1 / 45

Renewable Energy Sources II: Alternatives Part II

Renewable Energy Sources II: Alternatives Part II. Lecture #11 HNRT 228 Spring 2014 Energy and the Environment. Chapter 5 Summary. Hydroelectric Power Wind Power Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion Biomass as Energy Geothermal Energy Tidal Energy Wave Energy Today’s Focus Biomass Others.

leo-wilson
Download Presentation

Renewable Energy Sources II: Alternatives Part II

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Renewable Energy Sources II: Alternatives Part II Lecture #11 HNRT 228 Spring 2014 Energy and the Environment

  2. Chapter 5 Summary • Hydroelectric Power • Wind Power • Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion • Biomass as Energy • Geothermal Energy • Tidal Energy • Wave Energy • Today’s Focus • Biomass • Others

  3. Recall Renewable Resources • Renewable means anything that won’t be destroyed by using it • sunlight (the sun will rise again tomorrow) • biomass (grows again) • hydrological cycle (will rain again) • wind (sunlight on earth makes more) • ocean currents (driven by sun) • tidal motion (moon keeps on producing it) • geothermal (heat sources inside earth not used up fast)

  4. Renewable Energy Consumption

  5. Another look at available energy flow • The flow of radiation (solar and thermal) was covered previously • earth is in an energy balance: energy in = energy out • 30% reflected, 70% thermally re-radiated • Some of the incident energy is absorbed, but what exactly does this do? • much goes into heating the air/land • much goes into driving weather (rain, wind) • some goes into ocean currents • some goes into photosynthesis

  6. The Renewable Budget

  7. Outstanding Points from Fig. 5.1 • Incident radiation is 1741015 W • this is 1370 W/m2 times area facing sun (R2) • 30% directly reflected back to space • off clouds, air, land • 47% goes into heating air, land, water • 23% goes into evaporating water, precipitation, etc. (part of weather) • Adds to 100%, so we’re done • but wait! there’s more…

  8. Energy Flow, continued • 0.21% goes into wind, waves, convection, currents • note this is 100 times less than driving the water cycle • but this is the “other” aspect of weather • 0.023% is stored as chemical energy in plants via photosynthesis • total is 401012 W; half in ocean (plankton) • humans are 6 billion times 100 W = 0.61012 W • this is 1.5% of bio-energy; 0.00034% of incident power • All of this (bio-activity, wind, weather, etc.) ends up creating heat and re-radiating to space • except some small amount of storage in fossil fuels

  9. iClicker Question • With respects to energy, hydroelectric power represents • A remnant electric power from storms • B remnant water energy from chemical bonds • C remnant energy of chemical bonding • D remnant gravitational potential energy of precipitation • E a form of fictitious energy

  10. iClicker Question • With respects to energy, hydroelectric power represents • A remnant electric power from storms • B remnant water energy from chemical bonds • C remnant energy of chemical bonding • D remnant gravitational potential energy of precipitation • E a form of fictitious energy

  11. iClicker Question • What is true about hydroelectric power generation since 1950? • A It has always increased in MW produced • B It has always decreased in MW produced • C It has increased and decreased in total MW produced, but is now at a peak • D It has both increased and decreased in total MW produced • E The percentage of electric power produced by hydroelectric plants has generally increased over time

  12. iClicker Question • What is true about hydroelectric power generation since 1950? • A It has always increased in MW produced • B It has always decreased in MW produced • C It has increased and decreased in total MW produced, but is now at a peak • D It has both increased and decreased in total MW produced • E The percentage of electric power produced by hydroelectric plants has generally increased over time

  13. iClicker Question • What is about the maximum efficiency of energy generation using the wind? • A 20% • B 40% • C 60% • D 80% • E 100%

  14. iClicker Question • What is about the maximum efficiency of energy generation using the wind? • A 20% • B 40% • C 60% • D 80% • E 100%

  15. iClicker Question • Which state generates the most amount of electricity derived from wind power? • A Virginia • B Alaska • C Montana • D California • E Texas

  16. iClicker Question • Which state generates the most amount of electricity derived from wind power? • A Virginia • B Alaska • C Montana • D California • E Texas

  17. Biomass • Biomass is any living organism, plant, animal, etc. • 401012 W out of the 174,0001012 W incident on the earth from the sun goes into photosynthesis • 0.023% • this is the fuel for virtually all biological activity • half occurs in oceans • Compare this to global human power generation of 131012 W, or to 0.61012 W of human biological activity • Fossil fuels represent stored biomass energy

  18. Photosynthesis • Typical carbohydrate (sugar) has molecular structure like: [CH2O]x, where x is some integer • refer to this as “unit block”: C6H12O6 (glucose) has x=6 • Photosynthetic reaction: xCO2 + xH2O+ light [CH2O]x + xO2 1.47 g0.6 g16 kJ 1 g1.07 g • Carbohydrate reaction (food consumption) is photosynthesis run backwards • 16 kJ per gram is about 4 Calories per gram • Basically a “battery” for storing solar energy • usage just runs reaction backward (but energy instead of light)

  19. Photosynthetic efficiency • Only 25% of the solar spectrum is useful to the photosynthetic process • uses both red and blue light (reflects green), doesn’t use IR or UV • 70% of this light is actually absorbed by leaf • Only 35% of the absorbed light energy (in the useful wavelength bands) is stored as chemical energy • the rest is heat • akin to photovoltaic incomplete usage of photon energy • Net result is about 6%

  20. Realistic photosynthetic efficiency

  21. iClicker Question • The photosynthesis reaction • A takes in sugar and water and produces carbon dioxide and energy • B takes in sugar and sunlight and produces sugar and energy • C takes in sunlight and water to produce sugar and oxygen • D takes in sunlight, carbon dioxide and water to produce sugar and oxygen • E takes in sunlight, oxygen and water to produce sugar and energy

  22. iClicker Question • The photosynthesis reaction • A takes in sugar and water and produces carbon dioxide and energy • B takes in sugar and sunlight and produces sugar and energy • C takes in sunlight and water to produce sugar and oxygen • D takes in sunlight, carbon dioxide and water to produce sugar and oxygen • E takes in sunlight, oxygen and water to produce sugar and energy

  23. iClicker Question • Metabolic consumption of food is like photosynthesis in reverse in that • A you use oxygen and water to produce energy and carbon dioxide • B you use carbon dioxide and water to produce energy and oxygen • C you use sugar and oxygen to produce energy and carbon dioxide • D you use sugar and oxygen to produce carbon dioxide and water • E you use sugar and carbon dioxide to produce energy and oxygen

  24. iClicker Question • Metabolic consumption of food is like photosynthesis in reverse in that • A you use oxygen and water to produce energy and carbon dioxide • B you use carbon dioxide and water to produce energy and oxygen • C you use sugar and oxygen to produce energy and carbon dioxide • D you use sugar and oxygen to produce carbon dioxide and water • E you use sugar and carbon dioxide to produce energy and oxygen

  25. How much biomass is available? • Two estimates of plant production in book come up with comparable answers: • 1017 grams per year • 320 grams per m2 averaged over earth’s surface • consistent with 401012 W photosynthesis • U.S. annual harvested mass corresponds to 80 QBtu • comparable to 100 QBtu total consumption • U.S. actually has wood-fired plants: 6,650 MW-worth • in 2002, burned equivalent of 200,000 barrels of oil per day

  26. Ethanol from Corn • One can make ethanol (C2H5OH: a common alcohol) from corn • chop; mix with water • cook to convert starches to sugars • ferment into alcohol • distill to separate alcohol from the rest

  27. Does Ethanol as a Fuel Make Sense? • We put more energy into agriculture than we get out (in terms of Caloric content) by about a factor of two • at least in our modern, petrol-based mechano-farming • sure, we can do better by improving efficiencies • Estimates on energy return • controversial: some say you get out 0.7 times the energy out that you put in (a net loss); others claim it’s 1.4 times; often see numbers like 1.2 • 1.2 means a net gain, but 83% of your total budget goes into production; only 17% of crop is exported as energy

  28. Ethanol, continued • Right now, using tons of fossil fuels to get ethanol • and not clear we’re operating at a net gain • Why on Earth are we trying? • corn has worked its way into much of our foods • high fructose corn syrup • cow feed • corn oil for cooking • powerful presence in the halls of Congress • the corn lobby is partially responsible for pervasiveness of corn in our diet (soft drinks)

  29. iClicker Question • Fructose is bad for your health. • A True • B False • Sucrose is better for you than fructose. • A True • B False

  30. Food For Thought • Differences between glucose, fructose, and sucrose • And then there is ethanol

  31. Ethanol Issues, continued • Energy is a high-payoff business, especially when the government helps out with subsidies • thus the attraction for corn ethanol (which does get subsidies) • Can supplant actual food production, driving up price of food • there have been tortilla shortages in Mexico because corn ethanol is squeezing the market • after all, we only have a finite agricultural capacity • both land, and water are limited, especially water • Ethanol from sugar cane can be 8:1 favorable • Brazil doing very well this way: but corn is the wrong answer! • but lookout rain forests: can actually increase CO2 by removing CO2-absorbing jungle

  32. iClicker Question • The basic chemical formula for both glucose and fructose is C6H1206 • A True • B False

  33. iClicker Question • The basic chemical formula for both glucose and fructose is C6H1206 • A True • B False

  34. iClicker Question • Sucrose is a complex sugar made of glucose and fructose. • A True • B False

  35. iClicker Question • Sucrose is a complex sugar made of glucose and fructose. • A True • B False

  36. Quantitative Ethanol • Let’s calculate how much land we need to replace oil • an Iowa cornfield is 1.5% efficient at turning incident sunlight into stored chemical energy • the conversion to ethanol is 17% efficient • assuming 1.2:1 ratio, and using corn ethanol to power farm equipment and ethanol production itself • growing season is only part of year (say 50%) • net is 0.13% efficient (1.5%  17%  50%) • need 40% of 1020 J per year = 41019 J/yr to replace petroleum • this is 1.31012 W: thus need 1015 W input (at 0.13%) • at 200 W/m2 insolation, need 51012 m2, or (2,200 km)2 of land • that’s a square 2,200 km on a side

  37. What does this amount of land look like? We don’t have this much arable land! And where do we grow our food?

  38. Take Home Points • Hopefully this illustrates the power of quantitative analysis • lots of ideas are floated/touted, but many don’t pass the quantitative test • a plan has to do a heck of a lot more than sound good!!! • by being quantitative in this course, I am hoping to instill some of this discriminatory capability in you

  39. Other Renewable Resources • Consult text and other books for more on the other renewable resources • Note that there are few likely major players • Restricted by location and development costs • When considering most abundant renewable resources • consider the approximate value of QBtu available annually • compare to our consumption of 100 QBtu per year

  40. Renewable Resources Review • Solar (photovoltaic, solar thermal) • get 100 QBtu/yr with < 2% coverage of U.S. land area • Wind • maybe 180 QBtu/yr worldwide, maybe 25 QBtu in U.S. • Biomass • if we divert 10% of the 40 TW global budget into energy, would net 4 TW, or 120 QBtu worldwide; maybe 7 QBtu in U.S., given about 6% of land area • Hydroelectric • 70 QBtu/yr feasible worldwide: twice current development • 5 QBtu/yr max potential in U.S.

  41. Geothermal Energy • Geothermal: run heat engines off earth’s internal heat • could be as much as 1.5 QBtu/yr worldwide in 50 years • limited to a few rare sites Binary-cycleBinary-cycle power plants use moderate-temperature water (225 ºF–360 ºF, or 107 ºC–182 ºC) from the geothermal reservoir. In binary systems, hot geothermal fluids are passed through one side of a heat exchanger to heat a working fluid in a separate adjacent pipe. The working fluid, usually an organic compound with a low boiling point such as iso-butane or iso-pentane, is vaporized and passed through a turbine to generate electricity.

  42. Geothermal Energy • Dry steam • Use very hot (>455 °F, or >235 °C) steam and little water from the geothermal reservoir. • Steam goes directly through a pipe to a turbine to spin a generator that produces electricity. • This type of geothermal power plant is the oldest, first being used at Lardarello, Italy, in 1904. • Flash steam • Flash steam power plants use hot water (>360 ºF, or >182 ºC) from the geothermal reservoir. • When the water is pumped to the generator, it is released from the pressure of the deep reservoir. • The sudden drop in pressure causes some of the water to vaporize to steam, which spins a turbine to generate electricity. • Both dry steam and flash steam power plants emit small amounts of carbon dioxide, nitric oxide, and sulfur • Generally 50 times less than traditional fossil-fuel power plants. • Hot water not flashed into steam is returned to the geothermal reservoir through injection wells.

  43. Tidal Energy • Tidal: oscillating hydroelectric “dams” • a few rare sites are conducive to this (Bay of Fundy, for example) • can only generate when the tide is flowing in or out • only for about 10 hours each day • up to 1 QBtu/yr practical worldwide Tidal Energy System in France

  44. Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) • Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) • use thermal gradient to drive heat engine • complex, at sea, small power outputs

  45. iClicker Question • Are there any other alternative renewable energy resources? • A Yes • B No • Don’t forget that there is more to energy than meets the Earth

More Related