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CHANGES IN ELECTRIC GENERATION

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Use the Hot Water or Flash to Steam. Currently 2700 MW capacity in US ... Beam electricity to earth-based Receiver Antenna using Magnetron at Gigahertz Frequencies ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CHANGES IN ELECTRIC GENERATION


1
CHANGES IN ELECTRIC GENERATION
  • Generation vs. Demand
  • Demand growing 3 per year
  • New Generation more difficult to build

2
Generation
  • Large, Centralized Plants (Old Way)
  • Small, Distributed Plants (New Way)

3
Large Plants
  • Environmental Issues
  • Fossil Fuels
  • Location/Siting

4
Large Plants (Cont.)
  • New Ideas
  • Wind,Solar,Geothermal,Biomass
  • Oceanic Thermal Energy
  • Extra-Terrestrial Wireless Transmission

5
WIND
  • Wind Generators currently very popular
  • More and more Cost Effective
  • Not a Cure-All - never windy when you need it most

6
Solar
  • Photvoltaics
  • Electricity Directly from Sunlight
  • Low Conversion efficiency
  • Fairly High Cost
  • Solar Thermal - Solar One
  • Could yet show some promise
  • ONLY WHEN THE SUN SHINES

7
Geothermal
  • Hot Water from the Earth
  • Use the Hot Water or Flash to Steam
  • Currently 2700 MW capacity in US
  • Capacity growing at 9 worldwide
  • Excellent for Home Use - Heat Pumps

8
OTEC
  • Extract solar heat from Ocean Water
  • Flash it to Steam for Turbine/Generator
  • Can be combined with DeSalination
  • Costly

9
Microwaves from Space
  • Large Solar Power Satellites (SPS) in Earth Orbit
  • Beam electricity to earth-based Receiver Antenna
    using Magnetron at Gigahertz Frequencies

10
  • Typical Energy Costs for Various Generation
    Sources
  • Type Installed Cost Energy Cost
  • Fuel Cells 15,000-25,000/kW 20-25 cents/kwh
  • Solar - PV Cells 6,000-8,000/kW 12-15
    cents/kwh
  • Geothermal 5,000-10,000/kW 8-10 cents/kwh
  • Wind 2,000-3,000/kW 4-6
    cents/kwh
  • Biomass 2,000-2,500/kW 3-5
    cents/kwh
  • Natrl Gas (Turbine) 1,500-1,800/kW 2-4
    cents/kwh
  • Coal 1,500-2,000/kW 1.5-2 cents/kwh
  • Hydro 2,000-3,000/kW 0.2-0.5 cents/kwh

11
Distributed Generation
  • Make Electricity where and when needed
  • Wind, Solar, Geothermal, Biomass
  • Fuel Cells
  • MicroTurbines

12
Microturbines
  • Run on Natural gas
  • 30-50 kilowatt Designs
  • Create both Electricity and Hot Water
  • Small businesses, collection of homes

13
Fuel Cells
  • Most common type PEM
  • Polymer-Electrolyte Membrane
  • Strips Electrons from Hydrogen to make
    Electricity
  • Safety/Cost
  • Where to get H2??

14
DEMAND SIDE
  • Conservation Through
  • Market Pricing
  • Efficient Products

15
Market Pricing
  • Energy Prices becoming De-Regulated
  • New Equipment to Automate Pricing
  • Smart Meters
  • Smart Appliances

16
Smart Meters
  • Talks to Electric Company
  • Records Hourly Prices
  • Tells Appliances what current Price is
  • Shops Around for a Better Rate?

17
Efficient Products
  • Smart Appliances run only when energy is
    cheapest, talk to each other
  • Superconductors
  • Cars

18
Superconducting Motors
  • Extremely Efficient - Zero Electric Losses
  • Very High Torque - 140X increase in Power Density
  • Costly?
  • Not very Rugged - Bismuth-Cu Ceramic Tape
  • US Navy Loves Them

19
Other Superconductors
  • Transformers
  • Transmission Lines
  • Potential Savings
  • Between 5 and 10 of all Electricity Generated is
    lost in Transformers and T-Lines

20
Cars
  • EVs - Electric Vehicles
  • Biggest Problem is Energy Density
  • Battery Powered - Poor Range/Heavy
  • Fuel Cell Pwrd - Hydrogen is volatile, has poor
    energy density and no delivery system, LNG has
    emissions
  • Hybrids - LEVs
  • Just appearing on Market
  • Good Next Step
  • 30 MPG SUV

21
CONCLUSIONS
  • More of the Same Old Stuff
  • More New Stuff
  • Greater Emphasis on Environmental Factors
  • Conservation is Key
  • Wireless, Wireless, Wireless

22
WEB References
  • National Renewable Energy Labs
  • http//www.nrel.gov/
  • Electric Power Research Institute
  • http//www.epri.com/
  • US Dept. of Energy
  • http//www.energy.gov/
  • Electric Vehicles
  • http//www.evworld.com/
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