Yes, intakes have been heated for umpteen years, and that's a good thing. A hot intake manifold transfers heat to the air/fuel mixture helping to vaporize the gasoline. But this happens AFTER the air and fuel have been combined, at the appropriate ratio, in the carburetor.
My plan is to heat the intake, and the incoming air, so that when the air and fuel combine the fuel will absorb heat from the air and the intake and become a vapor, after the carburetor. This will simplify metering the fuel. It means rejetting the carb for the higher air temperature. (Higher temperature means less oxygen which means smaller jets are needed.)
If you heat the fuel to 450 degress, and then mix it with air less than 450 degress, you will condense some of your fuel.
Why do I want to vaporize the fuel and then condense it? This will take a lot to explain.
Gasoline is a mixture of different hydrocarbons. Some will vaporize at much lower temperatures than others, as can be seen in Teddy's post. Liquid gasoline doesn't burn. Only when it is in a vapor state does it burn. Its important not to confuse a mist with a vapor. When the fuel and air mix in the venturi of the carburetor, the lighter hydrocarbons become a vapor and the heavier are in the form of a mist. This mixture is drawn into the cylinder, compressed and then ignited by the spark plug. But only the vapors ignite. So the lighter hydrocarbons start to burn. But the lighter hydrocarbons don't all start burning at once. The flame has to spread from the spark plug across the combustion chamber. As the fuel burns, it creates enough heat to vaporize more hydrocarbons and the flame travels . Because some of the hydrocarbons have to absorb some of the heat in order to vaporize, they slow down the flame travel. Its very complex. The lighter hydrocarbons start burning, creating heat which is being transformed into power, but some of the heat is being absorbed by the liquid fuel, which slows down the burn. Also, the heat created by the lighter hydrocarbons is not necessarily enough to ignite the full spectrum of hydrocarbons, but only those slightly heavier, but as the slightly heavier start to burn and create heat, they ignite the slightly heavier, and so on. Its like a chain reaction. Heat continues to push down on the piston, and liquid hydrocarbons continue absorb heat, vaporize and burn. This process takes only a fraction of a second, but thats too long. The burning process continues long after it could have been useful to make power. Instead the heat goes out the tailpipe or the radiator.
During the burning process, the liquid fuel is absorbing heat. This keeps the temperature at an acceptable level. If we lean out the mixture too much, the temperature in the cylinder starts to rise. This can lead to detonation, also known as ping. Detonation can lead to pre-ignition.
So why do I want to vaporize the fuel and then condense it?
My goal is to only use that part of the fuel that I can fully vaporize with heated air. A fully vaporized fuel eliminates everything I described above. The flame travels EXTREMELY fast. This means nearly all of the fuel is utilized as power, instead of the 20-30 percent that is estimated to be used by todays engines. Not only do you eliminate the late burning fuel, and the excessive heat, the fast burn allows you to reduce you ignition timing, eliminating a lot more waste.
An alternative to separating out the lighter ends would be to have a very long run of intake manifold that would have time to heat the air/fuel mixture to the point that the entire mixture was vaporized. In the 70's a guy took a Ford LTD and put something that resembled a carb on the gas tank and heated the mixture all the way to the engine. This is documented by the press. He got over 100 mpg.
Holley Carburetor Company started making carburetors back in 1905 – 1910 range that would vaporize kerosine so that a gasoline engine would run on it. One was for sale on E-bay about a year ago. I kick myself in the butt for not buying it. It went cheap. I think for under $200. I did buy the owners manual for that carb.
Fast burn is the key to fuel mileage and power.
soryy for the length of response,
dean