Originally posted by chacowako
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Two condenser vessels in series followed by a bubbler is what you can get away with. Even simpler would be one vessel for diesel plus bubbler but the downside is that gasoline would end up floating on the bubbler water, raising its' level and it becomes a pain to extract.
The setup works like this: the reflux is tuned to the correct workable temperature so that the maximum weight that exits is that of diesel fuel. Heat from the stream maintains the temperature of the diesel vessel and all that is required is about 60°C in there. A heat exchanger at the diesel vessel inlet quenches the stream as required so that the diesel vessels' heat can be regulated. The 60°C mentioned earlier forces any excessively light fractions to be driven off downstream, hence the need to capture these in condenser vessel#2.
The point of it is, is that diesel is a range of hydrocarbons some of which overlap with gasoline. So only the most volatile of these fractions need be extracted from the diesel to make it stable enough to use in a diesel vehicle.
Tuning the reflux is going to need a bit of trial and error but the temperature maintained in this does dictate the weight of the fuel that lands in the 1st condenser vessel. To put this in simple terms, if the fuel dropping into condenser#1 is too heavy then lower the reflux temperature. If the fuel is too light then raise the reflux temp. I suggest starting point be about 300°C -350°C range and tweak from there. All this assumes that everything about the retort and reflux is working in harmony, correctly proportioned and appropriated levels of retort heat energy are being applied.
HTH
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