Greenhouse Gas Emissions Calculator Form
The page stays single-column overall. The calculator fields switch to three columns on large screens, two on smaller screens, and one on mobile.
Example Data Table
| Gas or source | Mode | Input | GWP | Emitted mass | CO₂e result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Methane (CH₄) | Direct mass | 2.50 kg | 28 | 2.5000 kg | 70.0000 kg CO₂e |
| Nitrous Oxide (N₂O) | Moles | 10.00 mol | 273 | 0.4401 kg | 120.1549 kg CO₂e |
| Carbon Dioxide (CO₂) | Gas volume | 1000 L at 25°C, 101.325 kPa | 1 | 1.7988 kg | 1.7988 kg CO₂e |
| Fuel carbon to CO₂ | Combustion | 100 kg fuel, 86% C, 99% oxidized | 1 | 312.1851 kg | 312.1851 kg CO₂e |
Formula Used
1) Direct mass
Emitted Mass (kg) = Input Mass × Unit Conversion
Use this when the gas mass is already known and only unit conversion is needed.
2) Moles to mass
Mass (kg) = Moles × Molar Mass ÷ 1000
This applies stoichiometric chemistry directly from amount in moles and gas molar mass.
3) Gas volume with pressure and temperature
n = PV ÷ (ZRT)
Mass (kg) = n × Molar Mass ÷ 1000
Use absolute pressure, gas temperature in kelvin, and an optional compressibility factor for non-ideal behavior.
4) Fuel combustion to carbon dioxide
CO₂ Mass = Fuel Mass × Carbon Fraction × Oxidation Factor × (M_CO₂ ÷ M_C)
This converts oxidized fuel carbon into carbon dioxide using chemical stoichiometry.
5) Carbon dioxide equivalent
CO₂e (kg) = Emitted Mass (kg) × GWP
The calculator multiplies the emitted gas mass by the selected global warming potential factor.
How to Use This Calculator
- Select the calculation mode that matches your available chemistry or process data.
- Choose a gas, or enter custom gas properties when needed.
- Fill the relevant inputs only for the chosen mode.
- Enter uncertainty and activity output if you want range and intensity.
- Click Calculate Emissions to show the result above the form.
- Review the result table, formula trail, and Plotly graph.
- Download the summary as CSV or PDF for documentation.
FAQs
1. What does this calculator estimate?
It estimates greenhouse gas mass, moles, carbon dioxide equivalent, uncertainty bounds, and optional emission intensity from chemistry-based inputs.
2. When should I use direct mass mode?
Use direct mass mode when the emitted gas mass is already measured or reported, and you only need conversions, CO₂e, uncertainty, and exportable results.
3. Why does the volume mode ask for pressure and temperature?
Gas volume changes with pressure and temperature. The calculator uses the ideal gas law, with optional compressibility, to convert measured volume into moles and mass.
4. What is GWP?
GWP means global warming potential. It compares the warming effect of one kilogram of a gas to one kilogram of carbon dioxide.
5. Why is combustion mode fixed to carbon dioxide?
Combustion mode converts oxidized fuel carbon into carbon dioxide using stoichiometric chemistry. That pathway is different from directly estimating fugitive methane or nitrous oxide.
6. What does uncertainty do?
Uncertainty adds a simple high and low reporting band around the CO₂e result. It helps show sensitivity when measurements or factors are approximate.
7. What is emission intensity?
Emission intensity divides total CO₂e by an activity output, such as kilograms of product, liters processed, or batches completed.
8. Can I use custom gases?
Yes. Select Custom Gas, then enter a gas name, molar mass, and GWP factor to match your own chemistry or reporting basis.