Originally Posted by GPracer2500
I'm looking for some help with the stoichiometry of gasoline. 14.7:1 is commonly cited as the stoich ratio for gasoline and air. I believe this ratio is calculated using a primary reference fuel consisting of a mixture of n-heptane and iso-octane. Precisely what mixture is unknown to me.
Could someone walk me through the calculation for determining the stoich of gasoline? Is there a way to work backwards from 14.7 to determine what mixture of n-heptane and iso-octane is used for the reference gasoline?
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Yes, there is.
Or would the results be similar or the same no matter what mixture of those two hydrocarbons was used?
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They might be similar (can't tell until we do the calculation), but they will not be the same.
Originally Posted by GPracer2500
This is what I've got so far:
iso-octane = C8H18
n-heptane = C7H16
air = 21% O2, 79% N2 (not exactly, but good enough for my purposes)
combustion products = CO2 + H2O
Where do I go from here?
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The next step is to write and balance the equations describing the combustion of each of these compounds, assuming complete combustion.
For instance, if you were burning ethanol (C2H6O), the balanced equation would look like this:
This tells you that 1 mole of ethanol needs 3 moles of oxygen for complete combustion. Using the molar masses, convert 1 mole (ethanol) and 3 moles (O2) into the respective masses for ethanol and oxygen. Finally, figure out how much air it takes to get that mass of oxygen. The ratio of ethanol mass to air mass is your required fuel-air ratio.
Do this for iso-octane and n-heptane - what do you get for each case?