Energy Resources Alternative Sources - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 53
About This Presentation
Title:

Energy Resources Alternative Sources

Description:

Chapter 14 Energy Resources Alternative Sources Figure 14.1 Figure 14.2 Figure 14.3 Figure 14.4 Nuclear Power - Fission Fission splitting apart the atom releases ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:477
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 54
Provided by: ouim1
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Energy Resources Alternative Sources


1
Energy ResourcesAlternative Sources
  • Chapter 14

2
Figure 14.1
3
(No Transcript)
4
Figure 14.2
5
Figure 14.3
6
Figure 14.4
7
Nuclear Power - Fission
  • Fission splitting apart the atom releases
    energy
  • Currently commercially feasible
  • Uranium-235 fuels most fission reactors
  • A controlled chain reaction occurs with
    continuous and moderate release of energy
  • The energy release heats water within the core of
    a reactor
  • This heat is transferred through heat exchangers
    to outer loops where steam generation is possible
    for generating power or propulsion

8
Figure 14.5 U-235 Nuclear fission and chain
reaction
9
Figure 14.6 Conventional nuclear fission reactor
10
Geology of Uranium
  • 95 of uranium found in sedimentary (or
    metasedimentary) rocks
  • Generally found in sandstones
  • Uranium is weathered from other rocks and
    deposited by migrating ground water
  • Minor amounts of uranium are present in many
    crustal rocks
  • Granitic rocks and carbonates may be rich in
    uranium
  • Uranium oxide (U3O8) yellowcake

11
(No Transcript)
12
Extending the Nuclear Fuel Supply
  • Uranium-235 is not the only fuel useful for
    fission-reactors
  • It is the most plentiful naturally occurring one
  • Uranium-238 can absorb a neutron and converts to
    plutonium-239 and is fissionable
  • U-238 makes up 99.3 of natural uranium
  • Used for over 90 of reactor grade enriched
    uranium
  • Breeder reactor can maximize the production of
    other radioactive fuels
  • Expensive and complex

13
Figure 14.7 the nuclear fuel cycle
14
Concerns Related Nuclear Reactor Safety
  • Nuclear reactor safety is a serious undertaking
  • Controlled release of very minor amounts of
    radiation occur
  • Major concerns are with accidents and sabotage
  • Loss of coolant in the core could produce a core
    meltdown
  • This event could allow the fuel and core
    materials to melt into an unmanageable mass and
    then migrate out of the containment structure
  • Could result in a catastrophic release of
    radiation into the environment
  • Reactors must be located away from active faults

15
Figure 14.8 Three Mile Island Reactors
16
Concerns Related to Fuel Handling
  • Mining and processing of uranium ore is a
    radioactive hazard
  • Miners are exposed to higher levels of
    radioactivity than the general population
  • Tailings piles are exposed to weather and the
    uranium is mobilized into the environment
  • Plutonium is both radioactive and chemically
    toxic
  • Easy to convert into nuclear weapons material
  • Uranium (enriched) is serious security problem

17
Figure 14.9 Locations of U.S. uranium reserves
18
Radioactive Wastes
  • Energy produced by nuclear fission produces
    radioactive wastes
  • Difficult to treat
  • No long-term, permanent storage or disposal sites
    in operation
  • Nuclear power plants are decommissioned once
    operations cease
  • Expensive to decommission these plants
  • Abundant radioactive contaminated material
    associated with these plants that must be
    permanently stored somewhere and safely

19
Figure 14.10
20
Risk Assessment and Risk Projection
  • No energy source is risk-free with acceptable
    risk
  • 8 of U.S. energy is supplied by nuclear power in
    2002
  • Nuclear-plant cancellation is not without its
    costs
  • Nuclear plants have lower fueling and operating
    costs than coal-fired plants
  • Reliance on nuclear power varies widely
  • Different people weigh the pros and cons of
    nuclear fission power in different ways

21
Figure 14.11 U.S. nuclear power plants
22
Figure 14.12 Percentage of electricity generated
by nuclear fission varies greatly by country
23
Nuclear Power - Fusion
  • Nuclear fusion is the opposite of nuclear fission
  • Sun is a gigantic fusion reactor
  • Fusion is a cleaner form nuclear power than
    fission
  • Fusion involves combining smaller nuclei to
    form larger ones
  • Can produces abundant energy
  • Hydrogen is plentiful and is the raw material
    required
  • Fusion difficult to achieve given current
    technology
  • Theoretical not yet economically attained

24
Figure 14.13 One nuclear fusion reaction
25
Solar Energy
  • Abundant solar energy reaches the earths surface
  • Be dissipated in various ways
  • Solar energy is free, clean, and a renewable
    resource
  • Limitations are latitude and climate
  • Solar Heating
  • Passive solar heating no mechanical assistance
  • Active solar heating mechanical circulation of
    solar-heated water
  • Solar Electricity
  • Photovoltaic cells

26
Figure 14.14 Distribution of solar energy
27
Fig. 14.15 Solar heating
28
Figure 14.16 A solar cell for the generation of
electricity
29
Figures 14.17 a and b
30
Figures 14.18 a and b
31
Geothermal Power
  • The earth contains a great deal of heat, most of
    it left over from its early history, some
    generated by decay of radioactive elements in the
    earth
  • Interior of the earth is very hot
  • Abundant source of heat and hot water
  • Magma rising into the crust bring abundant heat
    up into the crust as geothermal energy
  • Heat escaping from the magma heats water and the
    water convectively circulates

32
Figure 14.19 Geothermal energy
33
Figure 14.20 Lone Star Geyser, Yellowstone
34
Figure 14.21 Geothermal power plants worldwide
35
Geothermal Power
  • Applications of Geothermal Energy
  • Circulating geothermal water (not steam yet)
    through buildings to heat them
  • Use the hot geothermal water to raise the
    temperature of other water to reduce cost of
    heating that water
  • Geothermal water (stream) can be used to run
    electric generators
  • Environmental Considerations
  • Some locations have sulfur gases in the
    geothermal fluids
  • Other chemical (caustic) elements may be present
    that can clog geothermal circulation systems

36
Figure 14.22 The Geysers geothermal power complex
37
Figure 14.23 Mammoth Terraces, Yellowstone
38
Limitations on Geothermal Power
  • First, most geothermal fields have limited life
    times and taper off
  • Second, geothermal fields are stationary not
    mobile
  • Third, not many geothermal sites are suitable for
    energy production

39
Alternative Geothermal Sources
  • Many areas away from plate boundaries have high
    geothermal gradients
  • These areas contain hot-dry-rock type geothermal
    resources
  • Deep drilling into such rocks may produce
    appreciable amounts of geothermal energy

40
Figure 14.24
41
Hydropower
  • Falling or flowing water has long been used to
    produce energy for humans
  • Hydroelectric power produces less than 5 of U.S.
    energy requirement
  • Typically, a stream is dammed and the discharge
    is regulated to produce electricity
  • Hydropower is clean and non-polluting
  • Hydropower is renewable as long as streams have
    water flowing in them

42
Figure 14.25
43
Figure 14.26
44
Figure 14.27
45
Limitations on Hydropower Development
  • Reservoirs tend to
  • Silt up
  • Increase surface area exposed to evaporation
  • Destroy habitats
  • Encourage earthquakes
  • Expensive to build
  • Reservoirs are stationary power sources

46
Tidal Power and Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion
  • Limited energy production possible
  • Not enough difference in high-tide versus
    low-tide displacement of water (only about 1
    meter difference)
  • Most economic potential requires about 5 meters
    difference
  • Ocean thermal energy conversion (OTEC) is another
    clean, renewable technology. It exploits the
    temperature difference between warm surface water
    and the cold water at depth

47
Figure 14.28 Tidal-power generation
48
Figure 14.29 Ocean thermal energy conversion
49
Wind Energy
  • The winds are ultimately powered by the sun, and
    thus wind energy can be viewed as a variant of
    solar energy
  • Clean and renewable energy resource
  • Many technological improvements have increased
    the energy production from windmills
  • Areas of best wind generation potential tend to
    be far from population centers that would benefit
    from them
  • Wind Farms are large scale operations producing
    about 1 megawatt per windmill
  • Abundant small scale windmills involve small wind
    turbines lifting water on a ranch or farm

50
Figure 14.30 The windiest places in the United
States
51
Figure 14.31 Art driven by wind, Palm Springs,
California
52
Figure 14.32 Wind power capacity
53
Biomass
  • Biomass refers to the total mass of all the
    organisms living on earth
  • Biomass energy uses discarded waste material that
    is burned as a fuel to produce energy
  • Biomass fuels include wood, paper, crop waste,
    and other combustible waste
  • Alcohol, as a fuel, is produced from grains, such
    as corn
  • Mixed with gasoline to form gasohol
  • Qualifies as a renewable resource
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com