Gas Operations & Safety

Natural Gas Odorization

Design and calibrate natural gas odorization systems using Y/Z type odorant injectors, calculate mercaptan dosing rates per 49 CFR 192.625, and ensure leak detection compliance for distribution systems.

Federal requirement

1/5 LEL detectability

49 CFR 192.625: Gas must be detectable at 1/5 lower explosive limit (1% gas in air).

Typical dosing rate

0.5-1.5 lb/MMscf

THT or butyl mercaptan injection: 0.5-1.5 lb odorant per million standard cubic feet gas.

Odorant threshold

0.2-1.0 PPM

Human nose detects mercaptan at 0.2-1.0 PPM; regulatory limit is 1% gas (10,000 PPM).

Use this guide when you need to:

  • Calculate odorant injection rates for compliance.
  • Calibrate Y-type or Z-type odorizer pumps.
  • Size odorant storage tanks and refill intervals.
  • Conduct odor fade testing per 49 CFR 192.625.

1. Overview & Applications

Natural gas is odorless, colorless, and tasteless in its natural state. Odorization—the addition of mercaptan-based odorants—provides a distinctive "rotten egg" smell that enables leak detection before gas reaches hazardous concentrations. Odorization is federally mandated for all gas distribution systems serving the public.

Public safety

Leak detection

Enable detection of gas leaks at 1/5 LEL (10,000 PPM) by distinctive odor.

Distribution systems

City gate odorization

Inject odorant at city gate stations serving residential/commercial customers.

Regulatory compliance

49 CFR 192.625

Federal mandate: combustible gas must be readily detectable by odor at 1/5 LEL.

System monitoring

Odor fade testing

Annual testing to verify odor intensity meets regulatory threshold throughout system.

IMAGE: Odorization Safety Margin Diagram

Shows LEL (5%), 1/5 LEL detection threshold (1%), and odor detection margin

Key Concepts

  • Odorization: Addition of odorant (mercaptan) to natural gas for leak detectability
  • LEL (Lower Explosive Limit): Minimum gas concentration that will ignite (5% methane in air)
  • 1/5 LEL: Detection threshold = 1% gas in air (10,000 PPM) per 49 CFR 192.625
  • Odorant threshold: Minimum concentration humans can smell (0.2-1.0 PPM for mercaptan)
  • Odor fade: Loss of odorant due to adsorption in pipelines, especially new or rehabilitated mains
  • Y/Z odorizer: Bypass-type odorant injection system using wick, pump, or drip-feed methods

Why Odorization Matters

Risk Without Odorization Consequence Frequency Prevention
Undetected indoor leak Explosion, fatalities, property damage Rare but catastrophic Proper odorant dosing + annual testing
Outdoor leak (excavation damage) Gas accumulation in confined space Common (one call damages) Detectable odor alerts public/crews
Appliance malfunction Gas buildup in residence Occasional Occupants smell gas, evacuate
Odor fade in new mains Delayed leak detection Predictable in new/rehab pipe Elevated dosing + fade testing
Insufficient odorant dosing Below detection threshold Equipment failure or neglect Calibration + sniff tests + alarms
Legal mandate: 49 CFR 192.625(a) requires all combustible gas in distribution systems to contain a natural odorant or be odorized so that at a concentration in air of 1/5 the lower explosive limit, the gas is readily detectable by a person with a normal sense of smell. Exemptions: (1) Transmission lines, (2) Offshore gathering, (3) Master meter systems with individual odorization.

Odorization History and Evolution

Historical development of gas odorization in the United States:

  • 1937 New London School explosion: 298 deaths from unodorized natural gas leak; led to odorization mandates
  • 1940s-1950s: States begin requiring odorization; THT (tetrahydrothiophene) becomes standard odorant
  • 1968 Natural Gas Pipeline Safety Act: Federal oversight established; 49 CFR 192 created
  • 1970 DOT adopts 1/5 LEL standard: 49 CFR 192.625 codifies detection requirement at 10,000 PPM
  • 1990s Y/Z odorizer proliferation: Automated injection systems replace manual wick-feed odorizers
  • 2000s Electronic monitoring: Flow computers, remote telemetry, automated calibration verification

2. Regulatory Requirements

49 CFR 192.625 - Odorization of Gas

Federal Regulation: 49 CFR 192.625(a) "A combustible gas in a distribution line must contain a natural odorant or be odorized so that at a concentration in air of one-fifth of the lower explosive limit, the gas is readily detectable by a person with a normal sense of smell." Key terms defined: Lower Explosive Limit (LEL) for methane (natural gas): LEL = 5.0% methane in air = 50,000 PPM One-fifth LEL: 1/5 LEL = 1.0% methane in air = 10,000 PPM Detection requirement: Gas must be "readily detectable" (i.e., distinctly smellable) at 10,000 PPM This provides 5:1 safety factor between detectable concentration and explosive concentration. Human olfactory threshold: Mercaptan odorants: 0.2-1.0 PPM detection threshold Required in gas at 1/5 LEL: 10,000 PPM gas concentration Therefore: Odorant must be detectable at 10,000× dilution in gas

Exemptions from Odorization

49 CFR 192.625(b) and (d) provide limited exemptions:

Exemption Type Regulatory Citation Conditions Typical Application
Transmission lines 49 CFR 192.625(b)(1) Interstate/intrastate transmission, not serving public directly Cross-country pipelines, not at city gate
Offshore gathering 49 CFR 192.625(b)(2) Offshore structures and platforms GOM platforms, offshore Alaska
Master meter systems 49 CFR 192.625(b)(3) Individual facility odorization at each end-user Industrial complexes, refineries
Process gas (non-combustible use) 49 CFR 192.625(d) Used as chemical feedstock, not burned Petrochemical plants, hydrogen production
Temporary blanket gas Operational necessity Short-term purging, commissioning Pipeline commissioning, maintenance

Odor Testing Requirements

49 CFR 192.625(c) - Testing: Each operator must conduct periodic sampling of combustible gases to assure the proper concentration of odorant. Industry practice (AGA/OPS guidelines): - City gate stations: Monthly sniff tests - Distribution system: Annual system-wide testing - New/rehabilitated mains: Quarterly for first year (odor fade risk) Sniff test procedure: 1. Collect gas sample in Tedlar bag or glass bottle 2. Dilute sample to 1/5 LEL (10,000 PPM in air) 3. Panel of 3-5 people with normal sense of smell 4. Each person must readily detect odor 5. Document test date, location, concentration, and results Acceptable result: ≥ 80% of panel detects odor at 10,000 PPM (1/5 LEL) If < 80%, increase odorant injection rate Instrumented testing (optional): Gas chromatography (GC-FID or GC-SCD) measures odorant concentration Correlate instrumental PPM to odor threshold Typical: 0.8-1.6 mg/m³ THT at 1/5 LEL

Documentation and Record Keeping

  • Odorant injection records: Continuous flow computer logs or daily manual readings
  • Calibration records: Annual calibration of odorizer pumps and meters
  • Sniff test results: Date, location, concentration, number of panelists, pass/fail
  • Odorant inventory: Receipts, storage levels, consumption rates, material safety data sheets (SDS)
  • Maintenance logs: Odorizer equipment service, repairs, pump replacement
  • Compliance reports: Annual report to state PUC or PHMSA demonstrating compliance
Enforcement: PHMSA (Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration) enforces 49 CFR 192. Violations of odorization requirements can result in: (1) Civil penalties up to $200,000 per violation per day, (2) Corrective action orders, (3) Criminal prosecution if negligence causes injury/death. State public utility commissions may impose additional penalties.

State and Local Requirements

Some states have more stringent odorization standards than federal minimums:

Jurisdiction Requirement Notes
California (CPUC) 1/5 LEL + quarterly leak surveys + annual fade testing GO 112-F more stringent than federal
Texas (RRC) 1/5 LEL + monthly sniff tests at city gates 16 TAC §8.201
New York (PSC) 1/5 LEL + semi-annual fade testing in new mains 16 NYCRR Part 255
Pennsylvania (PUC) 1/5 LEL + quarterly high-consequence area sampling 52 Pa Code Chapter 59
Most other states Adopt 49 CFR 192.625 without modification Federal standard is minimum

Related Standards and Guidelines

  • AGA Operations Conference Proceedings: Industry best practices, odor fade mitigation strategies
  • ASTM D5305: Standard test method for determination of odorant concentration by GC
  • API RP 1100: Odorization of transmission lines (voluntary, where required by contract)
  • NFPA 58: LP-Gas odorization (1.0 lb odorant per 10,000 gal propane minimum)
  • CGA G-13: Canadian odorization standard (similar to US 49 CFR 192.625)

3. Odorant Types & Properties

Common Mercaptan Odorants

Primary Odorants (mercaptans = thiols, R-SH): 1. Tetrahydrothiophene (THT, C₄H₈S): - Most common odorant in US (70-80% market share) - Chemical formula: Cyclic structure with sulfur - Molecular weight: 88.17 g/mol - Density: 0.998 g/cm³ at 20°C (8.33 lb/gal) - Boiling point: 121°C (250°F) - Odor threshold: 0.07 PPM in air - Cost: Moderate (~$5-10/lb, commodity pricing) 2. Tertiary butyl mercaptan (TBM, C₄H₁₀S): - Alternative to THT, more volatile (lower BP) - Molecular weight: 90.19 g/mol - Density: 0.794 g/cm³ at 20°C (6.62 lb/gal) - Boiling point: 64°C (147°F) - Odor threshold: 0.01 PPM (more potent than THT) - Cost: Higher than THT (~$8-15/lb) 3. Dimethyl sulfide (DMS, C₂H₆S): - Used in Europe, less common in US - Molecular weight: 62.13 g/mol - Boiling point: 37°C (99°F) - very volatile - Odor: "Cabbage-like" rather than "rotten egg" 4. Ethyl mercaptan (ethanethiol, C₂H₆S): - Historical use (pre-THT era) - Extremely volatile (BP: 35°C / 95°F) - Very low odor threshold (0.001 PPM) - Handling challenges due to volatility Blends: Some operators use proprietary blends of THT + TBM + other mercaptans Benefits: Optimize odor strength, fade resistance, temperature performance

THT Physical Properties (Detailed)

Property Value Units Significance
Molecular weight 88.17 g/mol Heavier than methane (16.04), less volatile
Specific gravity 0.998 Slightly less dense than water (floats on water)
Density at 60°F 8.33 lb/gal Used for injection rate calculations
Vapor pressure at 20°C 1.5 kPa Low vapor pressure → minimal evaporation losses
Flash point 7°C (45°F) Flammable liquid; requires proper storage
Autoignition temp 202°C (396°F) Well above typical operating conditions
Solubility in water 3.5 g/L at 20°C Slightly soluble; can contaminate condensate
Freezing point -96°C (-141°F) Remains liquid in all field conditions

Typical Odorant Dosing Rates

Industry Standard Dosing Rates: Residential/commercial distribution: 0.5-1.5 lb odorant per MMscf gas (typical: 1.0 lb/MMscf) Calculation basis: Target: 1.0 mg/m³ THT at 1/5 LEL (10,000 PPM gas in air) For 1.0 lb THT per MMscf: 1.0 lb/MMscf = 453.6 g / 28,316 m³ = 16.0 mg/m³ in gas stream When diluted to 1/5 LEL (10,000 PPM = 1% gas in air): 16.0 mg/m³ × 0.01 = 0.16 mg/m³ in air This exceeds 0.07 PPM (0.26 mg/m³) threshold by factor of ~2× (conservative) Factors increasing dosing rate: - Odor fade in new or rehabbed mains: 1.5-2.5 lb/MMscf - Cold weather (reduced volatility): +20% increase - High moisture content (odorant adsorption): +10-30% - Long distribution system (extended residence time): +20-50% Factors decreasing dosing rate: - Short distribution runs (< 5 miles): 0.5-0.8 lb/MMscf - Warm climate (high volatility): -10% reduction - Dry gas (minimal liquid water): Standard rate OK Never below 0.5 lb/MMscf without engineering justification and testing

Odor Fade Mechanisms

Odor fade is the loss of odorant through adsorption, absorption, or chemical reaction in the distribution system:

Fade Mechanism Cause Severity Mitigation
Pipe wall adsorption New steel, ductile iron, PVC pipe High (first 6-12 months) Elevated dosing (2-3× normal) during break-in
Pipe coating absorption Epoxy, polyethylene linings Moderate (first 3-6 months) Pre-odorize coated pipe, increased dosing
Rust/scale reaction Oxidized iron in old mains Moderate (ongoing) Pigging, increased dosing, main replacement
Moisture scrubbing Free water in low spots Moderate (seasonal) Drip pots, line drying, increased dosing
Bacterial degradation Sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) Low (rare) Biocide treatment, system cleaning
Oxidation (high pressure) O₂ ingress, air contamination Low (distribution systems) Eliminate air intrusion, purging
New main odor fade: Newly installed or rehabilitated mains can adsorb 80-95% of odorant in the first few weeks of operation. Industry practice: Inject 2-3× normal dosing rate for 3-6 months, conduct quarterly sniff tests, gradually reduce to normal dosing as fade diminishes. Document all fade testing and dosing adjustments for regulatory compliance.

Odorant Storage and Handling

  • Storage tanks: Stainless steel 316 or carbon steel with epoxy coating; 50-500 gallon capacity typical
  • Secondary containment: 110% of tank volume per SPCC regulations (40 CFR 112)
  • Ventilation: Outdoor storage preferred; indoor requires mechanical ventilation (explosion-proof)
  • Temperature control: Not required (THT stable -140°F to +250°F); avoid direct sunlight to minimize expansion
  • Level monitoring: Visual gauge or electronic transmitter with low-level alarm
  • Material compatibility: Use Viton or Kalrez seals; Buna-N and neoprene degrade in mercaptans
  • Fire protection: Class IB flammable liquid; ABC fire extinguisher, no smoking within 50 feet

4. Y/Z Type Odorizer Systems

Odorizer Types Overview

Three Main Odorizer Configurations: 1. Wick-Feed (historical, rarely used today): - Canvas wick submerged in odorant tank - Gas flows over wick, evaporates odorant - No moving parts (very reliable) - Poor accuracy (temperature-dependent, no flow feedback) - Obsolete except for very small systems 2. Bypass (Y-Type) Odorizer: - Small stream of gas bypasses through odorant vaporizer/bubbler - Odorant-saturated gas rejoins main flow downstream - Positive displacement or gear pump injects liquid into bypass - Flow proportional control: Inject rate ∝ main gas flow 3. Direct Injection (Z-Type) Odorizer: - Liquid odorant injected directly into gas stream - Pump (diaphragm, piston, or peristaltic) meters odorant - Atomizing nozzle ensures mixing - Most accurate and widely used modern system Y vs Z comparison: Y-Type: Simpler, less maintenance, lower capital cost, adequate for small systems Z-Type: Higher accuracy, flow computer control, better for large/varying flows

Z-Type Direct Injection System

Most common configuration for modern city gate and district regulator stations:

IMAGE: Z-Type Odorizer System Schematic

P&ID showing storage tank, pump, flow computer, check valve, and injection nozzle

Z-Type Odorizer Components: 1. Odorant storage tank (50-500 gallon stainless steel) 2. Positive displacement pump (diaphragm, piston, or peristaltic) - Flow range: 0.1-10 gallons per day typical - Materials: 316SS wetted parts, Viton seals - Drive: Electric motor or pneumatic actuator 3. Flow computer (electronic control module) - Input: Gas flow rate from turbine or orifice meter - Output: Pump stroke rate (strokes per minute) - Set point: lb odorant per MMscf (typically 1.0) 4. Injection nozzle (atomizer) - Sprays liquid odorant into gas stream - Provides back-pressure (50-100 psi typical) - Location: Downstream of meter, in turbulent region 5. Check valve (prevents gas backflow into odorant tank) 6. Level alarm (low-level switch on storage tank) Operating principle: - Flow computer reads gas flow rate (scfh or MMscfd) - Calculates required odorant injection rate (gal/day or lb/hr) - Adjusts pump stroke rate to deliver target injection - Pump injects liquid odorant through nozzle into gas stream - Turbulence ensures rapid mixing and vaporization

Odorant Injection Rate Calculation

Injection Rate Formula: R_odorant = Q_gas × D_rate Where: R_odorant = Odorant injection rate (gal/day or lb/hr) Q_gas = Gas flow rate (MMscfd or scfh) D_rate = Dosing rate (lb odorant per MMscf) Convert dosing rate to volume basis: D_rate (gal/MMscf) = D_rate (lb/MMscf) / ρ_odorant (lb/gal) For THT (ρ = 8.33 lb/gal): D_rate (gal/MMscf) = D_rate (lb/MMscf) / 8.33 Example Calculation: City gate flow: Q_gas = 50 MMscfd (average) Target dosing: D_rate = 1.0 lb THT per MMscf THT density: ρ = 8.33 lb/gal Step 1: Calculate lb/day odorant required R_odorant = 50 MMscfd × 1.0 lb/MMscf = 50 lb/day Step 2: Convert to gal/day R_odorant = 50 lb/day / 8.33 lb/gal = 6.0 gal/day Step 3: Calculate pump output (if pump runs continuously) Pump output = 6.0 gal/day / 24 hr/day = 0.25 gal/hr = 4.2 ml/min Step 4: Set flow computer dosing rate Enter: 1.0 lb/MMscf (or 0.12 gal/MMscf) into controller Controller adjusts pump speed proportionally to gas flow If gas flow doubles to 100 MMscfd: R_odorant = 100 × 1.0 = 100 lb/day = 12 gal/day (automatic adjustment)

Pump Sizing and Selection

Pump Type Flow Range Accuracy Advantages Disadvantages
Diaphragm 0.1-5 gph ±2-5% Reliable, no seals, handles slurries Pulsating flow, limited accuracy
Piston (plunger) 0.5-20 gph ±1-2% High accuracy, high pressure capability Requires seal replacement, more maintenance
Peristaltic 0.05-2 gph ±5-10% No wetted parts, easy tube replacement Lower accuracy, tube life limited
Gear 1-50 gph ±1-3% Smooth flow, high capacity Expensive, wear on gears, requires filtration

Calibration Procedures

IMAGE: Odorizer Calibration Test Setup

Shows graduated cylinder, scale, pump connections, and measurement procedure

Annual Odorizer Calibration (Required): Method 1 - Volumetric Test (field method): 1. Fill graduated cylinder with 100-500 ml odorant 2. Note initial volume (V_initial) 3. Set pump to fixed stroke rate (e.g., 60 strokes/min) 4. Run pump for measured time (e.g., 10 minutes) 5. Note final volume (V_final) 6. Calculate actual flow rate: Q_actual = (V_initial - V_final) / time 7. Calculate pump calibration factor: CF = Q_actual / Q_indicated Where Q_indicated = pump controller display 8. Enter CF into flow computer (if software adjustable) Or adjust stroke rate to achieve target flow Acceptance criteria: CF = 0.95-1.05 (within ±5% of set point) If outside tolerance, rebuild pump or replace Method 2 - Gravimetric Test (more accurate): 1. Disconnect odorant supply line from tank 2. Connect line to graduated cylinder on scale 3. Record initial weight (W_initial) 4. Run pump for 30-60 minutes at normal rate 5. Record final weight (W_final) 6. Calculate: Q_actual (lb/hr) = (W_initial - W_final) / time (hr) 7. Compare to flow computer indicated rate 8. Adjust calibration factor as needed Calibration frequency: - New installations: Weekly for first month, monthly for 6 months, then annually - Existing systems: Annually minimum, more often if high-turndown or critical

Troubleshooting Common Issues

Problem Symptom Likely Cause Solution
No injection Odorant level not dropping Empty tank, pump failure, clogged line Check level, inspect pump, clean nozzle
Low injection rate Failed sniff test, high tank level Pump wear, check valve leak, low set point Recalibrate pump, replace check valve, adjust set point
High injection rate Excessive odor complaints, low tank level Flow computer error, pump over-stroking Verify gas flow input, recalibrate pump
Erratic injection Varying odor intensity Air in pump, clogged suction filter Prime pump, clean/replace filter
Pump cavitation Noisy pump, poor performance Low tank level, plugged suction Refill tank, clear suction line
Nozzle clogging High back pressure, no flow Particulates, corrosion products Install suction filter, clean nozzle
Seal leakage Odorant dripping from pump Worn seals/diaphragm, chemical attack Replace seals with Viton/Kalrez
Maintenance schedule: Industry best practice for Z-type odorizers: (1) Weekly visual inspection of pump and tank level, (2) Monthly sniff test at downstream sampling point, (3) Quarterly check of pump calibration, (4) Annual full calibration and service (rebuild pump if needed), (5) Every 2-3 years: Replace pump seals/diaphragm preventatively.

Odorant Consumption and Tank Sizing

Storage Tank Sizing: Required capacity = Daily consumption × Refill interval × Safety factor Daily consumption: C_daily = Q_gas × D_rate / ρ_odorant Where: Q_gas = Average gas flow (MMscfd) D_rate = Dosing rate (lb/MMscf) ρ_odorant = Odorant density (lb/gal) Refill interval: 30-90 days typical (depends on access, supplier schedule) Safety factor: 1.2-1.5 (accounts for flow variations, odor fade periods) Example: City gate average flow: 75 MMscfd Dosing rate: 1.0 lb THT/MMscf THT density: 8.33 lb/gal Refill interval: 60 days Daily consumption: C_daily = 75 × 1.0 / 8.33 = 9.0 gal/day 60-day consumption: C_60day = 9.0 × 60 = 540 gallons With 1.3 safety factor: Tank required = 540 × 1.3 = 702 gallons Select: 750-gallon stainless steel tank (next standard size) Actual refill frequency: 750 gal / 9.0 gal/day = 83 days between refills Low-level alarm setting: Set at 15-20% capacity: 0.15 × 750 = 112 gallons Provides 12-day warning before empty

5. Practical Applications

City Gate Station Odorization

Typical application: Add odorant as gas enters distribution system from transmission line:

IMAGE: City Gate Station Odorization Layout

Shows transmission line, meter run, regulator, odorizer location, and distribution main

City Gate Odorization Design: System configuration: 1. Transmission line (unodorized) → City gate meter → Pressure regulation 2. Odorizer installed downstream of meter, upstream of distribution 3. Flow computer receives signal from turbine or orifice meter 4. Controller adjusts injection proportional to measured flow Design parameters: Flow range: 10-200 MMscfd (20:1 turndown typical) Operating pressure: 300-600 psig (after regulation) Dosing rate: 1.0 lb THT/MMscf Temperature: -20°F to 120°F ambient Equipment sizing: Average flow: 100 MMscfd Peak flow: 180 MMscfd (winter heating demand) Average consumption: 100 × 1.0 / 8.33 = 12 gal/day Peak consumption: 180 × 1.0 / 8.33 = 21.6 gal/day Pump selection: Capacity: 25 gal/day (116% of peak) Type: Diaphragm or piston pump Turndown: 20:1 minimum (0.5-10 gal/hr range) Tank sizing: 60-day average supply: 12 × 60 = 720 gallons Select: 1000-gallon tank (provides 83 days average, 46 days at peak) Redundancy: Install duplex pump system (one operating, one standby) Automatic switchover on pump failure Separate suction lines from common tank Monitoring: - Flow computer display (local and SCADA) - Low tank level alarm (set at 200 gallons = 17 days) - Pump failure alarm (current sensor or pressure switch) - Monthly sniff test at downstream sample point (2-5 miles from injection)

District Regulator Station

Smaller systems serving neighborhoods or commercial districts:

District Regulator Odorization: Typical flows: 1-20 MMscfd Application: Supplemental odorization or isolated district Pressure: 60-100 psig (low-pressure distribution) Dosing rate selection: If already odorized upstream: 0.5 lb/MMscf (top-up only) If new mains in district: 1.5 lb/MMscf (odor fade compensation) If sole odorization point: 1.0 lb/MMscf (standard) Equipment: Average flow: 5 MMscfd Consumption: 5 × 1.0 / 8.33 = 0.6 gal/day Pump: 0.5-2 gal/day range (peristaltic or small diaphragm) Tank: 50-100 gallon (83-167 day supply) Cost-effective approach: Use pre-packaged odorizer skid (pump + tank + controller) Typical cost: $10,000-25,000 installed Alternative: Extend odorization from upstream station (if within 10 miles) Maintenance: Quarterly sniff test (higher frequency due to smaller system) Semi-annual pump calibration Tank refill 2-3× per year (coordinate with bulk delivery)

Odor Fade Testing Program

Required for new or rehabilitated mains to verify adequate odorant reaches end users:

Odor Fade Testing Procedure (New Mains): Phase 1 - Pre-commissioning (before gas-in): 1. Flush main with air or nitrogen 2. Pressure test per ASME B31.8 3. Pre-odorize if coating/lining present: - Circulate odorized nitrogen (2-3× normal dosing) for 24-48 hours - Allows coating to absorb odorant before gas service Phase 2 - Commissioning (initial gas-in): 1. Introduce odorized gas at 2-3× normal dosing rate 2. Collect gas samples at: - Injection point (baseline) - 25%, 50%, 75%, 100% of main length 3. Sniff test each sample at 1/5 LEL (10,000 PPM) 4. Document results: Pass/fail, odor intensity (1-5 scale) Phase 3 - Quarterly testing (first year): 1. Maintain elevated dosing (2× normal) for first 3 months 2. Reduce to 1.5× normal for months 4-6 3. Reduce to 1.25× normal for months 7-9 4. Return to 1× normal after 9-12 months (if passing sniff tests) 5. Conduct quarterly sniff tests at multiple points Acceptance criteria: - ≥ 80% of panel detects odor at all sample points - No sample point < 50% of injection point odor intensity - If any point fails, increase dosing and retest in 30 days Documentation: - Sample location (address, GPS coordinates) - Sample date/time - Dilution method and final concentration - Number of panelists and pass/fail votes - Odorant injection rate during sampling - Any fade mitigation actions taken Typical fade behavior: Weeks 1-4: 50-80% fade (rapid adsorption) Months 2-3: 20-40% fade (decreasing) Months 4-6: 10-20% fade (stabilizing) Months 7-12: < 10% fade (approaching steady-state) After 12 months: Minimal fade (< 5%), normal dosing sufficient

Emergency Response - Odorizer Failure

Action plan when odorizer fails and gas is being delivered without odorant:

  • Immediate actions (within 1 hour):
    • Switch to standby pump if duplex system installed
    • If no standby, implement emergency odorization (portable injection system)
    • Notify gas control and operations management
    • Do NOT shut down gas flow (impacts customers)
  • Within 4 hours:
    • Mobilize repair technician or contractor
    • Stage replacement pump/parts
    • Conduct downstream sniff tests to assess odor level
    • Notify state PUC or PHMSA if failure exceeds 24 hours
  • Within 24 hours:
    • Restore odorization or implement temporary system
    • Conduct system-wide sniff testing (verify adequate odor at extremities)
    • Document failure mode, duration without odorization, corrective action
    • File incident report per company procedures
  • If restoration > 24 hours:
    • File written report with regulatory agency (state PUC/PHMSA)
    • Implement continuous leak patrol (vehicle-mounted FID surveys)
    • Notify emergency responders (fire department) of reduced odor
    • Consider restricting new service connections until odorization restored

Odorant Handling Safety

Hazard Risk Level Safety Measure
Flammability High No smoking, no open flames, ABC extinguisher within 25 ft
Skin/eye irritation Moderate Nitrile gloves, safety glasses, face shield for transfers
Respiratory irritation Moderate Outdoor storage, ventilation, organic vapor respirator for spills
Environmental contamination Moderate Secondary containment, spill kit, no storm drain entry
Persistent odor Nuisance Odor contamination of clothing/tools—handle in well-ventilated area

Cost Analysis

Odorization Operating Costs: Annual odorant cost: Cost_odorant = (Q_gas × 365 days) × D_rate × C_unit Where: Q_gas = Average gas flow (MMscfd) D_rate = Dosing rate (lb/MMscf) C_unit = Unit cost of odorant ($/lb) Example: Q_gas = 100 MMscfd D_rate = 1.0 lb/MMscf C_unit = $6/lb (THT bulk pricing) Cost_odorant = (100 × 365) × 1.0 × $6 = $219,000/year Additional costs: - Equipment amortization: $2,000-5,000/year (15-year life) - Electricity (pump): $100-300/year - Maintenance (annual service): $1,000-3,000/year - Sniff testing (labor + lab): $5,000-15,000/year - Regulatory compliance (documentation): $2,000-5,000/year Total annual cost: $229,000-242,000 for 100 MMscfd system Cost per customer: For 50,000 customers: $229,000 / 50,000 = $4.58/customer/year Typical residential customer uses 50-100 Mcf/year Cost per Mcf: $4.58 / 75 Mcf = $0.06/Mcf (~0.5% of typical gas cost) Conclusion: Odorization is inexpensive insurance for public safety
Best practice summary: (1) Use Z-type direct injection odorizer for city gate stations (most accurate), (2) Dose at 1.0 lb THT/MMscf as baseline (adjust for fade), (3) Install duplex pumps for critical applications (redundancy), (4) Conduct monthly sniff tests and annual pump calibration (compliance), (5) Maintain 60-90 day odorant inventory (supply chain buffer), (6) Document everything (regulatory requirement + liability protection).

Applicable Standards Summary

Code/Standard Title Key Requirement
49 CFR 192.625 Odorization of Gas Detectable at 1/5 LEL (10,000 PPM), periodic testing required
49 CFR 192.605 Procedural Manual for Operations Written procedures for odorization system operation and maintenance
ASTM D5305 Odorant Concentration by GC Instrumental analysis method for odorant level verification
AGA Operations Conference Odorization Best Practices Industry guidance on fade testing, dosing rates, troubleshooting
NFPA 58 LP-Gas Code Minimum 1.0 lb odorant per 10,000 gal propane
State PUC regulations Varies by state May be more stringent than federal minimums