And to round out the energy per pound of air vs fuel types:
Keep in mind that the specific energy produced per pound of fuel is not exact, and depending on the source you will get the value computed using the higher heating value or the lower heating value.
http://www.afdc.energy.gov/afdc/pdfs/fueltable.pdfUsing the lower heating values you get:
Typical gasoline Thermal energy 18,676 BTU/lb Gasoline Max power rich 12.5:1 = 1494 BTU/lb
Typical gasoline Thermal energy 18,676 BTU/lb Gasoline Max power lean 13.23:1 = 1411.6 BTU/lb
Typical E85 Thermal energy 12648 BTU/lb rich max power fuel air mixture 6.48:1 = 1951.8 BTU/lb
Typical E85 Thermal energy 12648 BTU/lb lean max power fuel air mixture 7.38:1 = 1713.8 BTU/lb
Typical ethanol Thermal energy 11,585 BTU/lb 9.00:1 stoich fuel air mixture = 1287 BTU/lb
Typical methanol Thermal energy 8,637 BTU/lb 6.45:1 stoich fuel air mixture = 1339 BTU/lb
Typical methanol Thermal energy 8,637 BTU/lb 5.00:1 max power rich fuel air mixture = 1727.4 BTU/lb
I am estimating the max power rich fuel air mixture for methanol from various sources, if anyone knows their true AFR on methanol for max power that would help.
As you can see due to the heat contribution of gasoline mixed with ethanol in E85 it is equal to slightly superior in energy release potential compared to methanol.
Larry