Diesel Fuel Treatment For Marine Engines

Discover the challenges and solutions for diesel fuel treatment in the marine industry. Learn more.

The financial burden for the Marine industry is significant. Ship operators spend millions of dollars for fuel each year while they must prepare for the energy transition.  These challenges are becoming more difficult to ignore. Protecting diesel powered assets are of high importance to keep the business in operation. Running fleets of large diesel-powered engines is a more complex task. High-Pressure Common Rail System (HPCR) systems require high pressures exceeding 2000 bar and injector nozzle openings in the 2-3 µm diameter range. Achieving these results requires the diesel fuel to be at least 30 times cleaner than what is acceptable for standard EUIs and over 100 times cleaner than what is typically dispensed at the pump. It is impossible to attain this level of cleanliness with on-board filtration alone, and supplementary bulk and point of filling filtration is required.

 

The Impact of Particulate Contamination on Diesel-Powered Engines

 

Three types of engine fuel injection system failures can be attributed to hard particulate contamination:

 

  • Mechanical failures from component wear and blocking component movement
  • Electrical failures (typically as injector solenoid burnout) from silting around the poppet valve stem, restricting movement
  • Performance failures from blocking of injector nozzles and altering injector spray patterns

Defining Acceptable Fuel Cleanliness Levels

 

Fuel cleanliness requirements vary throughout the supply chain. Incoming fuel is expected to be at 22/20/17 per ISO 4406. EUI fuel injection systems require 18/16/13 per ISO 4406, while HPCR engines require as low as 12/9/6 per ISO 4406.

How Dirty is it? 

 

It is essential to consider the level of contamination in diesel fuel. For instance, the table below shows the amount of contaminant mass and water volume that would be pumped in one year for a large mine site using 137,000 liters of diesel fuel per day for different fuel contamination levels.

 

ISO 4406 Cleanliness Code22/20/1720/18/1518/16/1312/9/6
Kilograms of particulate contaminant pumped per year800200500.4
Water Content (ppm)50001000500100
Liters of water equivalent pumped per year250,00050,00025,0005,000

 

Managing diesel fuel cleanliness must be a site-wide investment top priority for ship operators. It should involve using advanced particulate and water filtration technologies from the point of delivery, through storage, and up to the dispensing nozzle.

 

Supplying equipment with diesel fuel that meets required cleanliness levels results in several significant benefits, including:

 

  • Improved diesel engine performance and reliability
  • Improved diesel engine operating costs
  • Reduced diesel engine maintenance costs
  • Reduced Engine downtime
Featured Products

  

Particle Filtration for Diesel Engines

Bulk Fuel Treatment (2nd stage) Centrifuge Protection

Reservoir Filtrations

Water Removal from Bulk Fuel

Last Chance Filter for critical component protection

For support on diesel fuel treatment solutions, contact our team of filtration experts on the form below.