Renewable 1
Renewable 1
Renewable 1
ME 301
Department of Mechanical
Engineering
Second Law
• The second law refers to the state of energy and is reflected in a
measurement of the degree of disorder, (a measurement called entropy).
When you burn a lump of coal, (a material in a very ordered state) a
change occurs which results in a more disordered state and you can never
combine the resultant products. In summary when we use an energy
source it is not destroyed but enters a more disordered state.
Third Law
• As we mentioned the universe is winding down. The third law is that
everything does come to a stop only when the temperature is at −273.15°C
on the Celsius scale.[1] .This is called absolute zero and is where the
entropy measurement is 0, (Zero).
Renewable Energy
o Renewable energy is energy that is naturally occurring,
theoretically inexhaustible source of energy which is
generated from natural sources i.e. sun, wind, rain, tides
and can be generated again and again as and when
required.
• Direct use are solar ovens, geothermal heating, and water- and
windmills.
• Sugarcane can be grown in the same field year after year, so it is renewable. Nearly
all of Brazil's vehicles are able to use 100% sugarcane ethanol for fuel. Contrast this
with Zim, where automobile engines are only required to be able to handle up to 10/
20% ethanol.
• The "waste" from sugarcane ethanol production is called bagasse and is often used
for heating and electricity generation.
• There are many other biomass sources that fit our definition of renewable, including
animal dung, algae (for biodiesel), jatropha nut, soybean, switchgrass, and more.
• Wood is used around the world as a source of heat, particularly for cooking. Most
trees and shrubs regrow relatively quickly, so they are generally considered
renewable.
• Though most biomass sources are considered renewable, keep this in mind: if you
harvest a renewable resource faster than it regenerates, it will not be able to renew
itself over time.
• Most renewable energy sources are carbon-
free.
• When the biomass or biofuel is burned, the carbon dioxide released cannot
be any greater than the carbon dioxide it originally removed from the air.
• Therefore, the overall carbon emissions are balanced in the process, hence
the term carbon "neutral."
• Biomass that is not used for energy is considered a carbon sink and
sometimes called carbon negative since it pulls carbon out of the air and
holds onto it.
World Total Primary Energy Supply
• Interesting thing to point out is that biofuels are lumped together with
"waste." In many parts of the world, if you burn garbage to produce
heat and/or electricity, it is considered a biofuel, and thus renewable.
• I'll leave it to you to think about whether or not that is
reasonable.?
• But note that biofuels (and biomass) constitute the majority of that
"slice" of the global energy pie.
• Hydro is at only 2.4%. But where are wind and solar?
• Wind and solar's contribution was so small that it was lumped into
the "other" category, at a measly 1.5%.
• This has improved since 2015 (and was 1.1% of the total in 2012), and
in fact has been growing at an all-time high rate, but there is still a
long way to go before they make a major dent in the global energy
regime.
Non Renewable Energy
• Non-Renewable energy is energy which is taken from
the sources that are available on the earth in limited
quantity and will vanish fifty-sixty years from now.
• “Non-renewable energy is energy that cannot restore
itself over a short period of time and does diminish. ”
(Source: U.S. EPA)
• Non-renewable sources are not environmental friendly
and can have serious affect on our health.
• To summarize: coal, oil, and natural gas are fossil fuels. Even
though they all get their energy from the sun, none of them are
renewable.