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Energy Production

Energy Production. Points on Energy to Discuss. Why is important in Agricultural Production? Is all energy alike? Can substitutions be made? What about scalability?. Energy. Primary energy sources (data from 2005) 40% Petroleum 23% Coal 23% Natural Gas 8.4% Nuclear

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Energy Production

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  1. Energy Production

  2. Points on Energy to Discuss • Why is important in Agricultural Production? • Is all energy alike? • Can substitutions be made? • What about scalability?

  3. Energy • Primary energy sources (data from 2005) • 40% Petroleum • 23% Coal • 23% Natural Gas • 8.4% Nuclear • 5.6% Renewable (mostly Hydroelectric) • Large scale production in the megawatts • Must then be distributed

  4. Power Production • Power plants use generators to transfer mechanical motion to electrical power • Generators operate in the opposite capacity of an electric motor • The US grid is based on Alternating Current (AC) • 60 Hz (frequency or oscillations per second) • Must all be in phase • Multiple plants on the same grid • Syncing – up/tying to the grid

  5. Power Production

  6. Power Production

  7. Power Production • Plants size • Measured in MW • Total peak output capacity • Large scale productions • Greater than 1 MW • Distribution • Power cables to substations • Power lines from substations to transformers • 120 Vac from transformer to houshold outlet • Power losses • Resistance in wire • Transformer junctions

  8. Power Production • Due to large losses and large distribution areas plants must produce much more energy then eventually reaches the consumer • A fossil fuel plant is at best 40% efficient • So less than half even makes it to the generator • Power line efficiencies are also in the 40% range • So less than half of what makes it to the generator leaves the plant • Through other components more is lost resulting in what the consumer uses

  9. Energy Sources • Grid Power Sources • Coal, Nuclear, Natural Gas, Wind, Hydroelectric, Hydrogen, and Biomass • Onsite Sources • Solar, Wind, Hydroelectric, Geothermal, and Biomass

  10. Energy Sources • Grid Power Sources • Coal • Nuclear • Natural Gas • Wind • Hydroelectric • Hydrogen • Biomass • Onsite Sources • Solar, Wind, Hydroelectric, Geothermal, and Biomass

  11. Grid Scale Energy Sources: Fossil Fuels Fossil Fuels - Coal, Natural Gas, Petroleum • Large amounts of stored energy • Nonrenewable, and must be mined • Fuel must be transported from mines to power plants • Large amounts of CO2 , Mercury, and Radon released • 100 x more radioactive material released to the environment than from nuclear power plants • Cost is low!

  12. Grid Scale Energy Sources: Fossil Fuels • Fossil Fuels are burned and boil water • Advanced water reheat systems heat the water above the critical point creating superheated water • Combined with a multiple pass turbine large amounts of energy can be extracted from the steam • The hotter the water gets the more energy that can be distracted • Higher energy fuels can boil water to higher temperatures

  13. Grid Scale Energy Sources: Coal Coal Power Example • Energy density: 6.67 kWh/kg (27000 BTU/kg) • Power plant efficiency: 30% 100 Watts x 24 h/day x 365 days/yr = 876 kWh/yr 876 kWh/yr / (6.67 kWh/kg x .30) = 437.78 kg/yr

  14. Grid Scale Energy Sources:Nuclear Nuclear Fuels • Large amounts of energy in a small package • Fuel is Uranium-235 • 1 ton of U235 is equivalent to 500 tons of Coal • Fission Reactors • Boiling Water Reactors (BWR) • Pressurized Water Reactors (PWR) • Radioactive waste byproduct • Same principles of boiling water to spin turbines • Highly regulated

  15. Grid Scale Energy Sources:Hydroelectric • Hydroelectric power has been used in agriculture for centuries • Water wheels to power mills, and factories • Modern dams stop river flows until it forms a lake of considerable depth • At the base of the dam are turbines that spin when the dam is opened • Energy is a function of: • Lake depth • Turbine area • Entrance and Exit pipe sizes

  16. Grid Scale Energy Sources:Hydroelectric • Power available by hydroelectric dam P = ρ*h*r*g*k ρ - density of water h - height of water in the resevoir r - flow rate of the water (dependant on inlet pipe size) g - gravitational constant k - turbine efficiency

  17. Grid Scale Energy Sources:Hydroelectric

  18. Grid Scale Energy Sources:Hydroelectric

  19. Energy Sources • From the Grid Scale the cost of the fuel is not as significant as the cost of the infrastructure • Cost effective energy strategies in agricultural production are somewhat different • Onsite power production • Viable with emerging technology • Viable in rural areas with little to no grid support • Often cost effective to run nonessential equipment

  20. Energy Sources • Grid Power Sources • Coal, Nuclear, Natural Gas, Wind, Hydroelectric, Hydrogen, and Biomass • Onsite Sources • Solar • Wind • Hydroelectric • Geothermal • Biomass

  21. Onsite Energy Sources • Power • Produced without a generator • Often delivers power as a Direct Current (DC) • Requires batteries for storage • Low efficiencies (but improving significantly) • Thermal • Using natural temperature gradients • Subsurface • Sunlight • Old and proven technology • Efficient and cost effective

  22. Onsite Energy Sources: Solar • New technological innovations in production • Reduced cost • Greater availability • Renewable • Reliability • Sunshine is predictable • Distance from equator matters • Vegetation and weather patterns can play with efficiency • Two Sectors • Photovoltaic • Solar Thermal

  23. How Solar Cells Work

  24. Onsite Energy: Solar Availability

  25. Onsite Energy Sources: Solar

  26. Onsite Energy: Solar Availability • Florida is between 5000 and 5500 Watt hours per meter squared per day • Full terrestrial sunlight is about 1000 W/square meter (340 BTU/ft2h) per day • Full sun equivalent of between 5 and 5.5 hours per day • Panel Efficiency • PV ~ 6 - 10% • Thermal ~ 40 – 60%

  27. Onsite Energy Sources: Solar • How much energy can a solar array produce on an annual basis? • Let’s look at a 3.0kW array of photovoltaic cells: kWh/yr = 3.0kW*5.5 hr/day*365 days/yr*0.9 kWh/yr = 5,420 kWh/yr Inverter efficiency is 0.9 Assumes no shading from adjacent buildings and/or trees

  28. Onsite Energy Sources: Solar • Average Residential Usage • 8,000 – 11,000 kWhr/yr per home • Area Required • Roughly 10 W/ft2 • So the 3.0 kW array will take up 300 ft2 • The average home would need an array approximately: 398 to 548 ft2 • So space and storage become significant issues…

  29. Onsite Energy Sources: Solar • Solar energy can be utilized as a passive agent • Houses designed to heat in the winter without attracting unwanted sun the summer • Overhangs and shading positioned to use or shield the strength and angle of the sun’s rays • Solar Declination  • Changing seasons, change the angle between us and the sun • In the northern hemisphere the sun is always angled just south of the sky’s middle • Solar energy applications, including passive solar, should be positioned on the southerly side

  30. Onsite Energy Sources: Solar • The solar chimney • Uses a tall structure on the south end of a building with a glass window • The chimney is vented to the outside at the top and is vented to the building at the bottom • Forced convection cycle pulls moist air out of the building space providing ventilation •  Solar Grain Drying • Air is drawn into a flat solar collector on the downstream end • Then is forced by a fan or thermal buoyancy to convect through the grain bin • Heated solar air will extract moisture

  31. Onsite Energy Sources: Solar

  32. Onsite Energy Sources: Wind • Wind power extracts energy from moving air by use of turbine to rotate the spindle of a generator • Similar to the way a car alternator charges your car battery while the engine is running • Wind speed varies greatly by height • Larger blades create more area and carry more inertia spinning longer • Height of turbine should be roughly 2 to 3 times the blade length

  33. Onsite Energy Sources: Wind

  34. Onsite Energy Sources: Wind • Types of tubines • Horizontal Axis • Vertical Axis

  35. Wind Speed Calculations • Wind profile power law: 1/7th power law • Wind speed rises with the 7th root of altitude u/ur = (z/zr)a • a is 1/7, u is the speed at hieght z, and the subscript r refers to the reference height and speed (something known) • These values change depending the atmospheric conditions and turbine style

  36. Wind Power Calculations P = power, Watts E = Efficiency, the theoretical maximum is 0.59 C = 4.17 x 10-5 (5.02 x 10-3) A = area, square meters (square feet) v = average wind speed meters per second (miles per hour) Power= E *C *A* v3

  37. Wind Power Calculations

  38. Onsite Energy Sources: Wind • Notice that the average wind speed is cubed in the formula • wind speed at 3 miles per hour is 27 times the constants… • and wind speed at 10 miles per hour is 1,000 times the constants! • This is Florida’s problem: low average wind speeds, interspersed with hurricanes

  39. Onsite Energy Sources: Geothermal • High temperatures occur in many locations around geologically active areas • Temperature gradients underground can be used to create small differential temperatures causing expansion and contraction of air and water • Can be used to generate hot water or steam • Directly heating • Generate electricity with steam turbines

  40. Onsite Energy Sources: Geothermal • Used in passive homes to heat or cool through ground tubes • buried tubes can be used to cool air that is then drawn through a ventilated building • viable in drier climates, and not applicable to the hot, humid south  • Geothermal energy is a viable resource in passive design outside the hot, humid southeast

  41. Onsite Energy Sources: Geothermal

  42. Onsite Energy Sources: Biomass • Agricultural products can be burned to produce heat • The most familiar method of doing this is to burn wood in a stove or furnace • Biomass refers to plant material that can be burned for energy • Energy can also be generated by burning methane generated from agricultural products or wastes

  43. Onsite Energy Sources: Biomass • Biomass can be directly burned or fermented in digesters • Anaerobic • Aerobic • Anaerobic microbes turn the hydrocarbons in organic matter into methane • Methane can be burned just like natural gas • Methane generation can produce useful energy, but requires a large amount of skilled attention to function properly • Aerobic microbes turn hydrocarbons into soil nutrients and produce some CO2

  44. Onsite Energy Sources: Biomass • Alcohol can be produced by fermenting agricultural products or waste • Alcohol sees some use in the United States as an additive to gasoline • Use widely as a fuel in other countries, like Brazil • Can be used as a replacement for gasoline, but is not more energy efficient than gasoline • This is because alcohol must be distilled in order to produce a fuel that will burn in internal combustion engine • Substitutes for diesel fuel can also be extracted from soybean oil, sugarcane, and mixtures of burned vegetable oil

  45. Onsite Energy Sources: Hydrogen • Hydrogen is another alternative to gasoline • Using hydrogen is not a way of saving energy, but rather of reducing objectionable emissions • Hydrogen is the cleanest burning fuel • When burned with pure oxygen, the only combustion product is water • Hydrogen fueled vehicles will probably become more important • The main problem with hydrogen is distribution and storage • Liquid hydrogen is difficult to store • Heavy and bulky fuel tanks are necessary for hydrogen fueled vehicles

  46. Onsite Energy Sources • Individual power supplies (those designed for house scale operations) are never constant • The sun is not out all the time • Wind does pass fast enough all the time • There is not a constants stream of feedstock for a digester • Etc… • So energy must be stored

  47. Onsite Energy Sources: Storage • Most onsite applications produce DC power • Solar panels • Turbines (wind, water, solar) • Easily stored in batteries, but must pass through an inverter to make the DC power 3 phase AC power • The inverter is not 100% efficient so you lose some power output • If a small scale generator is used for a turbine then to store the energy you must: • Use a converter to make the power DC for battery storage • Then use an inverter to make the battery energy 3 phase AC power again

  48. Energy Strategy • With the current accessibility to the public grid a good cost benefit analysis would need to be performed in order to determine the benefits of locally produced power • The first place to start is with increased efficiency • Passive design techniques • Proper wiring and electrical layout • Energy efficient products, proper usage and timing

  49. Energy Efficiency • Building orientation to the solar pattern • Overhangs where appropriate • Surrounding foliage • Trees for shading • Plants used to funnel air as a wind channel and barrier • Glazed glass • Properly ventilated structures

  50. Energy Efficiency • For Air Conditioned buildings: HVAC duct sizing and placement • Sized for the application • Well insulated, and not crimped • Air handlers inside conditioned space • Insulating materials • High R-values • No moisture barriers in FL

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