Peak Electricity Demand Impact and Reducing Power Needs During Peak Periods

Peak Electricity Demand
Power generation and distribution networks are built with spare capacity to meet peak periods of energy consumption is usually a time when demand for heating and / or cooling is particularly acute accommodate. Normally, peak electricity demand in some cases last just a few hours every year. And while the networks have always had to cope with peaks in recent years, the electricity consumption during peak hours has increased dramatically in the afternoon. (more…)

Solar Drying: Process, Definition and Background

Drying is one of the most important post harvest steps. It enhances the storage life of the crop products, minimizes losses during storage, and saves shipping costs. The drying process is the removal of water from the wet surface of the food. In this process, heat is transferred by convection and radiation to the surface of the produce. This heat raises the temperatures heat and evaporates the moisture from the exterior of the agricultural products, diffusing the interior moisture to the surface and replenishing the evaporated surface moisture. (more…)

Circulating Fluidized Bed Gasification Biomass Feedstock

Air-blown circulating fluidized bed gasifiers are of interest because they produce a good quality, low calorific value (LCV) gas (4–6 MJ/Nm 3 ) and possess a very high carbon conversion efficiency while allowing high capacity, good tolerance to variations in fuel quality, and reliable operation. The high and homogeneously distributed temperatures and the use of particular bed materials, such as dolomite, favor tar cracking. Successful tar cracking can also be achieved using secondary circulating fluidized bed reactors. Also, successful tests on catalytic tar cracking have been performed, for example, by introducing nickel compounds into the gasifier. Sulfur control is made easier because of the significant reduction that can be achieved by adding limestone or dolomite to the gasifier bed. (more…)

Coal Mine Water Treatment: Water Remediation & Iron-Oxidizing Bacteria

Before the passage of regulations dictating mined land reclamation and mine water discharge standards, streams and rivers down-gradient of mine sites were often contaminated with high levels of suspended and dissolved solids. In the eastern United States, Acid Mine Drainage was also a major problem. Nowadays, streams and rivers near active mine sites have much less of an impact. Sediment ponds are constructed to collect suspended solids and if the mine water does not meet regulations, chemicals [typically lime, Ca(OH) 3 ] are added to neutralize acidity and precipitate dissolved metals. (more…)

Factors Shaping Automobile Propulsion Technology

Automobile Propulsion
Fuel cell vehicles are being developed because they promise to meet the requirements expected of automobiles in a market increasingly constrained by environmental and resource limitations. Air pollution and oil dependence have been persistent challenges for vehicles powered by petroleum fuels (gasoline and diesel). Global warming presents a new challenge in the need to limit carbon dioxide (CO) emissions from fossil fuel combustion. (more…)

Biodiesel in Canada as Alternative Transportation Fuels

Biodiesel in Canada
For every 100 units of biodiesel fuel produced using this method, there are 11 units of glycerin as a by-product. Glycerin is used in such products as hand creams, toothpaste, and lubricants. Another biodiesel production process in limited use involves cold-pressed rapeseed oil, but no glycerin by-product is produced. Alternatively, unprocessed vegetable oils can be used in modified diesel engines. Such engines have limited production and are therefore more expensive, although their numbers are increasing in Europe. (more…)

Driving Toward Energy Efficiency – Buildings, Commercial, Performance

As the need for energy efficiency becomes more pronounced, the drive toward efficiency in the commercial sector will be impeded by its complicated mix of building sizes and uses, the complicated systems often used in commercial buildings, and the relative lack of understanding of operations factors impacting energy use and how to achieve efficiency. (more…)

Energy Use, Emissions, and Environmental Impact

energy emissions environmental
The growth in air transportation volume has important global energy sustainable development
associated with the potential for greenhouse gases sources. On local to regional scales, noise, decreased air quality related primarily to ozone production and particulate levels, and other issues, such as roadway congestion related to airport services and local water quality, are all recognized as important impacts. (more…)

Tourism Environmental Issues – Good Environmental Practice in Tourism Sector

tourism environmental issues
The tourism sector is taking an active role in environmental protection. They are becoming aware of the impact generated by the activity and recognizing that their actions affect the social, economic and environmental fate. Moreover, the culture of social responsibility, conducted increasingly by decision makers of different tourist areas, is becoming a new (more…)

The Future of Biofuels Usage and Energy Crops

biofuels usage
One of the main benefits from future use of biofuels would be the reduction of greenhouse gases compared to the use of fossil fuels. Carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that contributes to global warming, is released into the air from combustion. Twenty-four percent of worldwide energy-related carbon emissions in 1997 were from the United States. Carbon and due to rising energy consumption, are expected to increase 1.3 percent per year through 2015. (more…)

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