Aviation Gasoline And Its Component Hydrocarbons: Wartime Research (1940-45) - Introduction - Historical Background

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 104
- File Size:
- 39417 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1951
Abstract
MORE than a year before the United States entered World War II, the requirements of the National Defense Program indicated the need for additional sources of aviation gasoline. On September 10, 1940, Dr. R. E. Wilson, Group Executive, Advisory Commission of the Council for National Defense, requested the Bureau of Mines to undertake a survey of crude oils of the United States to designate those suitable for the production of 91-octane aviation gasoline. As quickly as a program could be defined, agreed upon, and funds provided to conduct the work, the Bureau began the project. Over a period of many years the Bureau had collected samples and made analyses of thousands of crude oils produced in the United States. Although these analyses did not include octane numbers of the gasoline fraction, they provided data necessary for calculating the correlation index. This index, developed within the Bureau, is a measure of the types of hydrocarbons present in gasoline and therefore is roughly indicative of the octane value. This fund of information from Bureau of Mines Hempel analyses, supplemented by information obtained from oil companies, reduced considerably the necessary laboratory work by providing data that permitted a large number of crude oils to be eliminated from consideration. However, in the survey carried out during the last part of 1940 and the first half of 1941, 225 samples of crude oil were collected and distilled. Octane values of the distillates were determined by the Army AFD-1C method. (See page 57.) A report containing these results, together with the calculated amounts of 91-octane aviation gasoline available from these sources, was prepared and distributed to the several offices of the Office of the Petroleum Coordinator for National Defense in August 1941. In December 1942 the Office of the Petroleum Coordinator for National Defense became the Petroleum Administration for War (P. A. W.).
Citation
APA:
(1951) Aviation Gasoline And Its Component Hydrocarbons: Wartime Research (1940-45) - Introduction - Historical BackgroundMLA: Aviation Gasoline And Its Component Hydrocarbons: Wartime Research (1940-45) - Introduction - Historical Background. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1951.