godlameroso wrote: .......How about cracking the fuel in addition to heating it? By cracking I mean using rhenium or platinum electrodes or an electric mesh in the fuel rail to catalyze the fuel into simpler chains. This would free up some oxygenates and hydrogen gas, as well as making the fuel easier to combust.
the unfortunately-named oxygenates would be a waste of space in F1 fuel, their oxygen has already been used ie unavailable for combustion
the secret of TJI is to burn successfully (ie quickly and consistently) a leaner mixture than otherwise possible
because of the efficiency benefits of such heat dilution
ie same heat, more air mass reduces heat loss to coolant and exhaust and so increases conversion to work in-cylinder
(but does not increase turbine recovery)
in a piston engine a gas fuel can be burnt successfully much leaner than a liquid fuel
even without catalysis combustion of a rich mixture reduces some of the liquid fuel to methane (and produces CO of course)
these gases could then be burnt very lean
fuel chemistry has a role in this case
extremely high leaning may then be worthwhile even if in-cylinder combustion 'efficiency' (completeness ie consistency) is degraded
and the F1 turbine can recover better at these high boosts from any post-cylinder combustion
boost pressure tells us how much leaning is used - imo around 3.2 bar abs tells us it's around 40% lean