J1829_201503 Stoichiometric Air-Fuel Ratios of Automotive Fuels

Revised

03/17/2015

Features
Issuing Committee
Scope
Content
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.
Rationale
Content
A recent SAE paper has been added to the references and its use discussed. For clarity, the references have been numbered and footnotes modified. IUPAC atomic weights were updated and equations and tables were modified to reflect the latest atomic weights.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/J1829_201503
Pages
10
Citation
SAE International Recommended Practice, Stoichiometric Air-Fuel Ratios of Automotive Fuels, SAE Standard J1829_201503, Revised March 2015, Issued June 1987, https://doi.org/10.4271/J1829_201503.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Mar 17, 2015
Product Code
J1829_201503
Content Type
Recommended Practice
Status
Revised
Language
English