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How Electricity is generated… A force is needed to push the blades of a turbine Turbine keeps a generator turning Electromagnet produces electrical current.

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Presentation on theme: "How Electricity is generated… A force is needed to push the blades of a turbine Turbine keeps a generator turning Electromagnet produces electrical current."— Presentation transcript:

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2 How Electricity is generated… A force is needed to push the blades of a turbine Turbine keeps a generator turning Electromagnet produces electrical current

3 Traditional energy production (Fossil Fuels)

4 Combustion of Fossil Fuels Hydrocarbon + O 2  CO 2 + H 2 O

5 Benzene – C 6 H 6 (liquid) Examples: Methane (CH 4 ) – small – Gas at room temp. Benzene (C 6 H 6 ) – medium - Liquid Paraffin (C x H x ) – large - Solid

6 UraniumUranium Pellets Fuel Rod Assemblies NUCLEAR ENERGY

7 Nuclear Fission Energy within the nucleus of an atom is more than 1 million times stronger than the chemical bonds between atoms. FUEL = URANIUM (nonrenewable metal) Uranium atoms are bombarded with neutrons that cause the nucleus to split open and energy is released.

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9 How Electricity is Produced from Conventional Nuclear Fission

10 Nuclear Energy Advantages 1.Energy is very concentrated in the Uranium (one pellet = 1780 lbs of coal = 149 gallons of oil!) 2.Non-polluting – only steam, not smoke Disadvantages 1.Disposal of hazardous waste 2.Can be dangerous – meltdown or weapons

11 Low-Level Radioactive waste High-Level Radioactive waste

12 Storage Options - Temporary/On-Site Storing Spent Fuel in wet and dry storage Temporary storage includes above- ground storage casks

13 Solar Energy Passive Solar Heating – uses Sun’s solar energy to heat something directly

14 Active Solar Heating – Energy from the Sun is gathered by collectors and used to heat water or heat a building.

15 Photovoltaic Cells – Energy from the Sun is gathered by collectors and used to heat water or heat a building.

16 Solar Power Tower – Heliostats (mirrors) focus sun’s light on a central receiving tower. A liquid is heated inside of a pipe. Hot pipe comes in contact with water & makes steam

17 Solar Energy Advantages 1.“Fuel” is free (the sun) 2.Provides endless heat & light 3.It’s non-polluting Disadvantages 1.Expensive to install/build 2.Need battery back up for night & cloudy days 3.Land-intensive

18 Wind Farm – large array of wind turbines that collectively generate electricity - Sun & convection produce wind

19 Wind Energy Advantages 1.“Fuel” is free (sun  wind) 2.Meet 10-15% of U.S. energy needs 3.It’s non-polluting Disadvantages 1.Land-intensive 2.Large & Noisy 3.Hazardous to birds (flyways) 4.Consistent wind is on shoreline & mountainsides

20 Hydroelectric Energy – Energy produced from moving water

21 Advantages 1.“Fuel” is free (sun  water cycle) 2.Water storage 3.High energy storage 4.Non-polluting Disadvantages 1.Sediments build up behind the dams 2.Reservoir floods land 3.Disrupts fish migration 4.Too much development to build new dams Hydroelectric Energy

22 Geothermal Energy – Groundwater that has been heated by energy within Earth’s crust Geothermal Heat-pump

23 Geothermal Energy Advantages 1.“Fuel” is free (hot water) 2.There is an abundance of hot water underground 3.Non-polluting Disadvantages 1.Steam in one location only lasts 10-15 years 2.Will not produce a high percentage of power 3.Overuse & reinjection may deplete hot water

24 Tidal Energy – Energy produced from rising & falling tidal currents

25 Tidal Energy Advantages 1.“Fuel” is free (moon  tides) 2.The tides are a steady source of energy 3.It’s non-polluting Disadvantages 1.Limited use (area must have > 8 ft tidal range) 2.Block boat traffic 3.Hazardous to marine organisms 4.Corrosion in salt water


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