How fuel homogenization improves biofuel stability, reduces filter clogging and supports reliable marine fuel treatment.
As the shipping industry gradually introduces biofuels and new fuel blends, fuel handling and fuel stability are becoming increasingly important. Compared with conventional fuels, biofuels often show greater variability in composition and storage behaviour. This can lead to operational challenges such as filter clogging, microbial growth, fuel incompatibility and unstable combustion.
Mechanical fuel treatment systems can help address these issues by improving fuel uniformity and conditioning the fuel before separation, storage or combustion.
IPCO Power develops mechanical fuel conditioning technologies used in marine engines, power plants and industrial fuel systems. These systems operate without additives and support stable fuel handling when using conventional fuels, biofuels or blended fuels.
What is a Fuel Homogenizer?
A fuel homogenizer is a mechanical device that applies high shear forces to fuel through a rotor-stator system. During this process, larger droplets, agglomerates and unstable fuel structures are broken down into smaller and more uniform particles.
This mechanical conditioning helps create a more consistent fuel structure before the fuel reaches the engine.
In marine fuel systems this can support:
- improved fuel stability
- more uniform fuel particle size
- improved combustion consistency
- reduced formation of large fuel agglomerates
Fuel homogenizers are typically installed upstream of the engine or fuel treatment system and operate continuously without the use of chemicals or additives.
Preventing Filter Clogging During Fuel Change-Overs
Frequent fuel change-overs are increasingly common on vessels switching between HFO, MGO, VLSFO and biofuel blends. When fuels with different chemical properties are mixed, instability can occur. This may cause asphaltene agglomeration or the formation of larger particles that quickly load fuel filters.
This phenomenon is one of the main causes of filter clogging in marine fuel systems.
The IPCO Power FID Improver applies mechanical homogenization to the fuel upstream of the engine. By breaking down unstable agglomerates and reducing particle size, the system helps maintain a more uniform fuel structure during fuel transitions.
In practice this can support:
- reduced fuel filter clogging
- more stable fuel flow during fuel change-overs
- improved fuel conditioning before injection
Because the process is purely mechanical, the system operates independently of fuel chemistry and does not require additives.
On-Board Fuel Blending for Biofuels
As alternative fuels are introduced, many operators require more flexibility in managing fuel blends. Controlled onboard fuel blending allows operators to gradually introduce biofuels or mix fuels with different properties.
The FID Blender enables controlled mixing of different fuel streams on board the vessel. When combined with mechanical fuel homogenization, the system can help create a more uniform blend and improve fuel consistency before the fuel enters the engine system.
This approach supports operators dealing with varying biofuel blend ratios or changing fuel qualities.
Maintaining Biofuel Stability in Storage Tanks
Another challenge associated with biofuels is microbial growth in fuel tanks. Water contamination combined with organic fuel components can create conditions where bacteria develop inside the fuel system.
This can lead to:
- sludge formation
- corrosion inside tanks and pipelines
- clogged fuel filters
- degradation of fuel quality
The FID FuelGuard is designed to continuously circulate and condition fuel inside storage tanks. By keeping the fuel in motion and mechanically conditioning it, the system helps maintain fuel quality during storage.
Continuous fuel circulation can reduce the risk of localized contamination and help maintain more stable biofuel storage conditions.
Mechanical Fuel Conditioning for Modern Marine Fuels
The introduction of biofuels, synthetic fuels and blended fuels means that fuel variability will increase in the coming years. Operators will need practical solutions to maintain stable fuel handling and engine operation.
Mechanical fuel conditioning systems such as fuel homogenizers, onboard fuel blenders and tank circulation systems can help operators manage fuel variability without relying on chemical additives.
These systems are typically integrated into existing marine fuel systems to support more stable operation while the industry transitions toward new fuel types.