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ENERGY SOURCES. TYPES OF SOURCES. RENEWABLE: CAN BE REGENERATED IN A SHORT AMOUNT OF TIME OR IS BASICALLY UNLIMITED NON-RENEWABLE: CAN’T BE REPLACED IN A SHORT AMOUNT OF TIME AND IS LIMITED. NON-RENEWABLE. FOSSIL FUELS NATURAL GAS COAL OIL FISSION. RENEWABLE. HYDRO SOLAR WOOD TRASH
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TYPES OF SOURCES • RENEWABLE: CAN BE REGENERATED IN A SHORT AMOUNT OF TIME OR IS BASICALLY UNLIMITED • NON-RENEWABLE: CAN’T BE REPLACED IN A SHORT AMOUNT OF TIME AND IS LIMITED
NON-RENEWABLE • FOSSIL FUELS • NATURAL GAS • COAL • OIL • FISSION
RENEWABLE • HYDRO • SOLAR • WOOD • TRASH • GEOTHERMAL • WIND • FUSION
Natural steam from the production wells power the turbine • generator. The steam is condensed by evaporation in the cooling • tower and pumped down an injection well to sustain production. © 2000 Geothermal Education Office
Like all steam turbine generators, the force of steam is used to spin the turbine blades which spin the generator, producing electricity. But with geothermal energy, no fuels are burned. © 2000 Geothermal Education Office
Turbine blades inside a geothermal turbine generator. © 2000 Geothermal Education Office
Turbine generator outdoors at an Imperial Valley geothermal power plant in California. © 2000 Geothermal Education Office
DRY STEAM POWER PLANT In dry steam power plants, the steam (and no water) shoots up the wells and is passed through a rock catcher (not shown) and then directly into the turbine. Dry steam fields are rare. © 2000 Geothermal Education Office
THE GEYSERSCALIFORNIA The first geothermal power plants in the U.S. were built in 1962 at The Geysers dry steam field, in northern California. It is still the largest producing geothermal field in the world. © 2000 Geothermal Education Office
20 plants are still operating at The Geysers. Wastewater from nearby cities is injected into the field, providing environmentally safe disposal and increased steam to power plants. © 2000 Geothermal Education Office
FLASH STEAM POWER PLANT • Flash steam power plants use hot water reservoirs. In flash plants, as hot water is released from the pressure of the deep reservoir in a flash tank, some of it flashes to steam.
Flash technology was invented in New Zealand. Flash steam plants are the most common, since most reservoirs are hot water reservoirs. This flash steam plant is in East Mesa, California. © 2000 Geothermal Education Office
In a binary cycle power plant (binary means two), the heat from geothermal water is used to vaporize a "working fluid" in separate adjacent pipes. The vapor, like steam, powers the turbine generator. © 2000 Geothermal Education Office
In the heat exchanger, heat is transferred from the geothermal water to a second liquid. The geothermal water is never exposed to the air and is injected back into the periphery of the reservoir. © 2000 Geothermal Education Office
This power plant provides about 25% of the electricity used on the Big Island of Hawaii. It is a hybrid binary and flash plant. © 2000 Geothermal Education Office
Geothermal power could serve 100% of the electrical needs of 39 countries (over 620,000,000 people) in Africa, Central/ South America and the Pacific. © 2000 Geothermal Education Office
STAR POWER www.td.anl.gov
ADVANTAGES • UNLIMITED SUPPLY • NO GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS • NO RADIATION
FUELS • DUETERIUM: COULD LAST MILLIONS OF YEARS TRITIUM IS BRED FROM LITHIUM LITHIUM: COULD LAST FOR ATLEAST 1000 YEARS
COMBINING HEAVY HYDROGEN ISOTOPES INTO HELIUM RELEASES THE GREATEST AMOUNT OF POWER en.wikipedia.org
Dueterium + Dueterium Tritium +Proton Helium + neutron
FUSION REACTIONS • To get molecules to fuse, the repulsion forces must be overcome by: • Gravity (as in stars) • Magnetic fields on plasma • Rapid pulse of energy to a fusion fuel (hydrogen bomb or a pulse of a laser, ion or electron beam)
How can a plasma be confined ? www.jet.efda.org
STAR FUSION en.wikipedia.org
PLASMA www.jet.efda.org • Plasmas occur at very high temperatures - the electrons are stripped from the atomic nuclei.(Image courtesy CEA, France)
HYDROGEN BOMB en.wikipedia.org
Magnetic confinement Particles move freely along field lines: how to stop the losses in that direction ? two solutions • pinching the field lines at the end -> reflection (“mirror”) -> linear arrangement • closing the field lines on themselves -> toroidal confinement • however: a pure toroidal field does not work • need a helical field www.jet.efda.org
TOKAMAK (MAGNETIC FIELD) www.jet.efda.org
TORUS www.jet.efda.org THE VACUUM CHAMBER OF THE TOKAMAK
MAGNETIC FIELD IN TOKAMAK www.jet.efda.org
TOKAMAK www.jet.efda.org
HEATING THE PLASMA www.jet.efda.org
R (m) 6.2 a (m) 2 VP (m3) 850 IP (MA) 15(17) Bt (T) 5.3 d,k 0.5, 1.85 Paux (MW) 40-90 Pa (MW) 80+ Q (Pfus/Pin) 10 bT, bP 2.5%, 0.7 ITER www.jet.efda.org estimated cost : 4 000 Million Euro ITER will be a nuclear machine: 1.5 x 1020 neutrons/s
What is a plasma : fourth state of Matter Increasing Temperature A plasma is electrically conducting and very reactive www.jet.efda.org