Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

47
History of Science Course Prof. Mika Sillanpää ADVENTURE IN ENERGY presented by Thuy Duong Pham Mikkeli, 17.07.2008

Transcript of Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Page 1: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

History of Science Course

Prof. Mika Sillanpää

ADVENTURE IN ENERGY

presented by Thuy Duong Pham

Mikkeli, 17.07.2008

Page 2: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

ADVENTURE IN ENERGY

••I. A Brief History of Energy

•II. Energy Issues of Contemporary Age

•III. Towards a Sustainable Energy Future

Page 3: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

I. A Brief History of Energy

Page 4: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Our first energy sources

Page 5: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

1880: Coal powered a steam

engine attached to the world’s 1st

electric generator.

Coal powered-steam engine

provided a landmark in industrial

development in Europe.

•1885 -1950: The Golden Age of

Coal

Coal

Page 6: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Hydropower

•1882: The first hydroelectric station opened in Wisconsin.

Page 7: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Petroleum oil

••1859: Edwin Drake first drilled for oil in U.S.

•Kerosene used for lighting had been the main oil product.

•1890: Mass production of automobiles began, creating

demand for gasoline.

•1951-present: Oil has given us most of our energy.

Page 8: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Nuclear power (fission)

•1942: Scientists produced nuclear energy in a sustained

nuclear reaction.

•1957: The first commercial nuclear power plant began

operating.

Page 9: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

II. Energy Issues of Our Age

Page 10: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Energy consumption per capita through history

(unit: kcal/day)

Source link: http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/jwh/14.4/images/christian_fig01a.gif

Page 11: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

World primary energy use, by energy sources (2007)

Source link: http://www.interacademycouncil.net/Object.File/Master/12/027/LTW1-

3.jpg

Page 12: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

:

Source link: http://www.urbanoptions.org/RenewableEnergy/FossilFuelsAShortBlip.htm

Page 13: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Coal formation

Fossil fuels

formation

Page 14: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

The Olduvai Theory of Industrial Civilization

Source link:

http://dieoff.org/page125.htm

From the caves, to the Moon, to the caves

Page 15: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Current Energy Issues

Fossil fuel related issues:

•Resource depletion

•Environmental pollution

•Climate change

•Acid rain

Nuclear power related issues:

•Safety of operation

•Plant decommisioning cost

•Radioactive wastes disposal

•Thermal pollution

•Threat of nuclear weapons

Page 16: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Something to think about…

••Is there still any hope for future?

•How can we make a transition to a more

sustainable energy future?

Page 17: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

II. Towards a Sustainable Energy Future

••Reducing energy waste (conservation)

•Improving energy efficiency

•Using renewable energy

•Shifting from large, centralized macropower systems to

smaller, decentralized micropower systems.

* Hydrogen - fuelcell, fusion, Earth resonance?

Page 18: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Reducing energy waste

Four widely used devices waste large amounts of energy:

•Incandescent light bulb: 95% is lost as heat.

•Internal combustion engine: 94% of the energy in its fuel is

wasted.

•Nuclear power plant: 92% of energy is wasted through

nuclear fuel and energy needed for waste management.

•Coal-burning power plant: 66% of the energy released by

burning coal is lost.

(G. Tyler Miller Jr., 2007)

Page 19: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Improving energy efficiency

Benefits:

•Prolongs fossil fuel supplies

•Low cost

•Reduces pollution and environmental degradation

•Buys time to phase in renewable energy

Page 20: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Saving energy and improving energy efficiency

•Producing both heat and electricity from one energy

source (industry)

•Using more energy-efficient electric motors and lighting.

•Increasing fuel efficiency and making vehicles from

lighter and stronger materials (transportation).

•Getting heat from the sun, superinsulating them, and

using plant covered green roofs.

•Saving energy in existing buildings by insulating them,

plugging leaks, and using energy-efficient heating and

cooling systems, appliances, and lighting.

Page 21: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Using renewable energies

•Solar power

•Bioenergy

•Wind power

•Hydropower

•Geothermal energy

Page 22: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Renewable energy revolution

••The European Union aims to get 22% of its electricity from renewable

energy by 2010.

•Costa Rica gets 92% of its energy from renewable resources.

•China aims to get 10% of its total energy from renewable resources by

2020.

• In 2004, California got about 12% of its electricity from wind and plans

to increase this to 50% by 2030.

•Denmark now gets 20% of its electricity from wind and plans to

increase this to 50% by 2030.

•Brazil gets 20% of its gasoline from sugarcane residue.

Page 23: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Heating buildings and water with Solar energy

•We can heat buildings by orienting them toward the sun (passive) or

by pumping a liquid such as water through rooftop collectors (active).

Page 24: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Cooling house naturally

•Roofs covered with plants, built from a blend of light-

weight compost, mulch and sponge-like materials that hold

water.

••Taking advantages of

breezes.

•Shading them.

•Having light colored or

green roofs.

Page 25: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Generating electricity with Solarcells

Page 26: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Nanosolar powersheet

The new dawn of solarRevolution solar energy:

•One of the largest inhibitors

to cheap solar power has

always been the high cost

of solar panels (due to their

thick glass, framing, and

expensive silicon).

•San Jose-based Nanosolar,

Inc. appears ready to

eliminate these barriers with

solar technology that

utilizes thin sheets of non-

silicon components that

reduce the production costs

by over 90% and decreases

the thickness by 99% (the

Nanosolar PowerSheets Innovation of the year 2007

Page 27: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Nanosolar is on track to make solar electricity:

•cost-efficient for ubiquitous deployment

•mass-produced on a global scale

•available in many versatile forms.

Page 28: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Generating electricity from Wind

•Wind power is a promising energy resource

because it is abundant, inexhaustible, widely

distributed, cheap, clean, and emits no greenhouse

gases.

•Much of the world’s potential for wind power

remains untapped.

•Capturing only 20% of the wind energy at the

world’s best energy sites could meet all the world’s

energy demands.

Page 29: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Generating electrictity from Wind

•Wind turbines can be used individually to produce electricity.

They are also used interconnected in arrays on wind farms.

Page 30: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Producing energy from biomass

•Plant materials and animal

wastes can be burned to

provide heat or electricity or

converted into gaseous or

liquid biofuels.

•The major advantages of

biofuels are:

•Crops used for production can

be grown almost anywhere.

•There is no net increase in

CO2 emissions.

•Widely available and easy to

store and transport.

Page 31: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Make fuel from wastes

••Transform landfill methane,

animal manure, or straw and

other agricultural wastes

into fuel.

•These produce energy without

competing with food

production.

•Methane capture reduces

emissions of a greenhouse gas

25 times more potent than

CO2.

Waste recycling/incineration plant

at Cergy Pontoise, near Paris, France

SourceLink:

http://europa.eu.int/comm/energy_transport/atlas/htmlu/munwaste.html

Page 32: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Biogas production from wastes

Source link: http://www.makinemekanik.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/09/biogas-cycle.JPG

Page 33: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Hydropower

Source link: http://hydropower.inel.gov/hydrofacts/hydropower-

facilities.shtml

Microhydropowe

r

Page 34: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Geothermal energy

•Geothermal energy consists of heat stored in soil, underground

rocks, and fluids in the earth’s mantle.

•We can use geothermal energy to produce electricity.

Page 35: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Source: Micropower-The Next Electrica

Era

Worldwatch, 2000

Page 36: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Future Energy Systems for the 21st Century

Source link : http://www.ihi.co.jp/ihi/technology/cleanenergy/21century-e.html

Future energy

technology?

Page 37: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Source link:

http://www.aacg.bham.ac.uk/images/hydrogen/H_from_renewables.JPG

Hydrogen from Renewable Sources

Page 38: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Hydrogen and fuelcell

•Fuel-efficient vehicles

powered by a fuel cell that

runs on hydrogen gas are

being developed.

•Combines hydrogen gas

(H2) and oxygen gas (O2)

fuel to produce electricity

and water vapor

(2H2+O2 • 2H2O).

•Emits no air pollution or CO2

if the hydrogen is produced

from renewable-energy

sources.

Page 39: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Nuclear Fusion

••A possible source

of energy in the

distant future:

clean and

abundant.

•Fusion could

become the

dominant source

of electricity on

Earth in a century

or so. Source link: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6165932.stm

Page 40: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

JET and ITER

JET (Joint European Torus

)

The star of Europe that can

produce plasma.

ITER

The International Thermonuclear

Experimental Reactor projecthttp://www.iter.org

Page 41: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Cold electricity – Tesla’s lost dream

Earth Resonance Technology

Free energy for people

Link: http://fuel-efficient-vehicles.org/tesla-flying-machine/Tesla-biography-Nikola.php

Page 42: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

What can we do, individually?

•Buy the most energy-efficient homes,

lights, cars, and appliances available.

•Look for electronics that are

rechargeable.

•Turn off lights, TV sets, computers, and

other electronic equipment when they are

not in use.

•Walk or ride a bicycle for short trips, or

take public transportation for longer ones.

•Use natural cooling (shading tree,

opening window…)

Page 43: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Efficiencity (UK)

Link:

http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/files/efficiencity/index.html

Page 44: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

The RuralZED Zero Emission Home

Link:

http://www.ruralzed.com/

Page 45: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

MASDAR

City of the future

•Zero-carbon

•Zero-waste

•Sustainable transport

•Local, sustainable materials

•Sustainable food, water

•Habitat and wildlife

•Equitty and fair trade

•Health and happiness

•Culture and heritage

Video link:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWVsi0UtmgI

Page 46: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

Thank you for your attention!

Together, we build!

Page 47: Adventure in energy (history, present, future)

References

•Energy Information Administrationhttp://www.eia.doe.gov/

•MAST Workshop, Energy http://matse1.mse.uiuc.edu/~tw/energy/energy.html

•A short history of energyhttp://www.ucsusa.org/clean_energy/fossil_fuels/a-short-

history-of-energy.html

•The Olduvai Theory: Sliding Towards a Post-Industrial Stone Age

http://dieoff.org/page125.htm

The Olduvai theory and catastrophic

consequenceshttp://www.energybulletin.net/node/45518

•G. Tyler Miller Jr. Sustaining the Earth: An Integrated Approach, 2007

•Sustainable Energy Options: http://eeru.open.ac.uk/natta/energy.html#7

•Micropower-The Next Electrica Era Worldwatch, 2000

•Nanosolar: http://www.nanosolar.com/

•Hydrogen from renewablesourceshttp://www.aacg.bham.ac.uk/images/hydrogen

•Horizon fuelcell: http://www.horizonfuelcell.com/

• ITER http://www.iter.org/

•RuralZED: http://www.ruralzed.com/

•Efficiencity: http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/files/efficiencity/index.html

•Masdar – Green Utopia in the

deserthttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWVsi0UtmgI