Diesel Fuel Lab provides long-term storage contamination testing through Sterling Analytical (sterlinganalytical.com), specifically designed to catch the degradation and contamination patterns that develop in stored fuel before they result in equipment failure when the fuel is finally needed. This is the testing program that answers the question every facility manager should be asking about their stored generator fuel: not “does this fuel look okay?” but “will this fuel actually perform when I need it, and what’s happening to it right now that I can’t see?”
Here’s a fact that surprises most diesel users when they first encounter it: the diesel fuel you’re storing today is chemically less stable in storage than the diesel your predecessors were managing twenty years ago — and the gap is significant, not marginal.
This matters specifically for long-term storage because biodiesel has two properties that make it meaningfully worse for storage than petroleum diesel:
Long-term diesel storage degradation follows a characteristic sequence. Understanding this timeline helps frame testing intervals and remediation decisions.
Fresh diesel appears clear and light amber. Within the first months of storage, oxygen dissolved in the fuel and present in the tank air space begins reacting with fuel hydrocarbons. Oxidation is initially invisible — no color change, no visible particles, no equipment symptoms. The ASTM D2274 oxidation stability test detects developing instability at this stage by predicting how rapidly gums and sediment will form under accelerated conditions. A fuel showing elevated D2274 insolubles at the 6-month mark is telling you it will cause filter problems at the 12-month mark — useful information when you still have time to treat with stabilizer rather than replace fuel.
A key physical relationship worth knowing: the oxidation rate approximately doubles for every 10°C (18°F) increase in fuel temperature. Fuel stored at 40°C (104°F) — a realistic summer temperature inside a sun-exposed aboveground tank — degrades roughly four times faster than the same fuel stored at 20°C (68°F). Tank location, insulation, and shade matter enormously for how quickly this timeline progresses.
Oxidation products — gums, varnishes, and early asphaltene precipitates — begin to affect fuel appearance. Diesel that was clear amber darkens toward brown or amber-brown. This color change is the first visible sign that degradation is underway, but by the time it’s visible, oxidation has typically been progressing for months. Asphaltenes — the heaviest molecular fraction of diesel — become unstable and begin to precipitate out of solution as oxidation proceeds, eventually forming the dark, sticky sludge found at the bottom of long-term storage tanks.
Simultaneously, if water has been accumulating through condensation (as it does in virtually every vented aboveground tank over 6–18 months), microbial colonization begins at the fuel-water interface. Early microbial growth is invisible without testing; only ASTM D6469 screening or ATP bioluminescence (ASTM D7463) reveals what’s growing at this stage.
Oxidation products and microbial biomass reach concentrations that cause observable equipment effects. Fuel filters begin restricting faster than normal. Dark, sticky material appears in fuel samples from the tank bottom. Microbial sludge — visible as dark, gelatinous material — coats the tank bottom and walls at and below the fuel-water interface. At this stage, fuel polishing alone is typically insufficient; biocide treatment is required before polishing, and depending on severity, tank cleaning may be necessary before new fuel is introduced.
Your fuel supplier’s Certificate of Analysis documenting D975 compliance at delivery tells you the fuel met specification when it left the terminal. It tells you nothing about what that fuel looks like after 12 months in your generator tank through four seasons of temperature cycling, condensation, and air exposure. NFPA 110’s mandate for annual fuel testing using appropriate ASTM standards exists precisely because delivery-stage compliance is not equivalent to storage-condition fitness.
The specific ASTM tests that matter for long-term storage are not the same as the full D975 specification battery:
Storage-Relevant Test | ASTM Method | What It Reveals |
Oxidation Stability | D2274 | Remaining storage life; predicts gum and sediment formation rate |
Water by Karl Fischer | D6304 | Dissolved water at ppm level; early detection before microbial threshold |
Water & Sediment | D2709 | Free water and settled solids at storage tank bottom |
Microbial Contamination | D6469 | Biological colonization at fuel-water interface |
Particulate Contamination | D2276 | Oxidation and microbial byproduct accumulation |
Acid Number | D664 | Acidic degradation product buildup from oxidation and microbial activity |
Visual / Clear & Bright | D4176 | Baseline appearance documentation and color change detection |
The oxidation stability test (ASTM D2274) and the acid number test (ASTM D664) are particularly valuable for long-term storage monitoring because they measure the cumulative effects of time-driven degradation rather than just point-in-time contamination — they tell you not just whether something has happened, but how far degradation has progressed.
Adding stabilizer to heavily degraded fuel that’s already producing gum and sediment is the storage equivalent, as one fuel chemistry expert put it, of putting fresh paint on a rotting wall — it provides a surface appearance of treatment without addressing the underlying problem. The correct sequence is:
Storage Situation | Testing Interval | Rationale |
Generator fuel, facility at risk (hospital, data center) | Every 6 months | NFPA 110 annual minimum; semi-annual for critical-risk applications |
Generator fuel, standard commercial facility | Annually | NFPA 110 minimum requirement |
Bulk seasonal storage (agricultural, construction) | At end of season before storage; at start of season before use | Verify condition before extended storage and before first-of-season use |
Disaster preparedness fuel reserve | Every 6 months | Long-term storage with no predictable use window |
Fleet bulk tank with slow turnover (refill intervals >90 days) | Quarterly | Microbial growth in warm season can outrun annual testing |
Any tank after visible color change or equipment symptoms | Immediately | Visible changes indicate Stage 2 degradation or later |
When testing identifies contamination in long-term stored fuel, remediation options exist for most contamination types at most severity levels — though options narrow as degradation advances:
Testing conducted through Sterling Analytical, established 1957, West Springfield, Massachusetts. Visit sterlinganalytical.com →
Verify Long-Term Diesel Fuel Quality with ASTM-Certified Laboratory Testing
Whether you’re managing backup generator fuel, seasonal equipment storage, emergency fuel reserves, or bulk diesel tanks, our testing services help identify contamination, oxidation, microbial growth, and storage-related degradation before they cause equipment failures.
