Dictionary Definition
oxygenate v : impregnate, combine, or supply with
oxygen; "oxygenate blood" [syn: oxygenize, oxygenise, aerate]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Derived terms
Translations
infuse with oxygen
- German: oxygenieren
- Italian: ossigenare, ossigenarsi
Extensive Definition
Oxygenated chemical compounds contain oxygen as a part of their
chemical structure. The term usually refers to oxygenated fuels. Oxygenates are usually
employed as gasoline
additives to reduce carbon
monoxide that is created during the burning of the fuel.
The oxygenate MTBE has been found to
have contaminated groundwater, mostly through leaks in underground
gasoline storage tanks. In 2004, California and
New York
banned MTBE, generally replacing it with ethanol. Several other states
started switching soon afterward.
The oxygenates commonly used are either alcohols or ethers:
- Alcohols:
- Methanol (MeOH)
- Ethanol (EtOH)
- Isopropyl alcohol (IPA)
- n-butanol (BuOH)
- Gasoline grade t-butanol (GTBA)
- Ethers:
- Methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE)
- Tertiary amyl methyl ether (TAME)
- Tertiary hexyl methyl ether (THEME)
- Ethyl tertiary butyl ether (ETBE)
- Tertiary amyl ethyl ether (TAEE)
- Diisopropyl ether (DIPE)
In the United
States, preferential regulatory and tax treatment of ethanol
(and methanol) automotive fuels introduces complexities beyond the
energy balance inherent in and the engineering merits of the fuels
themselves. North American automakers have in 2006 and 2007
enthusiastically promoted a blend of 85% ethanol and 15% gasoline,
marketed as E85, and their
flex-fuel vehicles, e.g. GM's
"Live Green, Go
Yellow" campaign. The apparent motivation for this is the
nature of U.S. Corporate Average Fuel
Economy (CAFE) standards, which give an effective 54% fuel
efficiency bonus to vehicles capable of running on 85% alcohol
blends over vehicles not adapted to run on 85% alcohol blends,.
This regulatory artificiality is quite valuable to the North
American auto manufacturers in avoiding fines for failing to meet
CAFE fuel economy standards imposed upon each manufacturer's car
and light truck fleets. In addition to this auto
manufacturer-driven impetus for 85% alcohol blends, the
United States Environmental Protection Agency had authority to
mandate that minimum proportions of oxygenates be added to
automotive gasoline on regional and seasonal bases from 1992 until
2006 in an attempt to reduce air pollution, in particular ground-level
ozone and smog. As a
consequence, much gasoline sold in the United States is blended
with up to 10% of an unspecified oxygenating agent. This product is
known formally as oxygenated fuel and often (but not entirely
correctly, as there are Federally-mandated reformulated gasolines
without oxygenate) as reformulated gasoline. Groundwater
contamination scares and the State of California's ban
of the substance as a gasoline additive has allowed ethanol to
displace methyl tert(iary)-butyl ether (MTBE) as the most
popular fuel oxygenate in the United States.
Many motorists in the U.S. did not welcome
oxygenated gasoline because of its reduced energy density resulting
in increased fuel consumption and because of fears of damage to
cars, particularly to older cars. Alcohol (particularly methanol)
fuel blends were expected to cause chemical damage to fuel system
materials not designed to withstand exposure to alcohols, to
increase water contamination due to alcohols' co-solvent
properties, and via alcohols' solvent action loosening fixed fuel
system deposits thus causing free-moving particulate contamination
and clogging of various components. Experience with oxygenated
fuels has shown little widespread deleterious mechanical effects,
but oxygenated fuels have resulted in increased fuel consumption
and often higher fuel prices. Although market conditions vary
widely, ethanol is generally more expensive on a volumetric basis
(and unquestionably more expensive on an energy content basis) than
the gasoline with which it is blended. Refining and distribution
complexities associated with regionally-specific oxygenated
'boutique gas' blends also has significantly raised gasoline prices
in parts of the United States, particularly in California. Air
pollution benefits from oxygenated fuels have thus far been
difficult to quantify and to attribute to oxygenated fuel, but
undoubtedly small.
Many American motorists see the promotion of,
Federal subsidy for, and high import tariffs protecting domestic
production of ethanol motor fuel and the Federal mandate for
oxygenated gasoline to be essentially political phenomena. The
principal driver in promoting E85 is the North American auto
industry's need to avoid CAFE fines; in the fuel alcohol industry
as a whole lobbying by American corn producers and agribusiness, in
particular Archer
Daniels Midland, the biggest ethanol producer in the United
States, has done much to get the fuel alcohol industry its present
subsidized and protected status. Advocates for wheat, corn and
sugar growers have succeeded in their attempts to lobby for
regulatory intervention encouraging adoption of ethanol,
stimulating debate over who the major beneficiaries of increased
use of ethanol would be. Some researchers have warned that ethanol
produced from agricultural feedstocks will cause a global food
shortage, contributing to starvation in the third world.
Most forms of automobile
racing that require the use of gasoline as fuel (as opposed to
higher-energy blended fuels or straight alcohols) prohibit the use
of oxygenate compounds in fuels, as they can allow higher fuel burn
than the engine intake
restrictions are designed to permit. Prior to the 2007
Daytona 500, for example, NASCAR driver
Michael
Waltrip and his team were heavily penalized when evidence of an
unspecified oxygenate compound was found in the car's intake
manifold during inspections.
See also
External links
References
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
aerate,
aerify, air, air out, air-condition,
air-cool, airify,
atomize, carbonate, chlorinate, cross-ventilate,
distill, emit, etherify, etherize, evaporate, exhale, fan, fluidize, fractionate, freshen, fume, fumigate, gasify, give off, hydrogenate, oxygenize, perfume, reek, refresh, send out, smoke, spray, steam, sublimate, sublime, vaporize, ventilate, volatilize, wind, winnow