Alcohol and petroleum Engines that can use either alcohol (often produced as a
biofuel) or standard gasoline are variants of
flex fuel vehicles. Such vehicles are in production and commonly available for sale in the United States and other countries.
Compressed or liquefied natural gas and petroleum Compressed natural gas (CNG) is made by compressing
methane to store it at high pressures.
Liquefied natural gas (LNG) is made and stored cryogenically, much like liquid hydrogen. The physical properties of natural gas require the
compression ratio of the engine to be higher than in normal internal combustion engines, and the higher compression makes for greater efficiency. Natural gas also has a higher
octane rating, so it can be burned at a higher temperature, reducing
engine knock, and the fuel can be produced without complicated refinement processes. Since little unburned carbon is produced in the combustion of natural gas, the engine and oil are kept much cleaner than would be the case if
gasoline alone was being burned, and the engine's life is thus increased. Aftermarket kits are available to convert vehicles to run on LNG or CNG and gasoline. In the United States, natural gas is cheaper than gasoline. Still, CNG at typical pressures requires more frequent refueling because it contains only a quarter of the energy per unit volume of gasoline, whereas LNG contains only 80%.
Liquefied petroleum gas and petroleum Liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) is a mixture of several
hydrocarbons, mainly
propane,
butane, and
ethane. The gas mixes readily with air, allowing for more complete combustion. The fuel costs less than regular gasoline, but LPG has lower energy per unit volume, so its fuel economy and efficiency are lower. LPG gives a longer engine life due to its clean-burning characteristics. The main difference between these vehicles and others is in their fuel storage systems. LPG is a gas at room temperature, but a liquid when pressurized (the required pressure varies according to the composition of the mixture). It is usually stored at around 10
bar. One drawback is that LPG fuel tanks are much heavier than conventional ones, hence two tanks would be needed, which would increase the vehicle's weight. Many automobile manufacturers make vehicles that run on LPG and gasoline. Some say that LPG is the least environmentally friendly
alternative fuel because it is derived from
fossil fuels so that greenhouse gases will inevitably be released into the atmosphere.
Hydrogen and petroleum Bivalent engines can also use
hydrogen fuel, as demonstrated by the
BMW Hydrogen 7 using a bivalent V12 H7 Series engine. The engine itself is similar to a regular gasoline combustion engine, except for the
fuel injection system. When a BMW Hydrogen 7 is running in gasoline mode, the fuel is injected directly into the cylinders, but when the vehicle is running on hydrogen, the fuel is injected into the intake manifold. BMW claims the Hydrogen 7 is the "world's first production-ready hydrogen vehicle", although only 100 total vehicles have been produced, and no more are planned to be produced. ==Future==