Any time you have heat, pressure, and oxygen around petroleum, you’re going to get the formation of carbon deposits. That means the internal combustion engine is a perfect place for their formation. Historically, automotive engineers and petroleum chemists have seen certain areas of the engine be the most prone to carbon deposit formation. And the deposits in these different areas have differing effects on the performance and operation of the engine.
This was noted in research on gasoline engines by the JAE (Japanese Automotive Engineers); they noted it as a phenomenon that actually changed the conditions inside the engine. These deposits altered key factors like formation of NOx gasses, changes in the combustion flame speed and thermal efficiency, even changes in the octane needs of the engine. Deposits would form on the piston crown, changing the volume inside the combustion chamber, which changes the minimum octane rating needed in the gasoline fuel to keep it igniting at the optimal time in the engine.
Researchers who have looked into the issue, trying to get a better handle on how these things happen, have settled on a hypothesis that combustion chamber deposits are formed when precursor molecules form from interactions between the fuel and air mixture as the flame “quenches” at the cylinder walls. The molecules get carried to the walls where they undergo reactions on the surface that eventually lead to deposit formation.
The formation of injector deposits are even more influential in the performance and efficiency of the engine. Automotive research suggests that injector deposits, just by themselves, can sap optimal fuel mileage and performance by 5-10% alone. The mechanism of formation is the same whether in gasoline or diesel fuel injectors. Small amounts of fuel, sometimes left over in the injector tip after engine shutdown, are exposed to the residual heat of the injector. This “cooks” the fuel – causes it to polymerizes and react with oxygen to form carbon deposits. These injector tip deposits have the effect of changing the injector spray pattern and even reducing the effective flow area or spray of fuel at maximum lift. The net results of this are increased particulate emissions and reduced power and torque for the engine.
Given that the different kinds of deposits are formed through the environmental conditions of the engine and the fuel system, there may not be an effective way to prevent their formation.
The alternative is to use fuel that is additized with an effective detergent package - to remove them as they are formed. This was partly the reason the Federal Government began requiring the addition of certain kinds of detergents in gasoline, because the body of research was clear that having detergents in fuel will help engines be more efficient and reduce harmful emissions going into the environment.
Now, the question of whether today’s fuels have enough detergent in them may be up for debate. Research seems to show that today’s engines, especially today’s common rail diesel engines, may benefit substantially from using a good fuel additive detergent package. We mention diesel specifically, because you have to remember that diesel fuel doesn’t have the same detergent requirements that gasoline has. So diesel engine owners would be even more wise to consider using a good fuel additive in their diesel fuel.
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