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Energy

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75% of energy in crude oil lost during refining, transportation, storage, ... Oil is used primarily for transportation and heating ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Energy


1
Energy
2
Definitions
  • Work application of force through a distance,
    measured in newtons (kg/m/s)
  • Energy capacity to do work measured in joules
    (newtons/meter)
  • Power rate of flow of energy, measured in watts
    (joules/s)

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Current energy sources
  • Fossil fuels account for 70 of all energy use
    globally (see piechart)
  • Average p/c energy use in the US is more than 300
    GJ/year (60 barrels of oil) less than 1 GJ in
    poor countries
  • Japan, W European countries have standards of
    living comparable or higher than the US, but use
    much lower amounts of energy

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Energy use
  • 36.5 of US energy use consumed by industry
    (mining, chemical, plastics, construction
    materials, foods, etc.)
  • Remainder utilized by residential and commercial
    buildings and transportation (see figure)

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Efficiency and waste
  • Natural gas is most efficient fuel (10 lost in
    shipping and processing) and combustion
    generates least amount of CO2
  • 2/3 of energy in coal lost in conversion to
    electricity and enormous amounts of air
    pollution are generated
  • 75 of energy in crude oil lost during refining,
    transportation, storage, marketing, and combustion

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Fossil fuels
  • Fossilized remains of living organisms, buried in
    sediments millions of years ago
  • Concentrated and transformed by high pressures
    and temperatures into coal, oil, and gas
  • Since they take so long to form, considered
    non-renewable resources

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Coal
  • Ten times more extensive all other fossil fuels
    combined
  • Can be 100 m thick, extend across tens of
    thousands of square kilometers that were once
    vast swampy forests
  • Enormous reserves in N America, Europe, and Asia
    very little in Africa and Latin America
  • Surface (strip) mining is safest for workers, but
    ecologically devastating
  • Coal accounts 83 of electric power production in
    the US
  • Coal burning releases half of the industrial CO2
    in the US each year and large amounts of other
    pollutants

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Oil
  • 2/3 of all known oil reserves in Middle East
  • Oil is used primarily for transportation and
    heating
  • Oil drilling is less hazardous to environment
    than coal mining, but source of significant ocean
    pollution
  • Around 3-6 million metric tons of oil are
    discharged into worlds oceans each year about
    half from tankers and half from deliberate
    dumping of used motor oil

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Tar sands
  • Mixture of sand and bitumen (tar) excavated and
    extracted using steam
  • Largest deposits in Canada and Venezuela
  • Deep deposits can be heated and pumped out using
    superheated steam
  • Excavation and refining of tar sands produces
    enormous amounts of toxic sludge, greenhouse
    gases, and contaminated surface water as well as
    extensive forest destruction

17
Oil shales
  • Oil shales are sedimentary rock mixed with
    kerogen (a solid hydrocarbon)
  • Abundant deposits in Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming
  • Like tar sands, oil shales can be heated,
    liquefied, and pumped out
  • Also generates extensive waste products
  • Abandoned after oil prices dropped

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Natural gas
  • 23 of global energy production
  • Produces half as much CO2 as coal
  • Abundant supplies in Middle East, former Soviet
    Union
  • Difficult to ship and store expensive
    infrastructure necessary to deliver it to markets

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Nuclear Power
  • Uranium235 is bombarded by neutrons causing
    nuclear fission and release of energy
  • Failure of coolant pumps can result in meltdown
    and release of deadly radioactive material
  • Production of uranium fuel and spent fuel rods
    generates enormous amounts of radioactive wastes
  • Monitored, retrievable storage is believed to be
    the best solution to radioactive wastes

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Energy conservation
  • Gas mileage (13 mpg in 1975) has doubled in
    response to federal regulations and rising oil
    prices
  • Additional improvements may yield even better
    mileages (up to 72 mpg)
  • Household energy losses can be reduced by better
    insulation, energy efficient appliances, passive
    solar heating, and other measures (see table p.
    285)

25
Solar energy
  • Passive heat absorption (thick walls of
    stone/adobe) is simplest and oldest use of solar
    energy
  • Active solar systems pump a heat absorbing fluid
    medium through a small collector heat can be
    stored in rocks or water
  • Parabolic mirrors can be used to concentrate
    solar energy to generate high temperatures
  • Photovoltaic cells use thin silicon sheets to
    convert solar energy directly into electrical
    current

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Energy storage methods
  • Alternative energy sources must be able to store
    large amounts of energy produced during peak
    periods for off-peak use
  • Traditional lead-acid batteries have limited
    energy storage ability and are toxic to
    manufacturing workers
  • One solution is to use energy to pump water to an
    elevated reservoir downhill movement converted
    to electricity as needed by turbine generators

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Fuel cells
  • Use hydrogen (which can easily be stripped of an
    electron) to generate electrical charge
  • Storage of hydrogen is difficult and dangerous
  • Alternatively, hydrogen can be stripped from
    fuels or biomass
  • Can potentially have quiet, clean operation with
    minimal waste products (water)
  • Could possibly be an important fuel source for
    vehicles and electronic appliances

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Biomass
  • Primary source of heating and cooking for
    thousands of years
  • 95 of energy use in many poorer countries
  • Use complicated by inefficient burning, and smoke
    and carcinogen emissions
  • Firewood collection has led to extensive
    deforestation in some areas

33
Dung and methane
  • Animal manure can be used as a fuel, but most the
    the potential heat and nutrients are wasted using
    open air burning
  • Manure can be converted more efficiently into
    methane gas (a highly efficient fuel) residual
    sludge can be used as fertilizer

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Alcohol
  • Plants can be converted to alcohol in form of
    ethanol (grain alcohol) or methanol (wood
    alcohol)
  • Can be used as an automobile fuel directly or in
    combination with gasoline (gasohol)
  • Methanol (wood alcohol) burns at a lower
    temperature than gasoline or diesel eliminating
    the necessity of a radiator for cars

36
Hydropower
  • Energy source since ancient times, ¼ of all
    energy generation today
  • 99 of electricity production in Norway
  • Much of hydropower energy produced in enormous
    dams, but has significant social and
    environmental impact displacement, reduced
    sediment, disease

37
Wind energy
  • Expensive storage during peak production times to
    offset nonwindy periods
  • More blades best in low winds, but more
    vulnerable to breakage during storms
  • Too far from residential areas to cause much
    noise or sight impact

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Other energy sources
  • Geothermal sources can produce steam or hot
    water limited to areas with volcanic activity
  • Pumping through deeply buried pipes can extract
    enough heat even in the absence of active vents
  • Tides can also be used for energy, but
    complicated by variable tidal periods, saltwater
    inundation of aquifers, destruction of habitat
    for aquatic species and migrating shorebirds, and
    heavy siltation
  • Experiments are also underway to utilize wave
    energy

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