The cetane number (or CN) of a fuel is defined by finding a blend of cetane and heptamethylnonane with the same ignition delay. Cetane has a cetane number defined to be 100, while isocetane’s measured cetane number is 15, replacing the former reference fuel alpha-methylnaphthalene, which was assigned a cetane number of 0. Once the blend is known, the cetane number is calculated as a volume-weighted average, rounded to the nearest whole number, of cetane’s 100 and heptamethylnonane’s 15.The analyser can measure it.
The updated report on the Cetane Number Analysers market gives a precise analysis of the value chain assessment for the review period of 2021 to 2027.