Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations cowski on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

CO2 emission factor

Status
Not open for further replies.

newengr

Chemical
Mar 21, 2002
21
Quick question, whats the density of CO2 in lb/ft3?

I was trying to calculate a CO2 emission factor (lb/mmBTU) ...I have the amount of gas in scfm....and also the BTU/unit to give me the energy consumed in MM BTU.....

For example:
I have 1E6(cf) of a gas thats composition is %H2 is 86.13
%CH4 is 9.58%, %CO2 is 2.38%, %CO is 1.44%, %methanol is .27%, %N2 is 0.16%, %H20 is .02%....All I have to do is convert the 1E6(cf) to (lb) by multiplying by CO2 density...Then I would multiply by .0238 to have the amount of CO2 in lb.....Then divide by energy consumed (mmBTU) to get CO2 emission factor which is (lb/mmBTU)
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

Multiply the volume by the amount of CO2 (2.38%, I assume this is mol/vol%) to get the volume of CO2.

If the pressure isn't that high (and by cf I think you might be referring to scf so you are fine there), use the ideal gas law to calculate the density, PV = ZnRT. If you re-arrange it, density = PMW/ZRT, P is the absolute pressure, MW is the mol weight, Z is the compressibility factor, R is the gas constant and T is the absolute temperature
 
Will I even need to use density if I have MW because
1E6scfm *.0238mol/scfm*44lb/mol = ## lb..then divide by mmBTU to get CO2 emission factor....
 
That's another way of doing it. I'm not sure about the 0.0238 mol/scf (the minute should not be there). I've used 379.6 scf/lbmole or 0.00263 lbmole/scf.

 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor