A method for determining total biodiesel methyl and ethyl ester content in diesel fuels by supercritical fluid chromatography-flame ionization detection (SFC-FID) is developed. A silica column typically used for determining aromatics in conventional diesel fuels by ASTM D5186 is back-flushed after separation of the hydrocarbons to allow elution of the various esters as a single "total biodiesel" distinct peak. The modification concurrently allows the determination of total aromatic hydrocarbons and their distribution as mono- and polynuclear compounds, as described in the current version of D5186. The instrument response is linear from 1.0% to 50% biodiesel esters with a signal-to-noise ratio of 25 at the 0.1% level. The short-term relative standard is 0.8%. Normalized percent quantitation using a hydrocarbon response factor of 1.00 and an ester response factor of 1.19 provide an average percentage error of 1.8% when measuring actual biodiesel/hydrocarbon fuel blends. The ester response factor is the average of the response factors of 10 pure ester compounds. These responses are calculated from respective solutions of each ester and the four compounds, hexadecane, toluene, tetralin, and naphthalene, as used for the D5186 response factor mixture.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/chromsci/45.10.690DOI Listing

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