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Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels
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Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Jan 01, 2016

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Page 1: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Energy, Power and Climate Change

Energy Sources and Consumption

Fossil Fuels

Page 2: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Energy Conversions

• Production of electrical power often starts with the release of thermal energy from a fuel

• Conversion of energy into work requires a cyclical process, and energy is lost to the surroundings

• Lost energy is unavailable and is known as degraded energy

Page 3: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Efficiency

efficiency =useful energy obtained

total energy in

Page 4: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Sankey Diagrams: Electrical Power

Production

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 5: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Renewable vs. Nonrenewable Energy

Sources

• Renewable resources - cannot be used up

• Examples:• Hydro (dams/tides)• Solar (Photovoltaic cells, solar heaters)

• Wind• Biofuels• Geothermal

Page 6: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

• Non-renewable resources - can be used up and eventually run out

• Examples:• Fossil fuels - coal, oil, natural gas

• Nuclear

Page 7: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Other things to consider:

• Nuclear power sources are non-renewable, but supply available can make the source effectively renewable

• A fuel can be managed in a renewable or nonrenewable way - for example, we can replant trees at the same rate that they are cut down

Page 8: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Possible sources of energy:

•Sun’s radiated energy•Gravitational energy of the Sun and the Moon

•Nuclear energy stored within atoms

•Earth’s internal heat energy

Page 9: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Energy Density:

• Can be used to compare fuels (including transportation costs)

• Energy liberated per unit mass of fuel consumed

• Measured in J kg-1

energy density =energy release from fuel

mass of fuel consumed

Page 10: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Comparison of Energy Sources

Page 11: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

World’s Energy Consumption

natural gas 24%

coal 24%

nuclear 6%

oil 38%

other 8%

Page 12: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Energy Sources used to Generate Electricity

Renewables include hydro (16.2%), combustible renewables (1.0%), and other (wind, solar, geothermal) (0.8%)

Coal 40.1%

Nuclear 15.1%

Oil 6.7 %

Gas 19.7%

Renewables 18.0%

Waste material 0.3%

Page 13: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Fossil Fuels

• Coal, oil and natural gas• Accumulations of dead matter exposed to high temperatures and pressures over millions of years

• Coal - plant matter in swamps• Oil - dead marine matter• Natural gas - by-product of oil production

Page 14: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Historical and Geographical Factors

• Industrial Revolution - large scale manufacturing

• Textiles, steam engine, iron and steel

• Increased rate of energy usage• Industries developed near fossil fuel deposits

• Growth of cities, increased cost due to transportation of fuels

Page 15: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Energy Transformations

• Solar energy converted by photosynthesis into living plant matter

• Plant matter converted to fossil fuels

• Fuel burned and converted to thermal energy

• Thermal energy converts water to steam

• Steam turns turbines

Page 16: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Flow Chart

Solar EnergyphotosynthesisChemical Energy in Plants

compressionChemical Energy in Fossil Fuels

burningThermal EnergyKE of steamKE of turbinesElectrical Energy

Page 17: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Rate of Fuel Consumption By Power Stations

•Calculate the typical rate (in kg per hour and tons per hour) at which coal must be supplied to a 500 coal MW fired power station. (Coal power stations have a typical efficiency of 35%, and coal has an energy density of 33 MJ per kg).

Page 18: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

How much power must be released from the fuel?

• You need 500 MW or 5 x 108 J s-1

• Coal is 35% efficient, so…….

efficiency =useful energy obtained

total energy in

0.35 =5x108Js−1

total energy in

Energy in = 1.43 x 109 J s-1

Page 19: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

How much coal do you need?

• If the energy density of coal is 33 MJ per kg (or 3.3 x 107 J kg-1), then:

1.43x109Js−1

3.3x107Jkg−1= 43.4 kg s−1

43.4 kg s−1 x 3600 s /hr =1.56 x105 kghr−1

1.56 x105 kghr−1 x 0.001 tons /kg =160 tonshr−1

Page 20: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Efficiencies of Fossil Fuels

Fossil Fuel

Typical Efficiency

Current Maximum Efficiency

Coal 35% 42%

Natural Gas

45% 52%

Oil 38% 45%

Page 21: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Advantages of Fossil Fuels

• Very high “energy density” (a lot of energy released from a small mass)

• Easy to transport• Cheap when compared to other sources of energy

• Power plants can be built anywhere with good transport links and water availability

• Can be used directly in the home to provide heating

Page 22: Energy, Power and Climate Change Energy Sources and Consumption Fossil Fuels.

Disadvantages of Fossil Fuels

• Combustion products produce pollution, esp. acid rain

• Combustion products produce greenhouse gases

• Extraction of fossil fuels can damage the environment

• Nonrenewable• Coal-fired plants require large amounts of fuel