You are right! My bad ... therefore I did this correction:PlatinumZealot wrote: β21 Aug 2022, 17:08A 0.25% to 0.15% is extemely small!!
This means the fuel density must not change from what was given for approval by more than 0.15%!
For example, a team can submit fuel for approval that is 99.75% of the density of the fuel that they will put into the car and gain a benefit on race day.
Now the tolerance is tighter. The fuel they submit for approval must be no less than 99.85% as dense as the fuel they will use to race with.
It is not a 40% change in density as you say.
So if we do the math, at an average density of 0.75 kg/cubic meter from a regular gasoline fuel in normal state conditions (temps and pressure wise) we should have 110kg of fuel some 147 litres of fuel which is let`s say 99.75% accurate to the fuel sample density they provided ... so the 0.25% density tolerance hence for mass (or volume had you like this physical parameter more) equates for some 0.25 kg or some 0.335 litres of fuel which is almost 0.01 sec/lap roughly saying ...in module amount speaking and not the whole total fuel amount
afaikatanatizante wrote: β21 Aug 2022, 15:54.. As rules stated, F1 engines run on petrol ... I read some time ago that octane fuel must not pass the 100 figure. ...
Im guessing here... Maybe chiral compounds are making a difference comboustion behavior for small change in density.atanatizante wrote: β21 Aug 2022, 17:54You are right! My bad ... therefore I did this correction:PlatinumZealot wrote: β21 Aug 2022, 17:08A 0.25% to 0.15% is extemely small!!
This means the fuel density must not change from what was given for approval by more than 0.15%!
For example, a team can submit fuel for approval that is 99.75% of the density of the fuel that they will put into the car and gain a benefit on race day.
Now the tolerance is tighter. The fuel they submit for approval must be no less than 99.85% as dense as the fuel they will use to race with.
It is not a 40% change in density as you say.So if we do the math, at an average density of 0.75 kg/cubic meter from a regular gasoline fuel in normal state conditions (temps and pressure wise) we should have 110kg of fuel some 147 litres of fuel which is let`s say 99.75% accurate to the fuel sample density they provided ... so the 0.25% density tolerance hence for mass (or volume had you like this physical parameter more) equates for some 0.25 kg or some 0.335 litres of fuel which is almost 0.01 sec/lap roughly saying ...in module amount speaking and not the whole total fuel amount
So in the end what was the reason they lowered this density tolerance?
Two chemical compounds with the same atomic/molecular structure but with different spatial orientations between atoms are called isomers.PlatinumZealot wrote: β21 Aug 2022, 21:30Im guessing here... Maybe chiral compounds are making a difference comboustion behavior for small change in density.atanatizante wrote: β21 Aug 2022, 17:54You are right! My bad ... therefore I did this correction:PlatinumZealot wrote: β21 Aug 2022, 17:08A 0.25% to 0.15% is extemely small!!
This means the fuel density must not change from what was given for approval by more than 0.15%!
For example, a team can submit fuel for approval that is 99.75% of the density of the fuel that they will put into the car and gain a benefit on race day.
Now the tolerance is tighter. The fuel they submit for approval must be no less than 99.85% as dense as the fuel they will use to race with.
It is not a 40% change in density as you say.So if we do the math, at an average density of 0.75 kg/cubic meter from a regular gasoline fuel in normal state conditions (temps and pressure wise) we should have 110kg of fuel some 147 litres of fuel which is let`s say 99.75% accurate to the fuel sample density they provided ... so the 0.25% density tolerance hence for mass (or volume had you like this physical parameter more) equates for some 0.25 kg or some 0.335 litres of fuel which is almost 0.01 sec/lap roughly saying ...in module amount speaking and not the whole total fuel amount
So in the end what was the reason they lowered this density tolerance?
Doesnt chirality in biology have very different behaviours?atanatizante wrote: β22 Aug 2022, 12:58Two chemical compounds with the same atomic/molecular structure but with different spatial orientations between atoms are called isomers.PlatinumZealot wrote: β21 Aug 2022, 21:30Im guessing here... Maybe chiral compounds are making a difference comboustion behavior for small change in density.atanatizante wrote: β21 Aug 2022, 17:54
You are right! My bad ... therefore I did this correction:
So if we do the math, at an average density of 0.75 kg/cubic meter from a regular gasoline fuel in normal state conditions (temps and pressure wise) we should have 110kg of fuel some 147 litres of fuel which is let`s say 99.75% accurate to the fuel sample density they provided ... so the 0.25% density tolerance hence for mass (or volume had you like this physical parameter more) equates for some 0.25 kg or some 0.335 litres of fuel which is almost 0.01 sec/lap roughly saying ...
So in the end what was the reason they lowered this density tolerance?
There is a special class between isomers in which atomic structure could be mirror-watched from an outside reference axis. You could see that like a reflection ...
A sub-class of these stereoisomers are enantiomers, specific stereoisomers in which atoms/molecules cannot be made to coincide only by rotations or translations, something like a left hand and a right hand. The chirality phenomenon is practically this superimposed behaviour ... the other stereoisomers called distomers (with other 2 sub-classes) have this capability to coincide structural when rotated or translated ...
What is worth mentioning from all the above statements is the fact that those 2 enantiomers or chiral compounds have the same physical and chemical properties, except when reacting with other chiral compounds and often having opposite optical activities. So in the end we are having the same fuel density even if they could develop a fuel based on chiral compounds .
Do you mean by DNA behaviour? unfortunately, biology is not my level of competence, although this must be governed by the same chemical&phisical laws and other anatomic/physiological ones, after all, with a little twist: we are speaking about the organic world now ...johnny comelately wrote: β22 Aug 2022, 13:02Doesnt chirality in biology have very different behaviours?atanatizante wrote: β22 Aug 2022, 12:58Two chemical compounds with the same atomic/molecular structure but with different spatial orientations between atoms are called isomers.PlatinumZealot wrote: β21 Aug 2022, 21:30
Im guessing here... Maybe chiral compounds are making a difference comboustion behavior for small change in density.
There is a special class between isomers in which atomic structure could be mirror-watched from an outside reference axis. You could see that like a reflection ...
A sub-class of these stereoisomers are enantiomers, specific stereoisomers in which atoms/molecules cannot be made to coincide only by rotations or translations, something like a left hand and a right hand. The chirality phenomenon is practically this superimposed behaviour ... the other stereoisomers called distomers (with other 2 sub-classes) have this capability to coincide structural when rotated or translated ...
What is worth mentioning from all the above statements is the fact that those 2 enantiomers or chiral compounds have the same physical and chemical properties, except when reacting with other chiral compounds and often having opposite optical activities. So in the end we are having the same fuel density even if they could develop a fuel based on chiral compounds .
But not so in non-organic?
(Only what I have been told) For example in pharmaceutical development left and right "versions" produce unrelated effects. As molecules become more complicated the 3D structure ( as opposed to 1D or 2D) almost defeats the chirality model.atanatizante wrote: β22 Aug 2022, 13:11Do you mean by DNA behaviour? unfortunately, biology is not my level of competence, although this must be governed by the same chemical&phisical laws and other anatomic/physiological ones, after all, with a little twist: we are speaking about the organic world now ...johnny comelately wrote: β22 Aug 2022, 13:02Doesnt chirality in biology have very different behaviours?atanatizante wrote: β22 Aug 2022, 12:58
Two chemical compounds with the same atomic/molecular structure but with different spatial orientations between atoms are called isomers.
There is a special class between isomers in which atomic structure could be mirror-watched from an outside reference axis. You could see that like a reflection ...
A sub-class of these stereoisomers are enantiomers, specific stereoisomers in which atoms/molecules cannot be made to coincide only by rotations or translations, something like a left hand and a right hand. The chirality phenomenon is practically this superimposed behaviour ... the other stereoisomers called distomers (with other 2 sub-classes) have this capability to coincide structural when rotated or translated ...
What is worth mentioning from all the above statements is the fact that those 2 enantiomers or chiral compounds have the same physical and chemical properties, except when reacting with other chiral compounds and often having opposite optical activities. So in the end we are having the same fuel density even if they could develop a fuel based on chiral compounds .
But not so in non-organic?
OK, thank you for that.casper wrote: β23 Aug 2022, 04:59I think you are confusing protein molecules against fuel hydrocarbon molecules. The desirable carbon number for
fuel is between C3 and C4. In fact C5 pentane is not desirable at all. Compare this with proteins having more than 10 hydrocarbons. Chirality is not relevant for HC fuel molecules because straight chain alkanes or single bond carbon chains burns efficiently compared to double bond alkenes, where chirality can occur. Of course additives having 5 to 7 carbon s can be added but chirality is not a consideration for these molecules. The type oxygenated functional group is the more important consideration, example an ester or ether.
You forget one thing my friend...atanatizante wrote: β22 Aug 2022, 12:58
Two chemical compounds with the same atomic/molecular structure but with different spatial orientations between atoms are called isomers.
There is a special class between isomers in which atomic structure could be mirror-watched from an outside reference axis. You could see that like a reflection ...
A sub-class of these stereoisomers are enantiomers, specific stereoisomers in which atoms/molecules cannot be made to coincide only by rotations or translations, something like a left hand and a right hand. The chirality phenomenon is practically this superimposed behaviour ... the other stereoisomers called distomers (with other 2 sub-classes) have this capability to coincide structural when rotated or translated ...
What is worth mentioning from all the above statements is the fact that those 2 enantiomers or chiral compounds have the same physical and chemical properties, except when reacting with other chiral compounds and often having opposite optical activities.
So in the end we are having the same fuel density even if they could develop a fuel based on chiral compounds. And furthermore, the combustion could be modified within at least 2 parameters: atomic/molecular structure change in fuel formulation (not spatiality like in the case of the chiral compounds) and the presence of additives known as the black art. And this is the real black art, not the tyres as they said, unfortunately ...