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“Low Blends” of Biodiesel: A Guide to Different Blend Levels

Biodiesel has become a valuable blending component with diesel fuel at low percentage blends because of biodiesel’s “premium” aspects. Pure biodiesel has high lubricity, high cetane, and a high flash point. “Low blend” can be defined as blends of 5% and below. Even low blends of biodiesel are highly effective at enhancing the lubricity of diesel fuel. The typical blend used for lubricity enhancement is 2% biodiesel mixed with 98% diesel (B2).

Several commercial “premium diesel” products have incorporated the positive benefits of biodiesel as a component of their multi-functional additive packages. These products typically claim that biodiesel serves as the carrier for the additive and delivers the lubricity properties, making up half of the total additive volume. These types of marketing messages often confuse the customer about the percentage volume of biodiesel in the finished blend. Generally, dosing rates for these types of additives is a maximum .25%. If biodiesel (methyl esters) makes up approximately half of the additive package, a customer could reasonably expect the finished blend to contain .10 - .15% biodiesel (or one-tenth of one percent).

Blends of up to 5% biodiesel are considered additive volumes. B5 meets the ASTM specification for diesel fuel, D 975. (Blends of up to B20 can meet D 975, however, as blend concentrations increase, there is a higher chance for distortion of some of the test method results which were designed for diesel fuel rather than biodiesel. Hence, all biodiesel (B100) should meet ASTM’s biodiesel standard, D 6751, prior to blending with diesel fuel at any level.)

Why B2? Lubricity data indicates that 2% blends of biodiesel offer the highest amount of lubricity benefit for the least incremental cost. Testing has shown that 2% blends of biodiesel can provide any type of distillate fuel with sufficient lubricity. Click here for a copy of public comments by Stanadyne Automotive Corp. about the use of B2, submitted as a response to EPA’s ultra-low sulfur diesel rule.

Many independent petroleum distributors have embraced biodiesel as a liquid fuel that can be complimentary to their conventional petroleum products, and integrated profitably into their operations and product lines. The National Biodiesel Board believes that the success of biodiesel as a fuel will depend upon the extent to which it can be successfully integrated into the existing national liquid fuel energy infrastructure. NBB is a Platinum Partner of the Petroleum Marketer’s Association of America (PMAA), and has committed to work cooperatively with petroleum distributors and marketers on technical, marketing, and regulatory issues pertaining to biodiesel. NBB and its member organizations have also begun outreach efforts to cooperate on regional technical, regulatory, and educational initiatives with state petroleum marketer groups.

 


Market Reports:
SoyGold "From the Field to the Farm"
Fueling Direct Injected Diesel Engines With 2% Biodiesel Blends

Market News:
Texas Oil Refinery Becomes First to Offer Biodiesel Blend in U.S.
Major Midwest Co-op Makes Biodiesel available to Farmers
Diesel distributor sells soybean-based fuel direct to farmers

Visitors who viewed this page also viewed:

Specification of Biodiesel (B100) (pdf)
Williams Cold Flow Testing Report (pdf)

GLOSSARY OF TERMS:

Lubricity: Lubricating characteristic of diesel fuel necessary to keep diesel fuel injection systems properly lubricated. Click here for lubricity fact sheet.

Cetane: Measure of combustion efficiency in a diesel engine. Similar to octane in a gasoline engine.

Flash point: Temperature at which fuel “autocombusts” under pressure. A flash point that is too low can cause injector failure, fires, or even explosions. The higher a fuel’s flash point, the safer it is to store and handle. Biodiesel has a flash point of approximately twice that of diesel fuel.

B2: A blend of 2% biodiesel and 98% diesel fuel. (e.g. B5 equals a 5% blend, B10 equals 10% biodiesel.)

Premium Diesel: A diesel fuel containing one or more performance properties exceeding regular diesel fuel standards. These properties typically include: lubricity, cetane, energy content, fuel injector cleanliness, low temperature operability, or stability.


Editorial by Dan Gilligan
President, Petroleum Marketers Association of America

As president of the Petroleum Marketers Association of America (PMAA), I would like to congratulate the biodiesel industry on successfully achieving all recognized technical, regulatory and infrastructure milestones that have resulted in its commercial success as a fuel and fuel additive.

Biodiesel is a product with a great deal of promise, and petroleum marketers would be wise to learn more about it. Biodiesel is virtually the only alternative fuel to integrate seamlessly with diesel technology nationwide. Petroleum marketers are eager to deliver products to their local marketplace that their customers can benefit from, and biodiesel is one such product. As its use increases in the United States, petroleum marketers will continue to integrate biodiesel into their operations, adding both value and market differentiation into their product lines. This change should be welcomed as a new source of revenue and national energy security that will ensure the diesel industry continues to grow healthy and strong.

PMAA is a federation of 42 state and regional trade associations representing 7,850 independent petroleum marketers nationwide. Collectively, these marketers sell approximately half the gasoline, 60% of the diesel fuel and 80% of the home heating oil consumed in America annually.

In January 2001, PMAA was pleased to welcome the National Biodiesel Board (NBB) as a national partner. Renewable fuel is an important and timely topic in Washington D.C. PMAA appreciates the insight the biodiesel industry will bring to our discussions.

Like the fuels themselves, the petroleum and biodiesel industries can blend together perfectly.

To learn more about PMAA, visit http://www.pmaa.org.

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