BRAZIL'S ALCOHOL DIESELS

Brazil has investigated replacing all of it imported petroleum fuels with home grown energy. Ethanol does not have the diesel fuel qualities of lubrication and the cetane number. Solutions are discussed as well as vegetable oil alternatives.

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A small percentage of the Sao Paulo city bus fleet has been operating on alcohol fuel since last year with excellent results . . . and far fewer toxic exhaust emissions.
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MOTHER'S traveling researchers recently brought back a report on...

Not long ago, two of MOTHER's editors returned from Brazil, where they had been investigating that country's massive effort to replace virtually all of its presently imported petroleum fuels with homegrown energy in the next decade or so. Clearly, the forwardthinking South American nation sees the "shape of things to come" . . . and has chosen to take a positive course of action rather than merely fret about the future:

One of the major concerns of the Brazilian people is the availability of diesel fuel ... since 80% of that country's goods (and most of its commercial passengers) are transported by heavy trucks and buses. Because even less diesel oil than gasoline can be gleaned from a barrel of crude petroleum, it's easy to understand why efforts are being made to look for viable domestic alternatives.

Appropriately enough, Mercedes-Benz (which supplies much of South America with diesel vehicles) of Brazil has been busily engaged in researching alternative fuels since early in 1973 ... and as of September 1979 has been testing its experimental fleet commercially, in the field, with excellent results.

Naturally, because Brazil has been so heavily involved in what they refer to as the "pro-alcohol" program, engineers at M-B have been primarily interested in running their diesel engines on ethanol ... but they've also been actively working with two other types of fuels that show great promise: a combination of diesel oil and gasoline, and a mixture of vegetable oil and diesel fuel.

HOW THEY DID IT

Standard diesel fuel has specific properties that make it suitable for use in selffiring internal combustion engines. The "liquid energy" provides needed lubrication, ignites easily, flows freely, burns with a minimum of residue, resists pre-ignition, and is relatively nonpolluting. Ethanol meets all these requirements but two: It doesn't have the lubricative qualities of petroleum distillates, and its cetane number (which is used to indicate the ability of a fuel to ignite quickly after being injected into the combustion chamber) is only about 10. (A diesel engine requires a fuel with a minimum rating of 45.)

In order to provide the necessary lubrication to the engine's injector pump, the Brazilian scientists merely routed an additional oil line from an existing fitting in the block . . . to a filter . . . and then into the pump itself. At the same time, the researchers installed a return tube to allow the pressurized engine oil to drain back into the crankcase.

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