Corrosion research, led by Prof. Joey Ocon and Myron Alcanzare, began last June 2016. This project was funded by Enhanced Creative Work and Research Grants (ECWRG), which “aims to encourage faculty and REPS to undertake research or creative work that will lead to publications, exhibitions, performances of creative work or other significant output such as patents, new software, and advanced technologies.”
The project is expected to create a framework upon which market available products of gasoline that contain ethanol are to be tested not solely on content specifications but on estimated corrosion rates of metals that are representative of fuel tanks from 1980’s to current.
The project aims to further reduce the risks of vehicular fires that may be caused by leakages in containers that are not compatible with gasoline-ethanol blends. It aims to take into account the secondhand car market that caters to the population that do not opt to purchase brand new vehicles.
The project is expected to last until May 2017 when the findings will be sent to a publisher for review.