RI 2661 Exhaust Gases From Engines Using Ethyl Gasoline

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 29
- File Size:
- 1404 KB
- Publication Date:
- Dec 1, 1924
Abstract
"One of the outstanding problems confronting automotive engineers in attempting to construct motors of greater economy is that of eliminating the ""knock"" from the operation of the engine. Recent investigations of this detonation or knock in internal-combustion engines, especially of the high-compression type, have demonstrated that it can be eliminated or reduced by decreasing the reaction velocity of combustion by adding small quantities of certain compounds to the gasoline, This makes it possible to use engines of a higher compression ratio, thereby greatly increasing the mileage per gallon of gasoline consumed. The savings in fuel reserves from increasing the proportion of crude oil marketable as motor fuel and in permitting the designing of more efficient engines are obvious.Ethyl gasoline, one of the widely used anti-knock fuels, is ordinary motor gasoline to which has been added 3 c.c. of tetraethyl lead and 2 c.c. of a halogen carrier, as ethylene dibromide or trichiorethylene, or approximately 0.06 per cent of the lead compound and 0.04 per cent of ethylene dibromide by volume. Ethyl gasoline should not be confused with ethyl fluid, which is a mixture of concentrated tetraethyl lead and ethylene dibromide in the prowler proportions for mixing with gasoline, but is not a motor fuel and is not sold to the public. Also tetraethyl lead is not a motor fuel, and likewise is act sold to the public."
Citation
APA:
(1924) RI 2661 Exhaust Gases From Engines Using Ethyl GasolineMLA: RI 2661 Exhaust Gases From Engines Using Ethyl Gasoline. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1924.