SAE J1616_201703
Current
The latest, up-to-date edition.
Recommended Practice for Compressed Natural Gas Vehicle Fuel
Hardcopy , PDF
English
06-03-2017
1. SCOPE
2. REFERENCES
3. DEFINITIONS
4. TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS
APPENDIX A - CNG COMPOSITION RECOMMENDATIONS/REQUIREMENTS
APPENDIX B - VEHICLE FUEL SYSTEM AND ENGINE PERFORMANCE
APPENDIX C - CRC CNG TEST FUELS
APPENDIX D - CALIFORNIA AIR RESOURCES BOARD (CARB)
SPECIFICATIONS
APPENDIX E - U.S. EPA CERTIFICATION FUEL COMPOSITION
Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) is a practical automotive fuel, with advantages and disadvantages when compared to gasoline.
DocumentType |
Standard
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Pages |
21
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PublisherName |
SAE International
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Status |
Current
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Supersedes |
Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) is a practical automotive fuel, with advantages and disadvantages when compared to gasoline. Large quantities of natural gas are available in North America. It has a higher octane number rating, produces low exhaust emissions, no evaporative emissions and can cost less on an equivalent energy basis than other fuels. Natural gas is normally compressed from 20 684 to 24 821 kPa (3000 to 3600 psig) to increase its energy density thereby reducing its on-board vehicle storage volume for a given range and payload. CNG can also be made from liquefied natural gas by elevating its pressure and vaporizing it to a gas. Once converted it is referred to LCNG.The properties of natural gas are influenced by: (1) source of supply i.e. field, composition or impurities; (2) the processing of natural gas by the production and transmission companies; (3) the regional gas supply, storage, and demand balancing done by distribution companies often in concert with pipeline companies to maintain uninterrupted service throughout the year, e.g., peak shaving with propane-air (see U.S. Bureau of Mines Publication 503); and (4) dispensing site maintenance characteristics i.e. filtration and drying.The Coordinating Research Council (CRC) has published the results of a national compressed natural gas vehicle fuel survey. Information on the properties of distribution system natural gas and its variability has been included in Figure 1, 2, and 3, and can be found in CRC Report No. PC-2-12. Composition can vary hourly under certain operating conditions in certain areas of the country. Thus the data should generally be considered representative for the areas mentioned with due consideration for local variation.Natural gases transported throughout the U. S. are not subject to uniform national standards. Under federal government rules covering interstate sales of natural gas, the U. S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) adjudicates tariffs, placing economic and technical requirements upon natural gases entering interstate commerce. In 2006, FERC issued a policy statement advising stakeholders that:1Only natural gas quality and interchangeability specifications contained in FERC-approved gas tariffs can be enforced;2Pipeline tariff provisions on gas quality and interchangeability need to be flexible to allow pipelines to balance safety and reliability concerns;3Pipelines and their customers should develop gas quality and interchangeability specifications based on technical requirements;4In negotiating technically-based solutions, pipelines and their customers are strongly encouraged to use the Natural Gas Council Plus (NGC+) Interim Guidelines…as a common reference point for resolving gas quality and interchangeability issues; and5To the extent pipelines and their customers cannot resolve disputes over gas quality and interchangeability, those disputes can be brought before FERC to be resolved on a case-by-case basis…2xThe NGC+ Interim Guidelines call for natural gas specifications that include:1A range of plus or minus 4% Wobbe number variation from local historical average gas, or alternatively, established adjustment or target gas for the service territory, subject to:aMaximum Wobbe number limit: 1400bMaximum higher heating value limit: 1110 Btu/scf2Additional composition maximum limits:aMaximum butanes+: 1.5 mole percentbMaximum total inerts: 4 mole percent3EXCEPTION: Service territories with demonstrated experience with supplies exceeding these Wobbe, higher heating value and/or compositional limits may continue to use supplies conforming to this experience as long as it does not unduly contribute to safety and utilization problems of end use equipment.2xWhile the Interim Guidelines provide only guidance for the setting of tariff limits on gas quality, experience has shown that in most cases the Wobbe and higher heating value limits are used in interstate tariffs. Since the bulk of U. S. sales of natural gas fall under FERC jurisdiction, this means that the Interim Guideline limits represent, in most cases, the limits that apply to natural gases received by distribution systems. Intrastate natural gas sales, by contrast, are not within FERC jurisdiction, but customers including utilities receiving gases from both intrastate and interstate sources, for practical purposes, generally receive natural gas that meets the Interim Guidelines.The NGC+ Interim Guidelines address combustion issues associated with natural gases. Separately, FERC considered condensable hydrocarbons in response to a second paper from NGC+.2x No specific actions were recommended by FERC in response to the NGC+ recommendations from this report, which basically recommended translation of historical condensable hydrocarbon experience into more general phase diagram-depicted “cricondentherm hydrocarbon dew point” (CHDP) criteria for higher hydrocarbon mixtures. CHDP criteria help ensure that natural gases of various compositions remain in gaseous state at all operating pressures and all reasonable ambient temperatures.Natural gas is comprised chiefly of methane (generally 88 to 96 mole percent) with the balance being a decreasing proportion of proportion of higher hydrocarbon alkanes such as ethane, propane, and butane. It can also contain nitrogen, water, carbon dioxide, oxygen, sulfur compounds and trace amounts of lubricating oil. At the retail outlet a warning agent, or odorant, is likely present in natural gas.Experience with natural gas vehicles has grown considerably. Fleet and ongoing in-use applications provide a foundation for characterizing gas composition factors that will help to understand gas quality effects on vehicle and overall performance and may cause fundamental operational problems for natural gas vehicles (NGVs). Water content and other corrosion precursors, heavier hydrocarbons, which may condense within the fuel container, particulate matter, oil, and energy content all need to be considered. Condensable hydrocarbons (liquid state) are also of concern in NGV equipment degradation.
DIN EN ISO 15403:2007-08 | NATURAL GAS - DESIGNATION OF THE QUALITY OF NATURAL GAS FOR USE AS A COMPRESSED FUEL FOR VEHICLES |
CSA NGV1 : 2017 | COMPRESSED NATURAL GAS VEHICLE (NGV) FUELING CONNECTION DEVICES |
CSA 12.8 : 2002 : R2013 | STANDARD FOR NATURAL GAS VEHICLE FUELING STATION RECIPROCATING COMPRESSOR GUIDELINES |
CSA/ANSI NGV4.8 :2012 | STANDARD FOR NATURAL GAS VEHICLE FUELING STATION RECIPROCATING COMPRESSOR GUIDELINES |
I.S. EN ISO 15403-1:2008 | NATURAL GAS - NATURAL GAS FOR USE AS A COMPRESSED FUEL FOR VEHICLES - PART 1: DESIGNATION OF THE QUALITY |
ANSI/CSA HGV 4.8-2012 (R2018) | Hydrogen gas vehicle fueling station compressor guidelines |
CNG FUEL INSPECTOR RESOURCE PACKAGE : 2013 | CONSISTS OF ANSI NGV 1-2006/CSA NGV 1-2006, COMPRESSED NATURAL GAS VEHICLE (NGV) FUELING CONNECTION DEVICES; ANSI PRD 1-2013, PRESSURE RELIEF DEVICES FOR NATURAL GAS VEHICLE (NGV) FUEL CONTAINERS; ANSI NGV 2-2007, COMPRESSED NATURAL GAS VEHICLE FUEL CONTAINERS; ANSI NGV 2A-2012, ADDENDA 1 TO ANSI NGV 2-2007, COMPRESSED NATURAL GAS VEHICLE FUEL CONTAINERS AND ANSI NGV 2B-2012 |
BS EN ISO 15403-1:2008 | Natural gas. Natural gas for use as a compressed fuel for vehicles Designation of the quality |
ISO/TR 15403-2:2006 | Natural gas - Natural gas for use as a compressed fuel for vehicles Part 2: Specification of the quality |
DIN EN ISO 15403-1:2009-10 | NATURAL GAS - NATURAL GAS FOR USE AS A COMPRESSED FUEL FOR VEHICLES - PART 1: DESIGNATION OF THE QUALITY |
BS ISO 15403:2000 | Natural gas. Designation of the quality of natural gas for use as a compressed fuel for vehicles |
CSA/ANSI NGV4.8 : 2012 : R2013 | STANDARD FOR NATURAL GAS VEHICLE FUELING STATION RECIPROCATING COMPRESSOR GUIDELINES |
CSA/ANSI NGV 4.1-2018 | Natural gas vehicle (NGV) dispensing systems |
CSA/ANSI PRD 1 : 2013(R2018) | PRESSURE RELIEF DEVICES FOR NATURAL GAS VEHICLE (NGV) FUEL CONTAINERS |
CSA 12.3 : 2014 | FUEL SYSTEM COMPONENTS FOR COMPRESSED NATURAL GAS POWERED VEHICLES |
I.S. EN ISO 15403:2005 | NATURAL GAS - DESIGNATION OF THE QUALITY OF NATURAL GAS FOR USE AS A COMPRESSED FUEL FOR VEHICLES |
UNI EN ISO 15403-1 : 2008 | NATURAL GAS - NATURAL GAS FOR USE AS A COMPRESSED FUEL FOR VEHICLES - PART 1: DESIGNATION OF THE QUALITY |
NFPA 52 : 2016 | VEHICULAR NATURAL GAS FUEL SYSTEMS CODE |
CSA/ANSI NGV1 : 2017 | COMPRESSED NATURAL GAS VEHICLE (NGV) FUELING CONNECTION DEVICES |
SAE J1297_201710 | Alternative Automotive Fuels |
CSA 12.8 :2002 | STANDARD FOR NATURAL GAS VEHICLE FUELING STATION RECIPROCATING COMPRESSOR GUIDELINES |
CSA 12.5 : 1999 : R2014 | NGV DISPENSING SYSTEMS |
CSA B108 : 2014 | COMPRESSED NATURAL GAS FUELLING STATIONS INSTALLATION CODE |
CSA B109 : 2017 | NATURAL GAS FOR VEHICLES INSTALLATION CODE |
CSA 12.5 : 1999 : R2004 | NGV DISPENSING SYSTEMS |
ISO 15403-1:2006 | Natural gas Natural gas for use as a compressed fuel for vehicles Part 1: Designation of the quality |
EN ISO 15403:2005 | Natural gas - Designation of the quality of natural gas for use as a compressed fuel for vehicles (ISO 15403:2000) |
EN ISO 15403-1:2008 | Natural gas - Natural gas for use as a compressed fuel for vehicles - Part 1: Designation of the quality (ISO 15403-1:2006) |
CSA/ANSI NGV4.8 : 2012 : R2016 | STANDARD FOR NATURAL GAS VEHICLE FUELING STATION RECIPROCATING COMPRESSOR GUIDELINES |
CSA 12.8 : 2002 : R2016 | STANDARD FOR NATURAL GAS VEHICLE FUELING STATION RECIPROCATING COMPRESSOR GUIDELINES |
SAE J2406_201802 | Recommended Practices for CNG Powered Medium and Heavy-Duty Trucks |
CSA NGV 6.1 : 2016 | COMPRESSED NATURAL GAS (CNG) FUEL STORAGE AND DELIVERY SYSTEMS FOR ROAD VEHICLES |
CSA/ANSI NGV3.1 : 2014 | FUEL SYSTEM COMPONENTS FOR COMPRESSED NATURAL GAS POWERED VEHICLES |
CSA/ANSI NGV2 : 2016 | COMPRESSED NATURAL GAS VEHICLE FUEL CONTAINERS |
CSA/ANSI NGV 5.2-2017 | Vehicle fueling appliances (VFA) |
ASTM D 6273 : 2014 : REDLINE | Standard Test Methods for Natural Gas Odor Intensity |
ASTM D 5504 : 2012 : REDLINE | Standard Test Method for Determination of Sulfur Compounds in Natural Gas and Gaseous Fuels by Gas Chromatography and Chemiluminescence |
SAE J2699_201107 | Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) Vehicle Fuel |
ISO 15403:2000 | Natural gas Designation of the quality of natural gas for use as a compressed fuel for vehicles |
NFPA 52 : 2016 | VEHICULAR NATURAL GAS FUEL SYSTEMS CODE |
ISO 6326-1:2007 | Natural gas Determination of sulfur compounds Part 1: General introduction |
CFR 40(PTS1000-END) : JUL 2016 | PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT - ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY AND DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE COUNCIL ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY |
ISO 6326-5:1989 | Natural gas Determination of sulfur compounds Part 5: Lingener combustion method |
ISO 6326-3:1989 | Natural gas Determination of sulfur compounds Part 3: Determination of hydrogen sulfide, mercaptan sulfur and carbonyl sulfide sulfur by potentiometry |
ISO 6326-4:1994 | Natural gas — Determination of sulfur compounds — Part 4: Gas chromatographic method using a flame photometric detector for the determination of hydrogen sulfide, carbonyl sulfide and sulfur-containing odorants |
ISO 6326-2:1981 | Gas analysis Determination of sulphur compounds in natural gas Part 2: Gas chromatographic method using an electrochemical detector for the determination of odoriferous sulphur compounds |
ASTM D 1945 : 2014 : REDLINE | Standard Test Method for Analysis of Natural Gas by Gas Chromatography |
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