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EN 14214

All road fuels are subject to strict quality controls which are vital to maintain standards and provide authorities with the ability to assess safety risks and environmental pollution. For example regular mineral diesel is subject to the EN 590 standard. In 1997 the European Committee for Standardization was given the task to develop a uniform standard for Fatty Acid Methyl Ester (FAME). The result was the EN14214 specification.

The introduction of this standard in 2004 is valid for all member states of the European Union. In particular this standard gives engine and automobile makers the ability to give warranties to those vehicles which run on Biodiesel. At present a limit of 5% FAME is allowed in the EN590 specification for mineral diesel. This 5% must conform to the EN14214 standard. Diesel Fuel Injection Equipment (FIE) Manufacturers like Bosch stress the importance of EN14214.

EN 14214 - Property Units Lower Limit Upper Limit Test-Method
Ester content % (m/m) 96,5 - EN 14103
Density at 15°C kg/m³ 860 900 EN ISO 3675 / EN ISO 12185.
Viscosity at 40°C mm²/s 3,5 5,0 EN ISO 3104
Flash point °C > 101 - ISO 3679
Sulfur content mg/kg - 10 -
Tar remnant (at 10% distillation remnant) % (m/m) - 0,3 EN ISO 10370
Cetane number - 51,0 - EN ISO 5165
Sulfated ash content % (m/m) - 0,02 ISO 3987
Water content mg/kg - 500 EN ISO 12937
Total contamination mg/kg - 24 EN 12662
Copper band corrosion (3 hours at 50 °C) rating Class 1 Class 1 EN ISO 2160
Cold filter plugging point (CFPP) °C - * EN 116
Oxidation stability, 110°C hours 6 - EN 14112
Acid value mg KOH/g - 0,5 EN 14104
Iodine value - - 120 EN 14111
Linolic Acid Methylester % (m/m) - 12 EN 14103
Polyunsaturated (>= 4 Double bonds) Methylester % (m/m) - 1 -
Methanol content % (m/m) - 0,2 EN 14110
Monoglyceride content % (m/m) - 0,8 EN 14105
Diglyceride content % (m/m) - 0,2 EN 14105
Triglyceride content % (m/m) - 0,2 EN 14105
Free Glycerine % (m/m) - 0,02 EN 14105 / EN 14106
Total Glycerine % (m/m) - 0,25 EN 14105
Alkali Metals (Na+K) mg/kg - 5 EN 14108 / EN 14109
Phosphorus content mg/kg - 10 EN 14107
*requirements: 15.04. - 30.09. max. 0 °C
 01.10. - 15.11. max. -10 °C
 16.11. - 28.02. max. -20 °C
 01.03. - 14.04. max. -10 °C

Description of the Standard Requirements of Biofuel Testing

Density (EN ISO 3675, EN ISO 12185): Biodiesel generally has a higher density than mineral diesel (EN 590 820-845 kg/m3 at 15°C). Density increases with a decrease in chain length and with unsaturation. This can impact on fuel consumption as fuel introduced into the combustion chamber is determined volumetrically.

Viscosity (EN ISO 3104, ISO 3105, D445): Viscosities of neat vegetable oils are many times higher which leads to serious problems in unmodified engines. The increase in viscosity results in poor atomization and incomplete combustion which leads to coking of injector tips. This results in engine power loss. Biodiesel still has higher viscosity than mineral diesel (3.50-5.00 mm2/s at 40°C vs 2.00-4.50 mm2/s). Viscosity decreases with unsaturation but increases markedly with contamination by mono, di or triglycerides.

Flash Point (ISO 3679, IP 523, IP 524, D93): Pure rapeseed methyl ester has a flash point value of up to 170°C. This method is therefore looking at residual components within the fuel that are combustible, especially methanol which is a particular hazard due to its invisible flame.

Sulphur Content (EN ISO 20846, EN ISO 20884, D5453): Sulphur emissions are harmful to human health and high sulphur fuels cause greater engine wear and in particular shorten the life of the catalyst. Biodiesel derived from pure Rapeseed oil will contain virtually no Sulphur, however FAME derived from animal sources may contain significant quantities.

Carbon Residue (EN ISO 10370): The Carbon Residue is the material left after evaporation and pyrolysis of a sample fuel. This is a measure of the tendency of a fuel to produce deposits on injector tips and the combustion chamber. For FAME samples it is an indication of the amount of glycerides, free fatty acids, soaps and catalyst residues remaining within the sample.

Cetane Number (EN ISO 5165, D613): This serves as a measure of ignition quality. This is the most pronounced change from vegetable oil to the transesterified product. Fuels with low cetane numbers show an increase in emissions due to incomplete combustion. Palm Oil and Tallow derived biodiesels have the best cetane numbers.

Sulphated Ash (ISO 3987, D874): Ash describes the amount of inorganic contaminants, such as catalyst residues, remaining within the fuel. Ash is related to engine deposits on combustion.

Water Content (EN ISO 12937): As FAME is hygroscopic it can pick up water during storage and as such there can be problems meeting the specification. At around 1500 ppm the solubility limit is reached and the water bottoms out. Free water promotes biological growth and the reverse reaction turning biodiesel into free fatty acids.

Total Contamination (EN 12662): Total contamination is defined as the insoluble material retained after the filtration of a heated sample over a standardized 0.8μm filter. FAME samples with high quantities of insoluble materials tend to cause fuel filter and injector blockages. High concentrations of soap stock are normally associated with high total contamination.

Copper Strip Corrosion (EN ISO 2160, D130): This is defined as the likelihood to cause corrosion to copper, zinc and bronze parts of an engine. A polished metallic strip is heated at 50°C for 3 hours, washed and compared to standards. Corrosion is likely to be caused by free acids or sulfur compounds. However FAME gives consistently good results in this area and is unlikely to fail due to the low sulfur content.

Oxidation Stability (EN 14112): The Oxidative stability specification is defined as a minimum Rancimat induction period of six hours. Essentially a fuel is heated at 110°C in a constant air stream and the formation of volatile organic acids is detected. This property relates to the overall storage stability of the fuel and the higher the degree of unsaturation (double bonds) within the FAME molecules gives a decrease in oxidative stability. This can be improved with the addition of antioxidant additives.

Acid Value (EN 14104, D664): Acid value is a measure of mineral acids and free fatty acids contained in a fuel sample. It is expressed in mg KOH required to neutralize 1g of FAME. High fuel acidity is linked with corrosion and engine deposits.

Iodine Value (EN 14111): Iodine number is a measure of total unsaturation (double bonds) within the FAME product. It is expressed as the grams Iodine required to react with 100g of FAME sample. High Iodine value is related to polymerization of fuels, leading to injector fouling. It is also linked to poor storage stability.

Ester Content (EN 14103): This is measured using gas chromatography and is restricted to esters falling within the C14-C24 range. It is ultimately a test for reaction conversion. Linolenic and polyunsaturated esters are controlled as they have been shown to display a disproportionately strong effect on oxidative stability.

Methanol Content (EN 14110): Methanol can be removed from FAME by washing or distillation. High methanol contents pose safety risks due to the very low flash point of methanol.

Glycerides (EN 14105, EN 14106, D6584): There is a limit on the mono, di, and triglycerides of no more than 0.80%, 0.20% and 0.20% respectively. Total glycerol is the sum of the bound and free glycerol and must not exceed 0.25%/ Failing to meet the spec implies low conversion to ester and deposit formation on injectors and valves.

Group I Metals: Sodium and Potassium are limited to a combined 5ppm. These arise from the addition of catalyst, and result in high ash levels in the engine.

Group II Metals: Calcium and Magnesium are limited to a combined 5ppm. These may arise from the addition of hard water in the washing process. Calcium and Magnesium soaps have been related to injector pump sticking.

Phosphorous Content (EN14107, D4951): The phosphorous limit is approx.10 ppm and normally arise from phospholipids within the starting material or from addition of phosphoric acid in the production process. High phosphorus fuels are suspected of poisoning catalysts and increasing emissions.

CFPP (EN 116): Cold Filter Plugging Point was considered to be a suitable indicator of low temperature operability. It defines a temperature at which a fuel is no longer filterable within a specified time limit.