Octane separation system and operating method
US-9121355-B2 · Sep 1, 2015 · US
US9528474B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9528474-B2 |
| Application number | US-201514947982-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Nov 20, 2015 |
| Priority date | Oct 24, 2013 |
| Publication date | Dec 27, 2016 |
| Grant date | Dec 27, 2016 |
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Systems and methods for separating higher octane fuel from a fuel mixture are presented. In one example, fuel vapors may be limited or constrained from migrating to fuel tanks storing lower octane fuels. The systems may vent fuel vapors from a plurality of fuel tanks to a single fuel vapor storage canister. Alternatively, the systems may vent fuel vapors from the plurality of fuel tanks to a plurality of fuel vapor storage canisters.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A fuel storage system for an engine, comprising: a first fuel tank storing a first fuel; a second fuel tank storing a second fuel having a lower octane than the first fuel; a first fuel vapor storage canister; a second fuel vapor storage canister; a first conduit coupled to the first fuel tank and the first fuel vapor storage canister; a second conduit not coupled to the first conduit, the second conduit coupled to the first fuel tank and the second fuel vapor storage canister; a third conduit coupled to the second fuel vapor storage canister and an engine intake manifold; a fourth conduit coupled to the engine intake manifold and the first fuel vapor storage canister; a fifth conduit coupled to the second fuel tank and the second fuel vapor storage canister; a valve positioned along the second conduit; a valve positioned along the fifth conduit; and a controller including executable instructions stored in non-transitory memory for: during a first condition in which temperature and/or pressure in one or more of the fuel tanks is decreasing, closing the valve positioned along the fifth conduit and opening the valve positioned along the second conduit. 2. The fuel storage system of claim 1 , further comprising a valve positioned along the third conduit. 3. The fuel storage system of claim 1 , further comprising a valve positioned along the fourth conduit. 4. A fuel storage system for an engine, comprising: a first fuel tank storing a first fuel; a second fuel tank storing a second fuel having a lower octane than the first fuel; a third fuel tank; a first fuel vapor storage canister; a second fuel vapor storage canister; a third fuel vapor storage canister; a first conduit coupled to the first fuel tank and the first fuel vapor storage canister; a second conduit not coupled to the first conduit, the second conduit coupled to the first fuel tank and the second fuel vapor storage canister, and a valve located along the second conduit; a third conduit coupled to the second fuel vapor storage canister and an engine intake manifold; a fourth conduit coupled to the third fuel vapor storage canister and the first fuel tank; a fifth conduit coupled to the second fuel tank and the second fuel vapor storage canister and a valve located along the fifth conduit; a sixth conduit coupled to the third fuel tank and the third fuel vapor storage canister and a valve located along the sixth conduit; and a controller including executable instructions stored in non-transitory memory for: while the engine is not accepting fuel vapors and temperature and/or pressure in one or more of the fuel tanks is decreasing, closing the valves located along the fifth and sixth conduits and opening the valve located along the second conduit. 5. The fuel storage system of claim 4 , further comprising a seventh conduit coupled to the engine intake manifold and the first fuel vapor storage canister. 6. The fuel storage system of claim 4 , further comprising a valve positioned along the third conduit. 7. The fuel storage system of claim 5 , further comprising an eighth conduit coupled to the third fuel vapor storage canister and the engine intake manifold. 8. The fuel storage system of claim 7 , further comprising a valve located along the eighth conduit. 9. A method for processing fuel vapors in an engine, comprising: storing a higher octane fuel in a first fuel tank and a lower octane fuel in a second fuel tank; coupling the first fuel tank to a first fuel vapor storage canister including carbon via a first conduit; coupling the first fuel tank to a second fuel vapor storage canister via a second conduit; coupling the second fuel tank to the second fuel vapor storage canister via a third conduit; and in response to temperature and/or pressure in the first and/or second fuel tank decreasing, flowing fuel vapors from the second fuel vapor storage canister to the first fuel tank via the second conduit while preventing the flowing of fuel vapors from the second fuel vapor storage canister to the second fuel tank via the third conduit. 10. The method of claim 9 , further comprising, in response to temperature and/or pressure in the first and/or second fuel tank increasing, flowing fuel vapors from the second fuel tank to the second fuel vapor storage canister. 11. The method of claim 9 , further comprising coupling the first fuel tank to a third fuel vapor storage canister via a fourth conduit, coupling a third fuel tank to the third fuel vapor storage canister via a fifth conduit, and in response to temperature and/or pressure in the first, second, and/or third fuel tank decreasing, flowing fuel vapors from the third fuel vapor storage canister to the first fuel tank while preventing the flowing of fuel vapors from the third fuel vapor storage canister to the third fuel tank via the fifth conduit. 12. The method of claim 11 , further comprising, in response to temperature and/or pressure in the first, second, and/or third fuel tank increasing, flowing fuel vapors from the third fuel tank to the third fuel vapor storage canister. 13. The method of claim 12 , further comprising flowing fuel vapors from the third fuel vapor storage canister to an engine intake manifold. 14. The fuel storage system of claim 1 , wherein during the first condition, the engine is off or the engine is on and deceleration fuel cut-out is occurring. 15. The fuel storage system of claim 14 , further comprising executable instructions stored in non-transitory memory for, during a second condition in which the temperature and/or pressure in one or more of the fuel tanks is increasing, opening the valve positioned along the fifth conduit and closing the valve positioned along the second conduit. 16. The fuel storage system of claim 4 , further comprising executable instructions stored in non-transitory memory for: while the engine is not accepting fuel vapors and temperature and/or pressure in one or more of the fuel tanks is increasing, opening the valves located along the fifth and sixth conduits and closing the valve located along the second conduit.
Cross-Sectional Technologies · mapped topic
Liquid fuels having different boiling temperatures, volatilities, densities, viscosities, cetane or octane numbers · CPC title
Controlling the combustible mixture as a function of the canister purging, e.g. control of injected fuel to compensate for deviation of air fuel ratio when purging · CPC title
Blends of gasoline and alcohols, e.g. E85 · CPC title
Layout of the fuel vapour installation · CPC title
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