حسابات
حسابات
Lecture 1
4th Year
Electrical Engineering
Department
University of Basrah
Section One
Over the past few decades, energy has become the backbone of technology and economic
development. Not counting men, machines and money, ‘energy’ is now the fourth factor
of production. Without energy, no machine will run and electricity has become a necessity.
Hence, the energy requirements have increased in the years following the industrial
revolution. This tremendous increase in use of energy has created troubles of ‘demand and
supply’. If this mounting world energy demand is to be met with fossil fuels, they will not
be available for energy production in few years. It is a need of today’s world to concentrate
on renewable energy sources to satisfy the demand and conserve our finite natural
resources for the generations to come. This is an endeavor to present an overview of the
concerns about energy demand and supply ratio and how to conserve energy as well how
Today, fossil fuel industries drill or mine for these energy sources, burn them to produce
electricity, or refine them for use as fuel for heating or transportation. Over the past 20
years, nearly three-fourths of human-caused emissions came from the burning of fossil
fuels.
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Section One
Fossil fuels are stored solar energy from past geological ages. Even though the quantities
of oil, natural gas, and coal are large, they are finite, and for the long term of hundreds of
years, they are not sustainable.
3. Chemical energy
4. Electrical energy
5. Nuclear energy
6. Electromagnetic energy
7. Gravitational energy
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Section One
Coal, Oil, Uranium etc., are examples of this type. The energy required to obtain these
fuels is much use than what they can produce by combustion or nuclear reaction. The
supply of primary fuels is limited. It becomes very essential to use these fuels sparingly.
Examples
Secondary fuels produce no net energy. Though it may by necessary for the economy,
Secondary sources are like sun, wind, water (tides), etc. Solar energy can by used through
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Section One
Introduction
Today every country draws its energy needs from a variety of sources. We can
commercial. The commercial sources include the fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas),
hydro-electric power and nuclear power, while the noncommercial sources include wood,
animal waste and agricultural wastes. In an Industrialized country like U.S.A. most of the
energy requirements are met from commercial sources, while in an Industrially less
developed country like India, the use of commercial and non-commercial sources are
about equal.
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Section One
decomposition of the remains of dead plants and animals buried under the earth for a long
time. These are non-renewable sources of energy, which, if exhausted, can not be
replenished in a short time. Their reserves are limited and are considered very precious.
These should be used with care and caution to let them last long. These are also
(i) Coal
Since the advent of industrialization coal has been most common source of energy.
In the last three decades, the world switched over from coal to oil as a Major source of
energy because it is simpler and cleaner to obtain useful energy from oil.
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Section One
It is clear that peat is the most inferior quality of coal. Whereas anthracite is the most
superior quality of coal. Bituminous is most commonly used in households and industry.
On strong heating, coal breaks up to produce coal gas, ammonia, coaltar and coke.
Coke is 98% carbon, obtained after losing all its volatile constituents during destructive
(ii). Petroleum
It is a dark coloured, viscous and foul smelling crude oil. The petroleum means
rock oil. It is normally found under the crust of earth trapped in rocks. The crude oil is a
complex mixture of several solid liquid gaseous hydrocarbons mixed with water, salt and
The crude petroleum is refined by the process of fractional distillation to obtain more
400oC in a furnace and vapors thus formed are passed into a tall fractioning column from
near its bottom. As the mixture of hot vapours rises in the column, it starts getting
cooled gradually.
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Section One
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Section One
1. In developing a project, it will take about 6-10 years time for planning, investigation
and construction.
2. High money investment is needed, and some parts of the investment have to be
designed from foreign sources.
3. There are growing problems on relocation of villages, involved, compensation for
damage, selecting the suitable resettlement area and environmental impact.
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Section One
A wind mill converts the kinetic energy of moving air into Mechanical energy that
can be either used directly to run the Machine or to run the generator to produce electricity.
Moon. They arise twice a day in Mid-Ocean. The tidal range is only a Meter.
Basically, in a tidal power station water at high tide is first trapped in an artificial basin
and then allowed to escape at low tide. The escaping water is used to drive water
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Section One
Energy from the sun is called solar energy. The Sun’s energy comes from nuclear
fusion reaction that take place deep in the Sun. Hydrogen nucleus fuse into helium
nucleus. The energy from these reactions flow out from the sun and escape into space.
Fig. shows the most important renewable and nonrenewable sources on planet earth
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Section One
3. Greenhouse Effect
The atmosphere functions like a blanket, keeping the heat of the Earth from radiating
into space (Figure below). The atmosphere lets solar insolation in but keeps most of
ground infrared radiation from going out. The greenhouse gases are
a. water vapor.
b. carbon dioxide CO2.
c. Methane CH4 , and other trace gases.
A large atmosphere of carbon dioxide can drastically change temperature at which the
energy balance occurs, with Venus a drastic example.
The greenhouse effect is simply demonstrated on a sunny day by your car interior with the
windows closed. The incident light passes through the windows and is absorbed in the
material inside, which then radiates (infrared) at the corresponding temperature. The
windows are opaque to infrared radiation, and the interior becomes hotter until there is
again an energy balance.
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Section One
explain briefly?
2. What are the non-conventional sources of energy
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