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Fossil Fuels Chapter 19
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http://www.anwr.org/gallery/pages/03-ANWRtoUSmap.htm
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1. Natural Gas What it is: –Mixture of methane (50-90%), heavier hydrocarbons (ethane, propane, butane) and small amounts of H 2 S (highly toxic) Properties: –Highly flammable; transportation difficult. Done in pipelines –Cleanest burning fossil fuel Methane is dried, cleansed of H 2 S, pumped in low pressure lines nationally. Heavier gases are removed as liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) for use in rural areas.
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Natural Gas Distribution
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Hydraulic Fracturing How: –Pumping water & chemicals under high pressure underground to force natural gas/petroleum to surface Problems: –Possible groundwater contamination –CH 4 released –Release of Fracking Chemicals
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:HydroFrac.png
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How Long Will Natural Gas Last? At current consumption rate, factoring in undiscovered reserves, approximately 125 years. Including unconventional sources, 200- 325 years
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2. Coal What is it: –Solid fuel formed from plant matter during Carboniferous period, 360- 285 million years ago. C content increases, water content decreases over time Ranked according to energy content
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Type Energy Content (megajoules/kg) Location in US 1.Anthracite30-34PA 2.Bituminous23-34Appalachia, Midwest, West 3.Subbituminous16-23West 4.Lignite13-16Gulf Coast, No. Great Plains
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Half is acquired through Strip-Mining (Surface Mining) Acid Mine Drainage: rainfall reacts with exposed rock, reacts with sulfides, produces sulfuric acid. Processed to remove much sulfur before burning Uses of Coal: –converted into synthetic oil or gas. –Mostly used by power plants to create electricity (60% of electricity produced). –Transported by train and coal slurry pipelines (uses more water).
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Open Pit Mining: digging at the surface to extract ore
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strip_mining#Strip_mining Coal Surface Mining in Wyoming
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:182619562_00d6f703b6_b.jpg Coal Mine in India
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Pollution & Coal Burning releases mercury into env. Takes a great deal of water; expensive, heavy environmental impact Production of NOx and SOx Particulate Ash Treatment--Scrubbing –calcium carbonate-rich materials are injected into the gases produced from burning coal, producing hydrated calcium sulfite as sludge. –Disposal issues.
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How Long Will Coal Last? At current consumption, 225 years. If usage rises 2%/yr, 65 years. Believed to be unidentified reserves projected to last 900 years.
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3. OIL! Petroleum (crude oil): –thick liquid consisting of hundreds of combustible hydrocarbons. Impurities –sulfur, oxygen, nitrogen & other impurities. Formation –decomposition of organic matter (mostly plant) –extreme pressures & temperatures –millions of years Usually dispersed throughout pores in rocks.
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Oil Recover: 3 Stage Process Primary: –Drilling a well, then remove oil that flows into the well. Secondary: –Pumping water under high pressure into a nearby well, forcing oil out, pump up to surface, – remove water from oil and reuse the water for recovery. Tertiary: –Use of superheated steam, CO 2 or detergent to dissolve oil, then removed from that. –Large amounts of energy needed (~1/3 barrel for every barrel produced) Production clip
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Fractional Distillation Separating the components that make up crude oil. Uses boiling points of the various fractions
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64% in the Middle East; 26% in Saudi Arabia alone
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Oil Facts US uses 30% of crude oil extracted; 68% for transportation $130.00 per barrel on 6/6/08 $48.92 per barrel 4/22/09 $91.58 per barrel 4/25/13 1 barrel petroleum = 42 gallons
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Just How Much Is There? Resource: –A concentration of material that is economically feasible to extract, now or in the future. Reserve: –Portion of the resource that can be extracted now, economically & legally.
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Reserves… Production of reserves expected to peak between 2010 and 2030. Peaked in US in 1975. Undiscovered supplies may extend it 20- 40 years.
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Other Sources of Oil Oil Shale: fine-grained sedimentary rock containing kerogen. –Distilled to form shale oil. –Potentially recoverable from CO, UT, WY. –Generally very low grade, takes much energy. Tar sand: mixture of clay, sand, water & bitumen (thick, high sulfur oil). –Most lie below earth’s surface; those close can be mined. –Largest deposits in Canada, UT, Venezuela, Colombia, Russia.
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Hubbert’s Prediction for Peak Oil Production http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hubbert_peak_oil_plot.svg
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