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Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz http://quantum.soe.ucsc.edu/ EE80S Sustainability Engineering and Practice October 17, 2007

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Page 1: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Renewable Energy Sources

Ali ShakouriElectrical Engineering Department

University of California Santa Cruzhttp://quantum.soe.ucsc.edu/

EE80S

Sustainability Engineering and Practice

October 17, 2007

Page 2: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

The Sun Source of our Energy supply

Ken Pedrotti, EE80T (winter quarter)

Page 3: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Nuclear Fission

• Heavy atomic nuclei can split giving rise to two smaller nuclei some extra particles. In a slow controlled reaction the energy that the particles fly off with is ultimately dissipated as heat and used to run a heat engine and a generator in a nuclear reactor.

Ken Pedrotti, EE80T (winter quarter)

Page 4: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Fission suffers from some public relations problems

Chernobyl Meltdown Aftermath

• http://www.worldprocessor.com/53.htm

Radiation Cloud form Chernobyl on April 27th

Ken Pedrotti, EE80T (winter quarter)

Page 5: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Nuclear Fusion

• Nuclear Fusion: Forget it, we aren't smart enough yet. But suppose we become smart enough in a few hundred years. Can adoption of sustainable energy technology get us to this point?

http://zebu.uoregon.edu/2001/ph162/l1.html

Ken Pedrotti, EE80T (winter quarter)

Page 6: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Are there Sustainable Solutions?

• http://zebu.uoregon.edu/2001/ph162/l14.html

Solar Biomass Wind

Hydroelectric Geothermal From the Oceans

Page 7: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

(in the U.S. in 2002)

1-4 ¢ 2.3-5.0 ¢ 6-8 ¢ 5-7 ¢

Today: Production Cost of Electricity

0

5

10

15

20

25

Coal Gas Oil Wind Nuclear Solar

Cost6-7 ¢

25-50 ¢

Cos

t , ¢

/kW

-hr

Nate Lewis, Caltech

Page 8: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Energy Costs

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

$/GJ

Coal Oil Biomass ElectB

razi

l Eur

ope

$0.05/kW-hr

www.undp.org/seed/eap/activities/wea

Nate Lewis, Caltech

Page 9: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Wind Energy Potential in the USA

Page 10: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Electric Potential of Wind

http://www.nrel.gov/wind/potential.html

In 1999, U.S consumed3.45 trillion kW-hr ofElectricity =0.39 TW

Nate Lewis, Caltech

Page 11: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Wind Energy

• Advantages: supplemental power in windy areas; best alternative for individual homeowner

• Disadvantages: Highly variable source; relatively low efficiency (30% ?); more power than is needed is produced when the wind blows; efficient energy storage is thus required

http://www.bullnet.co.uk/shops/test/wind.htm

Ken Pedrotti, EE80T (winter quarter)

Page 12: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

• Significant potential in US Great Plains, inner Mongolia and northwest China

• U.S.:Use 6% of land suitable for wind energy development; practical electrical generation potential of ≈0.5 TW

• Globally: Theoretical: 27% of earth’s land surface is class 3 (250-300 W/m2 at 50 m) or greaterIf use entire area, electricity generation potential of 50 TW Practical: 2 TW electrical generation potential (4% utilization of ≥class 3 land area)

Off-shore potential is larger but must be close to grid to be interesting; (no installation > 20 km offshore now)

Electric Potential of Wind

Nate Lewis, Caltech

Page 13: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

• Relatively mature technology

• Distribution system not now suitable for balancing sources vs end use demand sites

• Inherently produces electricity, not heat; perhaps cheapest stored using compressed air ($0.01 kW-hr)

Electric Potential of Wind

Nate Lewis, Caltech

Page 14: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Solar Cell

Ken Pedrotti, EE80T (winter quarter)

Page 15: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Solar Intensity

• http://www.wipp.carlsbad.nm.us/science/energy/solarpower.htm

Ken Pedrotti, EE80T (winter quarter)

Page 16: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Hydro Power

• Advantages: No pollution; Very high efficiency (80%); little waste heat; low cost per KWH; can adjust KWH output to peak loads; recreation dollars

• Disadvantages: Fish are endangered species; Sediment buildup and dam failure; changes watershed characteristics; alters hydrological cycle

• http://zebu.uoregon.edu/2001/ph162/l1.html

Page 17: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Globally

• Gross theoretical potential 4.6 TW

• Technically feasible potential 1.5 TW

• Economically feasible potential 0.9 TW

• Installed capacity in 1997 0.6 TW

• Production in 1997 0.3 TW

(can get to 80% capacity in some cases)

Source: WEA 2000

Hydroelectric Energy Potential

Nate Lewis, Caltech

Page 18: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Hydrogen Burning

• Advantages: No waste products; very high energy density; good for space heating

• Disadvantages: No naturally occurring sources of Hydogren; needs to be separated from water via electrolysis which takes a lot of energy; Hydrogen needs to be liquified for transport - takes more energy. Is there any net gain?

See EE80J (spring quarter)

Page 19: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Geothermal

• Advantages: very high efficiency; low initial costs since you already got steam

• 200C at 10km depth• Disadvantages: non-

renewable (more is taken out than can be put in by nature); highly local resource

Ken Pedrotti, EE80T (winter quarter)

Page 20: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Geothermal Energy Potential

Ken Pedrotti, EE80T (winter quarter)

Page 21: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Geothermal Energy Potential

• Mean terrestrial geothermal flux at earth’s surface 0.057 W/m2

• Total continental geothermal energy potential 11.6 TW• Oceanic geothermal energy potential 30 TW

• Wells “run out of steam” in 5 years• Power from a good geothermal well (pair) 5 MW• Power from typical Saudi oil well 500 MW• Needs drilling technology breakthrough (from exponential $/m to linear $/m) to become economical)

Nate Lewis, Caltech

Page 22: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Energy from the Oceans?

Tides

Currents Thermal Differences

Waves

Ken Pedrotti, EE80T (winter quarter)

Page 23: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion

• Advantages: enormous energy flows; steady flow for decades; can be used on large scale; exploits natural temperature gradients in the ocean

• Disadvantages: Enormous engineering effort; Extremely high cost; Damage to coastal environments?

Nate Lewis, Caltech

Page 24: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Tidal Energy

• Advantages: Steady source; energy extracted from the potential and kinetic energy of the earth-sun-moon system; can exploit bore tides for maximum efficiency

• Disadvantages: low duty cycle due to intermittent tidal flow; huge modification of coastal environment; very high costs for low duty cycle source

Ken Pedrotti, EE80T (winter quarter)

Page 25: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Biomass

• Advantages: Biomass waste (wood products, sewage, paper, etc) are natural by products of our society; reuse as an energy source would be good. Definite co-generation possibilities. Maybe practical for individual landowner.

• Disadvantages: Particulate pollution from biomass burners; transport not possible due to moisture content; unclear if growing biomass just for burning use is energy efficient. Large scale facilities are likely impractical.

Ken Pedrotti, EE80T (winter quarter)

Page 26: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Global: Top Down

• Requires Large Areas Because Inefficient (0.3%)

• 3 TW requires ≈ 600 million hectares = 6x1012 m2

• 20 TW requires ≈ 4x1013 m2

• Total land area of earth: 1.3x1014 m2

• Hence requires 4/13 = 31% of total land area

Biomass Energy Potential

Nate Lewis, Caltech

Page 27: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Conservation

Aerogel Thermal Insulation

EE80J (spring quarter)

Page 28: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Prius Power Train

Ken Pedrotti, EE80T (winter quarter)

Page 29: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Solar Energy

•Advantages: Always there; no pollution

•Disadvantages: Low efficiency (5-15%); Very high initial costs; lack of adequate storage materials (batteries); High cost to the consumer

www.fantascienza.net/femino/ MCCALL/MCCALL13.html americanhistory.si.edu/.../ images/gallry53.htm

Solar 1, Barstow California 1993

Future Solar Farm?

Ken Pedrotti, EE80T (winter quarter)

Page 30: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

• Theoretical: 1.2x105 TW solar energy potential

(1.76 x105 TW striking Earth; 0.30 Global mean albedo)

•Energy in 1 hr of sunlight 14 TW for a year

• Practical: ≈ 600 TW solar energy potential

(50 TW - 1500 TW depending on land fraction etc.; WEA 2000)

Onshore electricity generation potential of ≈60 TW (10%

conversion efficiency):

• Photosynthesis: 90 TW

Solar Energy Potential

Nate Lewis, Caltech

Page 31: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

• Roughly equal global energy use in each major sector: transportation, residential, transformation, industrial • World market: 1.6 TW space heating; 0.3 TW hot water; 1.3 TW process heat (solar crop drying: ≈ 0.05 TW)• Temporal mismatch between source and demand requires storage• (S) yields high heat production costs: ($0.03-$0.20)/kW-hr• High-T solar thermal: currently lowest cost solar electric source ($0.12-0.18/kW-hr); potential to be competitive with fossil energy in long term, but needs large areas in sunbelt• Solar-to-electric efficiency 18-20% (research in thermochemical fuels: hydrogen, syn gas, metals)

Solar Thermal, 2001

Nate Lewis, Caltech

Page 32: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

• 1.2x105 TW of solar energy potential globally

• Generating 2x101 TW with 10% efficient solar farms requires

2x102/1.2x105 = 0.16% of Globe = 8x1011 m2 (i.e., 8.8 % of

U.S.A)

• Generating 1.2x101 TW (1998 Global Primary Power) requires

1.2x102/1.2x105= 0.10% of Globe = 5x1011 m2 (i.e., 5.5% of

U.S.A.)

Solar Land Area Requirements

Nate Lewis, Caltech

Page 33: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Solar Land Area Requirements

3 TW

Nate Lewis, Caltech

Page 34: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Solar Land Area Requirements

6 Boxes at 3.3 TW Each

Nate Lewis, Caltech

Page 35: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

Solar Power Sattelites

                                                                                 

One suggestion for energy in the future is to

Ken Pedrotti, EE80T (winter quarter)

Page 36: Renewable Energy Sources Ali Shakouri Electrical Engineering Department University of California Santa Cruz  EE80S Sustainability

• Land with Crop Production Potential, 1990: 2.45x1013 m2

• Cultivated Land, 1990: 0.897 x1013 m2

• Additional Land needed to support 9 billion people in 2050: 0.416x1013 m2

• Remaining land available for biomass energy: 1.28x1013 m2

• At 8.5-15 oven dry tonnes/hectare/year and 20 GJ higher heating value per dry tonne, energy potential is 7-12 TW• Perhaps 5-7 TW by 2050 through biomass (recall: $1.5-4/GJ)• Possible/likely that this is water resource limited• Challenges: cellulose to ethanol; ethanol fuel cells

Biomass Energy Potential

Global: Bottom Up

Nate Lewis, Caltech