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Could anyone with a Defender 300tdi tell me what the stated CO2 emissions is on their log book please or if it is not stated at all?
Cheers
Cheers
Could anyone with a Defender 300tdi tell me what the stated CO2 emissions is on their log book please or if it is not stated at all?
Cheers
A typo perhaps? Maybe 2.67gThat is impossible, a litre of diesel weighs under 1kg. Burning it to produce 2.67kg of CO2 would breach the 1st law of thermodynamics.
Maybe not actually. Just Googled it and got this...Probably
Diesels like to suck in a lot of the atmosphere via the air filter. The oxygen part of the atmosphere is used to make the diesel combust. Diesel is made up of carbon and Hydrogen. In the combustion process the Oxygen, from the atmosphere, combines with the Carbon to produce CO2 and the Hydrogen combines with Oxygen, from the atmosphere, to create H2O. If the formula for a molecule of diesel is C10H20 (you could ÷ 10 to simplify and get CH2 and compare this to CO2) Oxygen is nearly 16 times more dense than Hysdrogen, so when the Oxygen/Hydrogen exchange happens during combustion you end up with a gas that is 16 times more dense. Bonkers isn't it. Explains why a turbo to ram the air in is a handy addition. That's just my basic understanding. @neilly being a Pedant (notice the capital P) will, no doubt, add a bit more substance to that layman's explanation as to what's going on.By my own meager calculations, burning 1 litre of Diesel would generate 1.51kgs of CO2 Unless the results of burning the Diesel are combing with part of the atmosphere to generate the CO2, in which case, it makes more sense.
That's great. Looking at actual figures, not just 16 x more dense, emphasises the difference even more. 1920 grammes of Oxygen to change 720g of Carbon to CO2 TremendousDiesel:
1 liter of diesel weighs 835 grammes. Diesel consist for 86,2% of carbon, or 720 grammes of carbon per liter diesel. In order to combust this carbon to CO2, 1920 grammes of oxygen is needed. The sum is then 720 + 1920 = 2640 grammes of CO2/liter diesel.
An average consumption of 5 liters/100 km then corresponds to 5 l x 2640 g/l / 100 (per km) = 132 g CO2/km.
http://ecoscore.be/en/info/ecoscore/co2
Or from another source.
7440 / MPG = co2 g/km
https://www.eta.co.uk/2010/02/22/calculating-a-cars-co2-emissions-from-its-mpg/
Both of the above work for the D2 Td5 mpg versus the V5 stated 262 g /km.
Cheers
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