PRICES include / exclude VAT
Homepage>BS Standards>75 PETROLEUM AND RELATED TECHNOLOGIES>75.060 Natural gas>BS 8609:2014 Natural gas. Calculation of carbon dioxide emission factors from composition
Sponsored link
immediate downloadReleased: 2014-07-31
BS 8609:2014 Natural gas. Calculation of carbon dioxide emission factors from composition

BS 8609:2014

Natural gas. Calculation of carbon dioxide emission factors from composition

Format
Availability
Price and currency
English Secure PDF
Immediate download
195.00 USD
English Hardcopy
In stock
195.00 USD
Standard number:BS 8609:2014
Pages:18
Released:2014-07-31
ISBN:978 0 580 83913 9
Status:Standard
DESCRIPTION

BS 8609:2014


This standard BS 8609:2014 Natural gas. Calculation of carbon dioxide emission factors from composition is classified in these ICS categories:
  • 75.060 Natural gas

This British Standard gives methods for the calculation of the carbon dioxide emission factor of natural gases, natural gas substitutes and other combustible gaseous fuels, when the composition of the gas by mole fraction is known. The method provides for the calculation of the carbon dioxide emission factor at the commonly used reference conditions of temperature and pressure and on the four common quantity bases:

  • mole;

  • mass;

  • volume (at the reference conditions of temperature and pressure); and

  • energy (gross or net).

Annex A provides example calculations for carbon dioxide emission factors on all the above bases and their uncertainties.

This standard requires use of complete compositional data in the form of mole fractions that, by definition, sum to unity. If this is not so then the raw mole fraction data is to be normalized and the normalized mole fractions and their uncertainties recalculated. Guidance on such data processing is provided in BS EN ISO 6974‑1 and BS EN ISO 6974‑2.

If the compositional data are incomplete, i.e. not all components have been determined, then it is for the user to establish the significance of the error caused by their omission and subsequent normalization.

NOTE One way to establish the significance of any omission is to determine how carbon dioxide emission factor changes when the mole fraction of an undetermined component is estimated to be unity minus the sum of all raw mole fractions.