Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCecil Lindsey Modified over 8 years ago
2
Fossil fuel: the remains of ancient organisms that changed into coal, oil, or natural gas Most of the energy that we use comes from fossil fuels Issues with using fossil fuels: ◦ Supply is limited ◦ Getting and using them has environmental consequences
3
Four main purposes: ◦ Transportation ◦ Manufacturing ◦ Heating and cooling buildings ◦ Generating electricity to run machines and appliances
4
Suitability of a fuel for each purpose depends on: ◦ Fuel’s energy content how much power can it produce ◦ Cost ◦ Availability ◦ Safety ◦ Byproducts of a fuel’s use
5
Energy in fuels is often converted into electrical energy in order to power machines Electricity is more convenient to use ◦ Can be transported quickly across great distances Disadvantages: ◦ Difficult to store Can’t keep it in a storage tank ◦ Other energy sources need to be used to generate it
6
Electric generator: a machine the converts mechanical energy (motion) into electrical energy ◦ Produce electrical energy by moving an electrically conductive material within a magnetic field ◦ Commercial electric generators convert the movement of a turbine into electrical energy Turbine: a wheel that changes the force of a moving gas or liquid into energy that can do work
8
Process: ◦ Burning fossil fuels release energy in the form of heat Used to boil water and produce high-pressure steam ◦ Steam directed against blades of a turbine makes turbine move ◦ Turbine is connected to an electric generator turbine sets the generator in motion generate electricity ◦ Steam from turbine directed to a condenser cools and becomes liquid water to be cycled again
10
Everything we use requires energy to produce it People in developed countries use more energy than developing countries ◦ Developed county- a county with a lot of industrial and economic activity and where people have a steady income Ex. United States and England ◦ Developing county- a county with little industrial and economic activity and little income Ex. Ecuador and Kenya
11
39% Electric power 28% Transportation 22% Industrial 11% Commercial and Residential
17
Coal formation: ◦ Remains for plants that lived in swamps hundreds of millions of years ago ◦ Layers of sediment build on top of remains ◦ Heat and pressure from Earth’s mantle transform plants into coal
18
Oil and natural gas formation: ◦ Decay of tiny marine organisms accumulate on bottom of ocean hundreds of millions of years ago ◦ Decaying organisms get buried by sediment ◦ Become heated by mantle to form complex carbon molecules ◦ Molecules break down and get trapped in porous rocks
19
Asia and North America rich in coal deposits Advantages: ◦ Inexpensive ◦ Needs little refining after it has been mined Underground mines have little environmental effects at the surface Surface mining can remove the top of an entire mountain
21
If waste rock not properly contained chemicals can leak out into nearby streams ◦ Ex. River in Colorado All coals produce sulfur joins with precipitation to produce acid rain High quality coal= less air pollution Low quality coal= more air pollution
22
Petroleum: oil that is pumped from the ground ◦ Also know as crude oil Make up fuels, plastics, chemicals Accounts for 45% of world’s commercial energy use Found in impermeable layers of rock
23
Environmental effects of petroleum: ◦ Burning releases sulfur produces smog and acid rain Smog: fog combined with smoke and other atmospheric pollutants ◦ Burning releases carbon dioxide contributes to global warming ◦ Oil spills
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.