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The difference was 0.07 in favor of 98E5 on average, meaning that using 95E10 gasoline, which has a higher ethanol content, increases consumption by 0.7%. When the measurements are normalized, the difference becomes 1.0%, a result that is highly consistent with an estimation of calorific values based on approximate fuel composition, which came ...
87 89 93 Missouri: 87 89 91/93 Some Phillips 66, Break Time, and Conoco stations sell 91 octane premium. Southwest Missouri in the Ozark Mountains and Mark Twain primarily only sell 87/89/91 Montana: 85.5 [7] 88 91 Nebraska: 87 89 91 Nevada: 87 89 91 Eastern Nevada primarily uses 85/87/91 octane ratings. New Hampshire: 87 89 93 New Jersey: 87 89 93
Using Boyle's law, the equivalent GGE at 3,600 psi (25 MPa) is 0.51 cubic feet (14 litres; 3.8 US gallons). The National Conference of Weights & Measurements (NCWM) has developed a standard unit of measurement for compressed natural gas, defined in the NIST Handbook 44 Appendix D as follows: "1 Gasoline [US] gallon equivalent (GGE) means 2.567 ...
283 J/(mol K) Heat capacity, [6] [7] c p: 78.28 J/(mol K) at 90 °C 87.53 J/(mol K) at 110-220 °C Heat capacity ratio, [6] [7] γ = c p /c v: 1.13 at 90 °C van der Waals' constants [8] a = 1217.9 L 2 kPa/mol 2 b = 0.08407 L/mol
[5] [6] The ethanol market share in the U.S. gasoline supply grew by volume from just over 1 percent in 2000 to more than 3 percent in 2006 to 10 percent in 2011. [1] [7] [8] Domestic production capacity increased fifteen times after 1990, from 900 million US gallons to 1.63 billion US gal in 2000, to 13.5 billion US gallons in 2010.
The increased solubility of water with higher ethanol content permits E30 and hydrated ethanol to be put in the same tank since any combination of them always results in a single phase. Somewhat less water is tolerated at lower temperatures. For E10 it is about 0.5% v/v at 21 °C and decreases to about 0.23% v/v at −34 °C. [30]
The world's top ethanol fuel producers in 2011 were the United States with 13.9 billion U.S. liquid gallons (bg) (52.6 billion liters) and Brazil with 5.6 bg (21.1 billion liters), accounting together for 87.1% of world production of 22.36 billion US gallons (84.6 billion liters). [1]
E10, E 10 or E-10 may refer to: E10 fuel, see Common ethanol fuel mixtures#E10 or less , a mixture of 10% ethanol and 90% petrol Diabetes mellitus type 1 ICD-10 code