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Ch 20 Sustainable Energy

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Title: Ch 20 Sustainable Energy


1
  • Ch 20 Sustainable Energy

2
Ch 20 Outline
  • 20.1 Conservation
  • Cogeneration
  • 20.2 Tapping Solar Energy
  • Passive vs. Active
  • 20.3 High Temperature Solar Energy
  • Photovoltaic Cells
  • 20.4 Fuel Cells
  • 20.5 Energy From Biomass
  • 20.6 Energy From Earths Forces

3
Conservation
  • Utilization Efficiencies
  • Todays average new home uses half the fuel
    required in a house built in 1974.
  • Reducing air infiltration is usually the most
    effective way of saving household energy.
  • According to new national standards
  • New washing machines will have to use 35 less
    water.
  • Will U.S. cut water use by 40 trillion liters
    annually and save enough electricity every year
    to light all the homes in the U.S.?

4
Utilization Efficiencies
  • For even greater savings, new houses can be built
    with extra thick superinsulated walls, air-to-air
    heat exchangers, and double-walled sections.
  • Straw-bale construction
  • Home orientation so have passive solar gains in
    winter and shade from trees in summer
  • Turn off appliances on standby - TV, printer,
    computer

5
Standby Energy Consumption
6
Energy Conversion Efficiencies
  • Energy Efficiency is a measure of energy produced
    compared to energy consumed.
  • Thermal conversion machines such as steam
    turbines can turn no more than 40 of energy in
    primary fuel into electricity or mechanical power
    due to waste heat.
  • We could be recapturing the heat and using it for
    space heating
  • Fuel cells can theoretically approach 80
    efficiency using hydrogen or methane.

7
Energy Conversion Efficiencies
  • Transportation
  • Raising average fuel efficiency in U.S. by 3
    miles per gallon would save more oil than the
    maximum expected production from drilling in
    Arctic Wildlife Refuge.
  • There are now more vehicles in the U.S. than
    there are licensed drivers.
  • In the 1970s, when oil prices rose, U.S. doubled
    auto gas mileages. Reached 25.9 mpg in 1988 but
    now down to 22.1 mpg.

8
Energy Conversion Efficiencies
  • Transportation
  • For short trips, could walk or bicycle
  • Could buy high efficiency mini car that gets 60
    mpg like the one shown in photo
  • Could buy hybrid gasoline electric car

9
Transportation Efficiencies
  • Could buy plug in hybrid car which recharges
    batteries from household current at night
  • Electricity costs the equivalent of 50 cents per
    gallon
  • Need to generate more electricity but could
    capture pollutants at the plant
  • Could buy diesel. A diesel sold in Europe
    currently gets 150 mpg.
  • A diesel plug in hybrid could make the U.S.
    entirely independent from imported oil.

10
Transportation Efficiencies
  • Fuel-cell powered vehicles are being developed
    which use hydrogen gas as fuel.
  • Produce water as their only waste product
  • Will take at least twenty years to come to market
  • Most hydrogen is currently created from natural
    gas, making it no cleaner or more efficient than
    burning the gas directly.
  • Governments in U.S. and Europe are spending
    billions on this.

11
Cogeneration
  • Cogeneration - simultaneous production of both
    electricity and steam, or hot water, in the same
    plant
  • Increases net energy yield from 30-35 to 80-90.
  • In 1900, half of electricity generated in U.S.
    came from plants also providing industrial steam
    or district heating.
  • By 1970s cogeneration had fallen to less than 5
    of power supplies.

12
Cogeneration
  • Interest is being renewed
  • District heating systems are being rejuvenated.
  • Plants that burn municipal waste are being
    studied.
  • Combined cycle coal gasification plants may be
    used in urban locations.
  • Apartment building-sized power generating units
    are being built that use methane, diesel or coal.

13
Tapping Solar Energy
  • A Vast Resource
  • Average amount of solar energy arriving on top of
    the atmosphere is 1,330 watts per square meter
  • Amount reaching the earths surface is 10,000
    times more than all commercial energy used
    annually
  • Until recently, this energy source has been too
    diffuse and low intensity to capitalize for
    electricity.

14
Solar Energy
  • Passive Solar Heat - using absorptive structures
    with no moving parts to gather and hold heat
  • Greenhouse Design

15
  • Active Solar Heat - pump heat-absorbing medium
    through a collector, rather than passively
    collecting heat in a stationary object
  • Water heating consumes 15 of U.S. domestic
    energy budget. A flat panel of 5 m2 can provide
    hot water for family of 4.

16
High Temperature Solar Energy
  • Parabolic mirrors are curved reflective surfaces
    that collect light and focus it onto a
    concentrated point. Two techniques
  • Long curved mirrors focused on a central tube
    containing a heat-absorbing fluid.
  • Small mirrors arranged in concentric rings around
    a tall central tower track the sun and focus
    light on a heat absorber on top of the tower
    where molten salt is heated to drive a
    steam-turbine electric generator.

17
Parabolic Mirrors
18
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19
Solar Energy
  • Only solar power tower in U.S. is in Southern
    California. It generates enough electricity for
    5,000 homes at cost far below oil or nuclear
    power.
  • If entire U.S. used solar towers, it would take
    up an area half the size of South Dakota (but
    less land than will be strip mined in next 30
    years to get coal).
  • Parabolic mirrors or solar box cookers can also
    be used for home cooking in tropical countries.

20
Solar Cooker
  • An inexpensive insulated box with a black
    interior and a clear plastic lid can serve as a
    solar cooker. Helps reduce deforestation and
    avoids health risks from smoky cooking fires in
    tropical countries.

21
Photovoltaic Solar Energy
  • Photovoltaic cells capture solar energy and
    convert it directly to electrical current by
    separating electrons from parent atoms and
    accelerating them across a one-way electrostatic
    barrier.
  • Bell Laboratories - 1954
  • 1958 - 2,000 / watt
  • 1970 - 100 / watt
  • 2007 - 2.50 / watt
  • 2009 - 1.00 / watt

22
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23
Photovoltaic Cells
  • During the past 25 years, efficiency of energy
    capture by photovoltaic cells has increased from
    less than 1 of light to more than 15 in field
    conditions and over 75 in the laboratory.
  • Invention of amorphous silicon collectors has
    allowed production of lightweight, cheaper cells.
  • Roof tiles with photovoltaic cells can generate
    enough electricity for a home.
  • At least 2 billion people now live without
    electricity. This could be a solution to their
    problems.

24
Storing Electrical Energy
  • Electrical energy storage is difficult and
    expensive.
  • Lead-acid batteries are heavy (3-4 tons) and have
    low energy density.
  • Metal-gas batteries are inexpensive and have high
    energy densities, but short lives.
  • Alkali-metal batteries have high storage
    capacity, but are more expensive.
  • Lithium batteries have very long lives, and store
    large amounts of energy, but are very expensive.

25
Fuel Cells
  • Fuel Cells - use ongoing electrochemical
    reactions to produce electric current.
  • Cathode () and anode (-) separated by
    electrolyte which allows ions to pass, but is
    impermeable to electrons
  • Hydrogen passed over anode where a catalyst
    strips an electron
  • Electrons pass through external circuit, and
    generate electrical current.
  • Hydrogen ion passes to cathode where it is united
    with oxygen to form water.

26
Fuel Cell
27
Fuel Cells
  • Fuel cells provide direct-current electricity as
    long as supplied with hydrogen and oxygen.
  • Hydrogen can be supplied as pure gas, or a
    reformer can be used to strip hydrogen from other
    fuels. Oxygen comes from air.
  • Fuel cells run on pure oxygen and hydrogen, and
    produce no waste products except drinkable water
    and radiant heat.

28
Fuel Cells
  • Typical fuel cell efficiency is 40-45.
  • Current is proportional to the size of the
    electrodes, while voltage is limited (1.23
    volts/cell).
  • Fuel cells can be stacked until the desired power
    level is achieved. A fuel cell stack that could
    provide all the electricity for a home would be
    about the size of a refrigerator.

29
Energy from Biomass
  • Plants capture about 0.1 of all solar energy
    that reaches the earths surface.
  • About half the energy used in metabolism.
  • Useful biomass production estimated at 15 - 20
    times the amount currently obtained from all
    commercial energy sources.
  • Biomass resources include wood, wood chips, bark,
    leaves and starchy roots.

30
Burning Biomass
  • Wood provides less than 1 of U.S. energy, but
    provides up to 95 in poorer countries.
  • 1,500 million cubic meters of fuelwood collected
    in the world annually
  • Inefficient burning of wood produces smoke laden
    with fine ash and soot and hazardous amounts of
    carbon monoxide.
  • Clean burning woodstoves are available but
    expensive, produces fewer sulfur gases than coal.

31
Fuelwood Crisis
  • About 40 of world population depends on firewood
    and charcoal as their primary energy source
  • Of these, three-quarters do not have an adequate
    supply.
  • Gathering wood is work of women and children and
    in some places it now takes 8 hours to get to
    supply and even longer to walk back with wood
    that will last only a few days.

32
Fuelwood Crisis
  • In cities, people must pay high prices for wood,
    as much as 25 of household income.
  • By 2025, if current trends continue, the demand
    is expected to be twice current harvest rates
    while supply will stay steady.
  • In some African nations, demand is already ten
    times the sustainable yield.

33
Dung
  • Where other fuel is in short supply, people often
    dry and burn animal dung.
  • Downside not returning animal dung to land as
    fertilizer reduces crop production and food
    supplies.

34
Methane
  • Methane is main component of natural gas.
  • Produced by anaerobic decomposition
  • Burning methane produced from manure provides
    more heat than burning dung itself, and left-over
    sludge from bacterial digestion is a
    nutrient-rich fertilizer.
  • Methane is clean, efficient fuel
  • Municipal landfills contribute as much as 20 of
    annual output of methane to the atmosphere. This
    could be burned for electricity.

35
Anaerobic Production of Methane
36
Methane
  • Cattle feedlots and chicken farms are a
    tremendous potential fuel source since wastes
    contain more energy than all the nations farmers
    use.
  • Haubenschild dairy farm uses manure to generate
    all their electricity. In January 2001, the farm
    saved 35 tons of coal, 1,200 gallons of propane,
    and made 4,380 selling electricity.

37
Alcohol from Biomass
  • Ethanol or methanol made from plant materials or
    diesel made from vegetable oils or animal fats
  • Gasohol - mixture of gasoline and ethanol
  • Ethanol in gasohol makes gasoline burn cleaner
    and most states require that 5 to 10 be added
    to gasoline.
  • Most ethanol now made from grain but can be made
    from any cellulosic material such as wood chips
    or straw.

38
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39
Alcohol from Biomass
  • Brazil is worlds leader in alcohol from biomass,
    mostly sugarcane waste.
  • Ethanol production growing rapidly in the U.S.
    but use of corn for fuel has increased corn
    prices by 50. Since corn is used as animal
    feed, meat, milk and egg prices have risen.
  • U.S. has 5 million flex fuel vehicles now
  • Increasing fuel economy by 12 would reduce oil
    consumption just as much as use of ethanol and
    save 10 billion in subsidies.

40
Alcohol from Biomass
  • Energy crops - such as switch grass, cattails and
    hybrid poplars could be grown on marginal lands
    specifically as energy source.
  • Low-input high-diversity fuels - mix of native
    prairie perennial species which grow well in dry,
    low nitrogen conditions and which could be
    harvested for fuel

41
Fuel from Biomass
  • Water is a worry when using ethanol as a biofuel.
  • It takes 3 to 6 liters of water to produce a
    liter of ethanol and in many of plains states
    there is not enough water to produce both food
    and fuel.
  • Biodiesel can be made from almost anything
    organic such as fat from meat or vegetable oil.
    European Union already consumes 1 billion gallons
    of biodiesel.

42
Energy from Earths Forces
  • Hydropower
  • In 1925, falling water generated 40 of worlds
    electric power.
  • Hydroelectric production capacity has grown
    15-fold but fossil fuel use has risen so rapidly
    that hydroelectric only supplies 20 of
    electrical generation.
  • Untapped potential for hydropower in Latin and
    Central America, Africa, India and China

43
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44
Dams
  • Much of hydropower in recent years has been from
    enormous dams
  • Human Displacement
  • Ecosystem Destruction
  • Wildlife Losses
  • Large-Scale Flooding due to Dam Failures
  • Sedimentation
  • Herbicide Contamination
  • Evaporative Losses
  • Nutrient Flow Retardation

45
Dams
  • Rotting of submerged vegetation kills fish,
    acidifies water, produces greenhouse gases
  • Schistosomiasis - human disease caused by
    parasitic fluke that lives in snails, which like
    the slow moving water behind dams
  • Indigenous peoples lose their lands

46
Dam Alternatives
  • Low-Head Hydropower - extract energy from small
    headwater dams
  • Run-of-River Flow - submerged directly in stream
    and usually do not require dam or diversion
    structure
  • Micro-Hydro Generators - small versions designed
    to supply power to single homes
  • Government subsidies for small scale hydropower
    resulted in abuse of water resources e.g.
    diverting small streams

47
Wind Energy
  • Estimated 80 million MW of wind power could be
    commercially tapped worldwide.
  • Five times total current global electrical
    generating capacity
  • Typically operate at 35 efficiency under field
    conditions
  • When conditions are favorable, electric prices
    typically run as low as 3 cents / kWh.

48
Wind Power
  • no fuel costs or emissions
  • generates income for farmers who rent land for
    turbines or sell electricity BUT
  • intermittent source
  • not enough wind everywhere
  • bird mortality
  • power lines needed to transmit the electricity

49
Wind Resources in the U.S.
50
Geothermal Energy
  • Geothermal Energy - tap energy from hot springs,
    geysers
  • Few places have geothermal steam, but can use
    Earths warmth everywhere by pumping water
    through buried pipes using heat pumps
  • Deep wells for community geothermal systems are
    being developed.
  • Heat from Earths crust is never exhausted

51
Geothermal Energy
52
Tidal and Wave Energy
  • Ocean tides and waves contain enormous amounts of
    energy that can be harnessed.
  • Tidal Station - tide flows through turbines,
    creating electricity
  • Requires a high tide/low-tide differential of
    several meters
  • Pelamis wave power generator - snakelike machine
    points into waves and undulates up and down,
    which pumps fluid to hydraulic motors that drive
    electrical generators. Cables carry power to
    shore.

53
  • The world's first commercial-scale and
    grid-connected tidal stream generator SeaGen
    in Strangford Lough.8 The strong wake shows the
    power in the tidal current

54
Pelamis Wave Converter
55
Ocean Thermal Electric Conversion
  • Heat from sun-warmed upper ocean layers is used
    to evaporate a working fluid, such as ammonia,
    which has a low boiling point.
  • Gas pressure spins electrical turbines.
  • Cold water is then pumped from the depths to
    condense the ammonia again.
  • Need temperature differential of about 20o C
    between warm upper layers and cooling water.

56
Ideal Scenario for World Energy Consumption 2100
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