|
adiabatic
-
The expansion
of a working gas in which heat is neither gained nor lost.
|
|
Top
|
|
alternative
fuels -
The
U.S. Department of Energy classifies the following fuels as
"alternative fuels": bio-diesel, electricity,
ethanol, hydrogen, methanol, natural gas, propane, p-series,
and solar energy.
Using these alternative fuels can help our nation
reduce its dependence on imported petroleum and improve air
quality.
Methane Hydrides is of particular interest as this source of fuel can be
found in abundance and offers real potential as working fuel.
|
|
Top
|
|
bottled
gas - Lighter
hydrocarbons, such as propane, butane, pentane, and
mixtures of these gases are liquefied and employed as
fuels.
These bottled gases, which are usually stored
in steel cylinders, make possible the use of
appliances such as cooking stoves, heaters, and
generators in localities where a centralized gas
supply is not available.
|
|
Top
|
|
biogas
-
A
mixture of methane and carbon dioxide produced by the
bacterial decomposition of organic wastes and used as a
fuel for electricity production.
|
|
Top
|
|
bio
genset -
A
generator set that utilizes biomass or bios gas as the
working fuel.
|
|
Top
|
|
BTU
- A
unit measurement of heat or energy, usually
abbreviated as Btu or BTU. One Btu was originally
defined as the quantity of heat required to raise the
temperature of 1 lb (0.45 kg) of water from 59.5° F
(15.3° C) to 60.5° F (15.8° C) at constant pressure
of 1 atmosphere; for very accurate scientific or
engineering measurements, however, this value was not
precise enough. The Btu has now been redefined in
terms of the joule as equal to 1055 joules; in
engineering, a Btu is equivalent to approximately
0.293 watt-hour.
|
|
Top
|
|
calorie
-
A
metric unit of heat measurement. The small, or gram,
calorie (cal) is usually specified in science and
engineering as the amount of heat required to raise the
temperature of 1 g of water from 14.5° to 15.5° C. The
temperature interval is sometimes specified in other
ways. The definition now generally accepted in the
United States, and standard in thermochemistry, is that
1 cal equals 4.1840 joules(J).
|
|
Top
|
|
Carnot
cycle - In
thermodynamics, a series of operations consisting of
isothermal expansion, adiabatic expansion, isothermal
compression, and adiabatic compression, which make up
the cycle of an ideal heat engine at maximum thermal
efficiency.
|
|
Top
|
|
closed
cycle -
A series closed-loop
thermodynamic operations in which the working fluid
self-contained within the engine cycles through thermal
expansion, performing mechanical work, followed by
cooling and recycling of the working fluid to repeat the
cycle.
|
|
Top
|
|
cogeneration
- This
production of electricity which uses waste heat (as in steam)
from an industrial process or the use of steam from
electric power generation as a source of heat for space
heating, water heating, or absorption chiller systems.
|
|
Top
|
|
concentrating
solar power (CSP) -
Concentrating
solar power plants produce electric power by converting
the sun's energy into high-temperature heat using
various mirror configurations.
The heat is then channeled through a conventional
generator.
These plants consist of two parts: one that
collects solar energy and converts it to heat, and
another that converts heat energy to electricity.
There are three kinds of concentrating solar
power systems: dish systems, trough systems, and
central-receiver systems.
|
|
Top
|
|
concentrators
-
There are two
basic optical systems used to concentrate sunlight lenses
and or mirrors to focus and enhance the sun's rays.
In solar applications, concentrated solar energy
is focused to heat a fluid or PV cells.
|
|
Top
|
|
conventional power generation - Electric
generation methods that produce power by the use of:
fossil fuel, large hydroelectric and nuclear
resources.
|
|
Top
|
|
diesel
cycle - The
diesel cycle is a type of
internal-combustion
engine in which heat caused by air compression ignites
the fuel. At the instant fuel is injected into a diesel
engine’s combustion chambers, the air inside is hot
enough to ignite the fuel on contact. Diesel engines,
therefore, do not need spark plugs, which are required
to ignite the air-fuel mixture in gasoline engines.
Diesel engines burn a petroleum product similar to
kerosene, jet fuel, and home heating oil.
|
|
Top
|
|
digester gas - Biogas
produced during the decomposition of organic waste,
typically ordinary manure.
This is a simple process that requires three
conditions: (1) a tank that excludes air, (2) a
constant, even temperature of 95 to 100 degrees F, (3) a
gentle stirring action. All three of these conditions mimic the conditions.
|
|
Top
|
|
DOE - United
States Department of Energy. Main government agency responsible for regulating many energy sources, gas included.
www.energy.gov
|
|
Top
|
|
electric
power systems - Systems
for the transformation of other types of energy into
electrical energy and the transmission of this energy to
the point of consumption. The production and
transmission of energy in the form of electricity have
important economic advantages in terms of cost per unit
of power delivered.
|
|
Top
|
|
electrolysis - The
producing of chemical changes by passage of an electric
current through an electrolyte to separate the hydrogen
and oxygen into separate gases.
|
|
Top
|
|
electromagnetic
radiation - The
energy waves produced by the oscillation or
acceleration of an electric charge. Electromagnetic
waves have both electric and magnetic components.
Electromagnetic radiation can be arranged in a spectrum
that extends from waves of extremely high frequency and
short wavelength to extremely low frequency and long
wavelength (see Wave Motion). Visible light is
only a small part of the electromagnetic spectrum. In
order of decreasing frequency, the electromagnetic
spectrum consists of gamma rays, hard and soft X rays,
ultraviolet radiation, visible light, infrared
radiation, microwaves, and radio waves.
|
|
Top
|
|
emissions
- The release of
pollutants and greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
|
|
Top
|
|
energy
- The
capacity of matter to perform work as the result of its
motion or its position in relation to forces acting on
it. Energy associated with motion is known as kinetic
energy, and energy related to position is called
potential energy. Energy exists in various forms,
including mechanical, thermal, chemical, electrical,
radiant, and atomic. All forms of energy are
interconvertible by appropriate processes. In the
process of transformation, either kinetic or potential
energy may be lost or gained, but the sum total of the
two remains always the same.
|
|
Top
|
|
EREN - Energy
Efficiency & Renewable Energy Network of Department
of Energy.
www.eren.doe.gov
|
|
Top
|
|
external combustion - Engines
that are designed such that the working fluids
never comes into direct contact with the heat
source, but are heated and cooled through the use of heat
exchangers.
|
|
Top
|
|
Federal
Energy Regulatory commission (FERC) -
US
government agency that regulates hydroelectric dams and
interstate commerce in oil, natural gas, and
electricity. Successor to the
Federal Power Commission, the FERC is considered an independent regulatory agency responsible primarily to Congress, but it is housed in
the Department of Energy.
http://www.ferc.gov
|
|
Top
|
|
fossil fuels - Hydrocarbon
deposits used for fuel, such as petroleum,
coal, and natural gas.
These deposits are derived from the living matter
of a previous geologic time.
|
|
Top
|
|
fuel cell - Fuel cell technology is one of the most exciting and environmentally sound advances in Natural Gas technology. These cells were first
used by NASA in the 1960's for power generation in space capsules.
The high price of fuel cell technology has limited the growth of their
implementation, but now cells are being used to generate power in hospitals, and soon vehicles may employ this technology. Fuel cells rely on the chemical interaction of natural gas and certain other metals, such as platinum, gold, and other electrolytes to
produce electricity. The only by product of a fuel cell's operation is water, which is pure enough to
drink.
|
|
Top
|
|
generator - Any
device that transforms mechanical energy into electrical
energy.
|
|
Top
|
|
genset - A
generator
set which include an engine that drives a generator.
|
|
Top
|
|
geothermal energy - Geothermal
energy is based on the fact that the earth is hotter the
deeper one drills below the surface. Water and steam
circulating through deep hot rocks, if brought to the
surface, can be used to drive a turbine to produce
electricity or can be piped through buildings as heat.
Some geothermal energy systems use naturally occurring
supplies of geothermal water and steam, whereas other
systems pump water down to the deep hot rocks. Although
theoretically limitless, in most habitable areas of the
world this subterranean energy source lies so deep that
drilling holes to tap it is very expensive.
|
|
Top
|
|
gig watt - A
unit of power equal to one billion watts.
|
|
Top
|
|
global warming - An
increase in the earth's temperature due to the use of
fossil fuels and other industrial processes leading to a
buildup of "greenhouse gases" (carbon dioxide,
methane, nitrous oxide, and chlorofluorocarbons) in the
atmosphere. It has been known that these gases
help stop the earth's infrared radiation from escaping
into space and thus function to maintain the earth's
relatively warm temperature. (This is called the
greenhouse effect.)
|
|
Top
|
|
green energy - Energy
produced from non-polluting renewable sources as
biomass, geothermal, solar, and wind.
|
|
Top
|
|
greenhouse effect
- Term,
for the role the atmosphere plays in insulating and
warming the earth's surface. The atmosphere is largely
transparent to incoming short-wave solar radiation,
which is absorbed by the earth's surface. Much of this
radiation is then reemitted from the earth at infrared
wavelengths, but it is reflected back to the earth by
gases such as carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide,
and ozone in the atmosphere. The reflected radiation
maintains the temperature of the earth in a range that
is hospitable to life. This heating effect is the basis
of the theories concerning global warming.
|
|
Top
|
|
greenhouse
gas - Any
gas that absorbs infrared radiation in the atmosphere.
Greenhouse gases include water vapor, carbon
dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), halogenated
fluorocarbons (HCdFCs), ozone (O3), per fluorinated
carbons (PFCs), and hydroflurocarbons
(HFCs)
|
|
Top
|
|
grid
- A network of conductors
for distribution of electric power.
|
|
Top
|
|
horsepower
-
A unit of power in the English system, for measuring the
rate at which an engine or other prime mover can perform
mechanical work. It is usually abbreviated hp. Its
electrical equivalent is 746 watts, and the heat
equivalent is 2545 British thermal units per hour. One
horsepower was originally defined as the amount of power
required to lift 33,000 pounds 1 foot in 1 minute, or
550 foot-pounds per second.
Three
different horsepower values are used to quote the
performance of an engine: (1) Indicated horsepower is
the theoretical efficiency of a reciprocating engine,
which is determined from the pressure developed by the
cylinders of the engine; (2) brake or shaft horsepower
is more commonly used to indicate the practical ability
of the engine, or the maximum performance, which is the
indicated horsepower minus the power lost through heat,
friction, and compression; (3) rated horsepower is the
power that an engine or motor can produce efficiently
for sustained periods of time.
|
|
Top
|
|
hybrid system - An
engine designed
to operate with solar power and another
heat source, such as internal
combustion as seen in the Hybrid Trochilic engine.
In principle, a hybrid system could provide power
24 / 7, using solar energy when the sun is available and
another energy source the rest of the time.
|
|
Top
|
|
hydrogen
fuel - Hydrogen a fuel
for the future, the simplest element composed of one proton and one electron.
It makes up more than 90% of the composition of the universe. More than 30% of the mass of the sun is atomic hydrogen.
It is the third most abundant element in the earth's surface, and is found mostly in water. Under ordinary (earthly) conditions, hydrogen is a colorless, odorless, tasteless, and nonpoisonous gas composed of diatomic molecules (H2).
When hydrogen is generated from renewable sources, its
production and use is part of a clean, cyclic
process.
|
|
Top
|
|
hydropower -
Hydropower plants
capture the energy of falling water to generate
electricity. A
turbine converts the kinetic energy of falling water
into mechanical energy.
Then a generator converts the mechanical energy
from the turbine into electrical energy.
Hydro-plants range in size from
"micro-hydro" that power only a few homes to
giant dams like Hoover Dam that provide electricity for
millions of people.
|
|
Top
|
|
independent power
producer (IPP) - Private firms producing electricity, as opposed to utility companies.
|
|
Top
|
|
internal combustion - Any
type of machine that obtains mechanical energy directly
from the expenditure of the chemical energy of fuel
burned in a combustion chamber that is an integral part
of the engine. Four principal types of
internal-combustion engines are in general use: the
Otto-cycle engine, the diesel engine, the rotary engine,
and the gas turbine.
|
|
Top
|
|
isothermal -
Marked
by changes of volume or pressure under conditions of
constant temperature.
|
|
Top
|
|
joules - A
unit of energy that determined the numerical relation
between heat and mechanical energy, or the mechanical
equivalent of heat that is equal to 1 watt-second, or 10
million ergs, or about 0.000948 British thermal unit.
|
|
Top
|
|
kilowatt (kW) - A
unit of electrical power equal to one thousand watts.
|
|
Top
|
|
kilowatt-hour - A
unit for measuring electrical energy, equal to the power
supplied by one kilowatt for one hour.
|
|
Top
|
|
Kyoto Protocol -
A Protocol, negotiated by more than 160 nations in December 1997, aims to reduce net emissions of certain greenhouse gases (primarily carbon dioxide (CO2)). Each of the participating developed countries must decide how to meet its respective reduction goal during a five-year period (2008-2012); but specific ground rules remain to be worked out at future negotiating sessions.
|
|
Top
|
|
megawatt
(MW) - One
million watts.
|
|
Top
|
|
methane
-
CH4,
a flammable, explosive, colorless, odorless, tasteless
gas that is slightly soluble in water and soluble in
alcohol and ether; boils at -161.6°C and melts at
-182.5°C. Formed
in marshes and swamps from decaying organic matter and
it is a major explosion hazard in mines.
Methane is a major constituent (up to 97%) of
natural gas, and used as a source of petrochemicals and
as a fuel.
|
|
Top
|
|
methane hydride -
A frozen lattice-like
substance, huge amounts of which underlie our oceans and
polar permafrost. This
crystalline combination of a natural gas and water
(known technically as a clathrate) looks remarkably like
ice but burns when exposed to a lit match.
Methane hydrate discovered only a few decades
ago, with little research done on it until recently.
By some estimates, the energy locked up in
methane hydrate deposits is more than twice the global
reserves of all conventional gas, oil, and coal deposits
combined. However,
no one has yet figured out how to pull out the gas
inexpensively, and no one knows how much is actually
recoverable.
|
|
Top
|
|
micro-generator -
Generating
systems less than 1 MW in size.
|
|
Top
|
|
micro-siting - A
process for identifying and qualifying site locations
for wind farms.
|
|
Top
|
|
micro-turbines - Small
combustion turbines typically less than 500kw.
|
|
Top
|
|
natural
gas - A natural occurring mixture of hydrocarbon and
non-hydrocarbon gases found in porous geological
formations beneath the earth’s surface, usually in
connection with oil deposits.
|
|
Top
|
|
Newton
- The
unit of force in the meter-kilogram-second system equal
to the force
required to impart an acceleration of one meter per
second per second to a mass of one kilogram.
|
|
Top
|
|
NREL
- National Renewable
Energy Laboratory.
www.nrel.gov.
|
|
Top
|
|
open
cycle -
A series of
thermodynamic operations in which the working fluid,
generally air, is drawn into the engine, heated to
induce thermal expansion and perform mechanical work and
at the completion of expansion is exhausted back the
atmosphere.
|
|
Top
|
|
Otto cycle - The
ordinary Otto-cycle engine is a four-stroke engine; that
is, in a complete power cycle, its pistons make four
strokes, two toward the head (closed head) of the
cylinder and two away from the head. During the first
stroke of the cycle, the piston moves away from the
cylinder head while simultaneously the intake valve is
opened. The motion of the piston during this stroke
sucks a quantity of a fuel and air mixture into the
combustion chamber. During the next stroke, the piston
moves toward the cylinder head and compresses the fuel
mixture in the combustion chamber. At the moment when
the piston reaches the end of this stroke and the volume
of the combustion chamber is at a minimum, the fuel
mixture is ignited by the spark plug and burns,
expanding and exerting a pressure on the piston, which
is then driven away from the cylinder head in the third
stroke. During the final stroke, the exhaust valve is
opened and the piston moves toward the cylinder head,
driving the exhaust gases out of the combustion chamber
and leaving the cylinder ready to repeat the cycle.
|
|
Top
|
|
parabolic
collector trough -
A solar collector
system using mirrored surfaces curved in a parabolic shape that linearly extend into a trough shape. The collector focuses sunlight on a tube running the length of the trough. A heat transfer fluid is pumped around a loop through this tube, picking up heat. The fluid then goes to a heat exchanger where it either directly heats potable water or heats a thermal storage tank. As with all concentrating solar collectors, parabolic-trough collectors use tracking systems that keep them facing the sun throughout the day, maximizing solar heat
gain.
|
|
Top
|
|
photon -
A
small unit of light energy or electromagnetic radiation.
Max Planck and Albert Einstein, Nobel Prize winners in
physics, discovered that light, which usually travels in
waves, sometimes behaves as if it were made up of a
stream of small quantities, or quanta, of energy. The
energy, E, of a photon is calculated using the
equation E = hu, where h is a
universal constant (Planck's constant) and u is the
frequency (number of vibrations per second) of the
light.
|
|
Top
|
|
photovoltaic (PV)
- A
renewable energy technology that converts the sun’s
lights, not its heat, directly into electricity.
The
solar cells are made from thin slices of crystalline
silicon, gallium arsenide, or other semiconductor
materials that convert solar radiation directly into
electricity. Cells with conversion efficiencies in
excess of 30 percent are now available. By connecting
large numbers of these cells into modules, the cost of
photovoltaic electricity has been reduced to 30 cents
per kwh, about twice the rate that the largest U.S.
cities were paying for electricity in 1989. Current use
of solar cells is limited to remote, unattended
low-power devices such as buoys and equipment aboard
spacecraft.
|
|
Top
|
|
power
- Physical force or
energy, which produces or tends to produce motion;
opposed to the weight, which is acted upon. Power
is always expressed in units of energy divided by units
of time. Two units of power are the horsepower and the
watt. One horsepower is equal to the amount of power
required to lift 33,000 pounds a distance of 1 foot in 1
minute. One watt equals the power needed to do 1 joule
of work per second. There are 746 watts in 1 horsepower.
|
|
Top
|
|
power conversion unit -
A system that
converts potential energy in the form of fuels into
electricity.
|
|
Top
|
|
power tower -
Central receiver systems, where heliostats reflect and
concentrate sunlight onto a central tower-mounted
receiver where the energy is transferred to a heat
transfer fluid such as molten nitrate salt.
This is then passed optionally to storage, and
finally to power-conversion systems which convert the
thermal energy into electricity and supply it to the
grid.
|
|
Top
|
|
Principia
Mathematica - (for short)
is a three-volume work by Isaac Newton published on July
5, 1687. It contains the statement of Newton's laws of
motion forming the foundation of classical mechanics as
well as his law of universal gravitation. He derives
Kepler's laws for the motion of the planets (which were
first obtained empirically). In formulating his physical
theories, Newton had developed a field of mathematics
known as calculus. However, the language of calculus was
largely left out of the Principia. Instead, Newton
recast the majority of his proofs as geometric
arguments. |
|
Top
|
|
public utility
commission (PUC) - State
public utility commission regulates utility industries to ensure that customers receive safe, reliable services at reasonable rates.
|
|
Top
|
|
renewable energy - Energy sources that cannot be
exhausted such as Biomass; Solar Energy; Windmill;
Geothermics; and Waterpower offer alternatives to
America's dependence on foreign oil.
|
|
Top
|
|
solar dish concentrator
system - A
parabolic dish system used to focus solar radiation onto
its focal point.
The parabolic dish is the most efficient
concentrator, and with existing, designs the most
inexpensive.
These concentrators are used primarily for high
temperature applications such as Stirling Engines for
electricity generation.
|
|
Top
|
|
solar
energy - Radiant
energy produced in the sun as a result of nuclear fusion
reactions. It is transmitted to the earth through space
in quanta of energy called photons, which interact with
the earth’s atmosphere and surface. The strength of
solar radiation at the outer edge of the earth’s
atmosphere when the earth is taken to be at its average
distance from the sun is called the solar constant, the
mean value of which is 1.37 × 106 ergs per sec per cm2,
or about 2 calories per min per cm2. The intensity is
not constant, however; it appears to vary by about 0.2
percent in 30 years. The intensity of energy actually
available at the earth’s surface is less than the
solar constant because of absorption and scattering of
radiant energy as photons interact with the atmosphere.
|
|
Top
|
|
solar thermal
energy systems - A device
that either absorbs or reflects solar light to
produce heat energy such as: dish
concentrators, power towers, parabolic collector
troughs, or flat plate solar water heater systems.
|
|
Top
|
|
Stirling cycle - A
modified form of the Carnot cycle in which all the heat
is added and rejected at the highest and lowest
temperatures reached.
|
|
Top
|
|
stray power - In
electricity , power lost by friction, eddy currents,
etc. when running a dynamo.
|
|
Top
|
|
synthetic
fuels
-
Gaseous
or liquid fuels produced from coal, shale formations,
tar sands, or renewable biomass resources such as crops
or animal wastes, and used as substitutes for petroleum
or natural gas. For example, Oil may be extracted
from certain types of shale by heating the rock in the
absence of air or oxygen—a chemical process called
pyrolysis; oil may also be extracted from tar sands by
mixing the sands with hot water and steam. Gasohol is a
mixture of gasoline with ethanol or methanol; the latter
alcohols may be distilled from waste-wood products or
crop plants. These processes remain too expensive to
compete commercially, but in the future, they may be
needed to meet increasing energy demands.
|
|
Top
|
|
thermoelectricity -
Electricity generated by the application of
heat to the junction of two dissimilar materials. If two
wires of different materials are joined at their ends
and one end is maintained at a higher temperature than
the other, a voltage difference will arise, and an
electric current will exist between the hot and the cold
junctions. This phenomenon is known as the
Seebeck effect.
|
|
Top
|
|
Trochilics - The
science of rotary motion.
|
|
Top
|
|
Trochilic
Engines - A
truly rotating piston, turbine by design that can
function as a Stirling cycle, internal combustion,
and high-pressure gas engine. This highly efficient, clean, cost effective power source
offers a solution to the worlds energy dilemma.
More Information
|
|
Top
|
|
trough system - A
type of concentrating solar power where
the sun's energy is concentrated by parabolic curved,
trough-shaped reflectors onto a
receiver pipe running
along the inside of the
curved surface. This energy heats oil flowing
through the pipe, and the heat energy is then used to
generate electricity in a conventional steam generator.
|
|
Top
|
|
Wankel
Engine - Internal-combustion
engine that uses a triangular-shaped rotor, or rotating
part, to produce mechanical energy. The Wankel engine is
powerful for its weight and size, vibrates is much less
than piston engines, has few moving parts, and can run
comparatively quietly and smoothly on different grades
of fuel. Use of the Wankel engine, however, has
been limited by the engine’s comparatively high fuel
consumption and exhaust emissions.
|
|
Top
|
|
watt - A
unit of power. One
watt equals the power needed to do 1 joule of work per
second. There are 746 watts in 1 horsepower.
|
|
Top
|
|
watt-hour
- A
unit of work or energy
equivalent to the power of one watt operating for one
hour.
|
|
Top
|
|
wind power -
Interactions
between the sun’s energy, the oceans, and the
atmosphere, produce the winds, which have been used for
centuries to turn windmills. Modern applications of wind
energy use strong, light, weather-resistant
aerodynamically designed wind machines that, when
attached to generators, produce electricity for local,
specialized use or as part of a community or regional
network of electric power distribution.
|
|
Top
|
|
wind turbine - Devices
power by wind, which produces mechanical energy.
Modern
wind turbines are propelled by one of two effects: drag,
by which wind pushes the blades; and lift, by which the
blades are moved in the same way an airplane's wing
rises on an air current. Turbines operated by lift turn
more rapidly and are inherently more efficient. Wind
turbines can be classified as horizontal-axis machines,
with their main shafts parallel to the ground, or
vertical-axis machines, with shafts perpendicular to the
ground. Horizontal-axis turbines used to generate
electricity have one to three blades; those used for
pumping may have many more. The most common
vertical-axis machines, named after their designers, are
the Savonius, used primarily for pumping, and the Darrieus, a higher-speed machine resembling an
eggbeater.
|
|
Top
|