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ENERGY RESOURCES – KS3

ENERGY RESOURCES – KS3. Differentiated Materials. Key Words. Energy – being able to do work. e.g. food gives us energy, so that we can move Fuel - Fuel is anything that is burned or altered to obtain energy. Fuel gauge. Solar power. Most of the Earth's energy comes from the sun

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ENERGY RESOURCES – KS3

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  1. ENERGY RESOURCES – KS3 Differentiated Materials

  2. Key Words • Energy – being able to do work. e.g. food gives us energy, so that we can move • Fuel - Fuel is anything that is burned or altered to obtain energy Fuel gauge

  3. Solar power • Most of the Earth's energy comes from the sun • Solar power is energy from the sun • There are two main ways that we use the Sun's energy • 1. Solar Cells • 2. Solar water heating

  4. Why Use Solar power? Advantages • Solar energy is free - no fuel, no waste or pollution. • In sunny countries, easy to use in remote places • Good for low-power uses such as solar powered garden lights and battery chargers Disadvantages • Doesn't work at night. • Very expensive to build solar power stations. • Can be unreliable unless you're in a very sunny place • Solar energy is renewable because the sun is always there

  5. Energy from fossil fuels Fossil fuels are coal, oil and gas Coal oil and gas • Fossil fuels were formed from dead plants and animals over millions of years. fossils

  6. Energy from fossil fuels • Fossil fuels have formed over millions of years. Plants and animals died and were immediately covered by sediment in seas or swamps. • After millions of years of pressure and heat (900C to 1200C), these remains turned into COAL, OIL and NATURAL GAS. • Coal comes mainly from dead plants, like trees, falling into swamps. • Oil and gas occur together and were formed from both plants and animals being buried. • When we burn fossil fuels we’re using the sun’s energy that has been stored as chemical energy underground for millions of years.

  7. How ‘fossil fuel’ power stations work: • Coal is crushed to a fine dust and burnt. Oil and gas can be burnt directly. www.vauxhallsociety.org.uk

  8. Why use fossil fuels to make electricity? Advantages • Electricity can be generated fairly cheaply. • Transporting oil and gas to the power stations is easy. • Gas-fired power stations are very efficient. • A fossil-fuelled power station can be built almost anywhere. Disadvantages • Pollution. Burning any fossil fuel produces carbon dioxide, which contributes to the "greenhouse effect", warming the Earth. • Burning coal produces more carbon dioxide than burning oil or gas. • Mining coal can be difficult, dangerous and ugly. • Coal-fired power stations need huge amounts of fuel. • Fossil fuels are a non- renewable energy resource. Once we've burned them all, there isn't any more and our use of fossil fuels has nearly doubled every 20 years since 1900. This is a particular problem for oil, because we also use it to make plastics and many other products.

  9. Wind power • Wind power also comes from the sun; winds blow because the Sun warms our atmosphere. Warm air tends to rise, and winds are due to other air moving in to replace it. • The wind blows the propeller round, which turns a generator to produce electricity • We tend to build many of these towers together, to make a "wind farm" and produce more electricity. • The more towers, the more wind, and the larger the propellers, the more electricity we can make

  10. Why use wind power? Advantages • Wind is free. • Produces no waste or greenhouse gases. • The land beneath can usually still be used for farming. • Wind farms can be tourist attractions. • A good method of supplying energy to remote areas Disadvantages • The wind is not always predictable - some days have no wind. • Suitable areas for wind farms are often near the coast, where land is expensive. • Some people feel that covering the landscape with these towers is ugly • Can kill birds. • Can affect television reception if you live nearby. • Can be noisy. • Wind power is renewable. Winds will keep on blowing.

  11. Hydro-electric power • Hydro-electric power is generated from falling water. Nowadays there are many hydro-electric power stations, providing around 20% of the world's electricity. How it works: • A dam is built to trap water, usually in a river valley. • Water is allowed to flow through tunnels in the dam, to turn turbines and thus drive generators to produce electricity. (http://www.wvic.com/hydro-works.htm) 

  12. Why use Hydro-electric power?

  13. Hydro-electric power is renewable. The Sun provides the water by evaporation from the sea, and will continue to do it. Disadvantages

  14. Nuclear Power - energy from splitting Uranium atoms • Nuclear power is generated using Uranium, which is a metal mined in various parts of the world. • Nuclear power produces around 11% of the world's energy needs, and produces huge amounts of energy from small amounts of fuel, without pollution. electronicsdesigninfo.blogspot.com

  15. Advantages of using nuclear power

  16. disadvantages

  17. Tidal power - energy from the sea • How it works: Tidal Barrages • These work rather like a hydro-electric scheme • A huge dam (called a "barrage") is built across a river estuary. When the tide goes in and out, the water flows through tunnels in the dam. • The ebb and flow of the tides can be used to turn a turbine. www.h2bidblog.com

  18. Advantages of tidal power

  19. Disadvantages of tidal power • A barrage across an estuary is very expensive to build, and affects a very wide area. - the environment and birds. There are few suitable sites for tidal barrages. • Only provides power for around 10 hours each day, when the tide is actually moving in or out. Tidal energy isrenewable. The tides will continue to ebb and flow, and the energy is there for free.

  20. Geothermal Energy is energy from heat inside the Earth. How it works • Hot rocks underground heat water to produce steam. We drill holes down to the hot region; steam comes up, is purified and used to drive turbines, which drive generators to make electricity. • Geothermal energy is an important resource in volcanically active places such as Iceland and New Zealand. http://keller.clarke.edu

  21. Advantages

  22. disadvantages

  23. Biomass - energy from organic materials • Sugar cane can be used to make alcohol, which can be burned to generate power • Other solid wastes, can be burned to provide heat, or used to make steam for a power station • We can use rubbish, animal manure, woodchips, seaweed, corn stalks and other waste www.animalaid.org.uk aq48.dnraq.state.ia.us

  24. Advantages • It makes sense to use waste materials where we can. • The fuel tends to be cheap. • Less demand on the Earth's resources. Disadvantages • Collecting the waste in sufficient quantities can be difficult. • We burn the fuel, so it makes pollution. • Some waste materials are not available all year round. Biomass isrenewable, as we're going to carry on making waste products. We can always plant and grow more sugar cane and more trees, so those are renewable too.

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