SAE J1829

Stoichiometric Air-Fuel Ratios of Automotive Fuels.

More details

Download

PDF AVAILABLE FORMATS IMMEDIATE DOWNLOAD
$29.92 tax incl.

$68.00 tax incl.

(price reduced by 56 %)

1000 items in stock

Standard:
  • J1829
Revised:
  • 1987-06-01
Revision:
  • Historical. Access the latest revision: J1829_200210
Issuing:
  • Fuels And Lubricants Tc 7 Fuels Committee
Scope:

The mass of air required to burn a unit mass of fuel with no excess of oxygen or fuel left over is known as the stoichiometric air-fuel ratio. This ratio varies appreciably over the wide range of fuels--gasolines, diesel fuels, and alternative fuels--that might be considered for use in automotive engines.Although performance of engines operating on different fuels may be compared at the same air-fuel ratio or same fuel-air ratio, it is more appropriate to compare operation at the same equivalence ratio, for which a knowledge of stoichiometric air-fuel ratio is a prerequisite.This SAE Recommended Practice summarizes the computation of stoichiometric air-fuel ratios from a knowledge of a composition of air and the elemental composition of the fuel without a need for any information on the molecular weight of the fuel.

History:
StandardPublishedRevisionStatus
J1829_2002102002-10-31LatestReaffirmed
J1829_1997121997-12-01HistoricalReaffirmed
J1829_1992051992-05-01HistoricalRevised
J1829_1987061987-06-01HistoricalIssued
AKA:
  • SAE J 1829
Sector:
  • Automotive
Topic:
  • On-board Energy Sources

Contact us