1 2 Lectures Energy Conversion Introduction
1 2 Lectures Energy Conversion Introduction
1 2 Lectures Energy Conversion Introduction
(MSJ0200)
2011. Autumn semester
1. and 2. lectures
Introduction
Course content (1)
• Energy classification
• Sources and utilization
• Energy Conversion
• Buildings
– Thermal energy conversion in buildings, low energy and
passive houses, eco materials.
– Different heating systems, appliance of heating and
ventilations systems, district heating and local heating.
– Electrical management of buildings. Heating and
ventilation control systems.
Course content (2)
• Industry
– Thermal energy management of industry, utilization of
waste heat.
– Process energy efficiency (logistics, electrical power
management).
• Transportation
– Energy consumption of transportation.
– Emissions from transportations, directives, regulations.
• Different type of internal combustion engines,
hybrid and hydrogen cars.
Course content (3)
• Power Plants.
– Fuels for generating power (fossil, nuclear, renewable).
– Steam power plants.
– Gas turbines power plants.
– Hydraulic power plants.
– Advance fossil fuel power plants.
– Combined-cycle power plant.
– Solar power plant.
• Wind energy conversion. Waste to energy
conversion. Biomass conversion process for energy
recovery. Nuclear power technologies
Course plan (1)
29.08: 1, 2 lectures:
• Description of the course
• Introduction, history of energy conversion
• Energy classification, sources
30.08: 3, 4 lectures:
• Transportation. Energy consumption of
transportation.
• Emissions from transportations, directives,
regulations.
• Different type of internal combustion engines,
hybrid and hydrogen cars
Course plan (2)
31.08: 5, 6 lectures:
• Energy conversion. Buildings. Thermal energy
conversion in buildings, low energy and
passive houses.
• Different heating systems, district heating and
local heating.
01.09: 7, 8 lectures:
• Nuclear power technologies
Course plan (3)
02.09: 9, 10 lectures:
• Fuels for generating power (fossil, nuclear,
renewable).
• Shale gas
• Steam power plants.
13.09: SEMINAR:
• SEMINAR (2-nd part)
xxx.09: EXAM
SEMINAR
Topic:
Environmental problems, which appear
due to the energy conversion (everyone
makes a presentation, length ca 15min)
…
Introduction
• Energy conversion engineering (or heat-power
engineering) has been one of the central
themes in the development of the engineering
profession.
2 kJ
heat
2 kJ
thermal energy
Heat and Work
• In addition to using energy to do work,
objects gain energy because work is
being done on them.
–Heat ?
–Chemical
–Electromagnetic
–Nuclear
–Mechanical
Heat Energy- (internal energy)
• The internal motion of the atoms is called
heat energy, because moving particles
produce heat.
• Electromagnetic Energy
• NON-RENEWABLE:
--CAN NOT BE REPLACED IN A SHORT
AMOUNT OF TIME; LIMITED
Fossil fuels
• Coal, oil and gas are called "fossil fuels" because they have
been formed from the organic remains of prehistoric plants
and animals.
• Crude oil (called "petroleum") is easier to get out of the
ground than coal, as it can flow along pipes. This also
makes it cheaper to transport.
• Natural gas provides around 20% of the world's
consumption of energy, and as well as being burnt in power
stations, is used by many people to heat their homes.
It is easy to transport along pipes, and gas power stations
produce comparatively little pollution.
• Fossil fuels are not a renewable energy resource.
Once we've burned them all, there isn't any more, and our
consumption of fossil fuels has nearly doubled every 20
years since 1900.
This is a particular problem for oil, because we also use it to
make plastics and many other products.
Biomass
• Biomass is a renewable energy resource derived from the
carbonaceous waste of various human and natural activities.
It is derived from numerous sources, including the by-
products from the timber industry, agricultural crops, raw
material from the forest, major parts of household waste
and wood.
• Biomass does not add carbon dioxide to the atmosphere as
it absorbs the same amount of carbon in growing as it
releases when consumed as a fuel. Its advantage is that it
can be used to generate electricity with the same equipment
or power plants that are now burning fossil fuels.
• At present, biogas technology provides an alternative
source of energy in rural India for cooking. It is particularly
useful for village households that have their own cattle.
Through a simple process cattle dung is used to produce a
gas, which serves as fuel for cooking. The residual dung is
used as manure.
Wind energy
• Wind energy is the kinetic energy associated with the
movement of atmospheric air. It has been used for
hundreds of years for sailing, grinding grain, and for
irrigation. Wind energy systems convert this kinetic
energy to more useful forms of power.