Unit 6: Energy Resources and Consumption

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51 Terms

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Energy transformations

Conversions of energy from one form to another (e.g., chemical → thermal → mechanical → electrical); humans mostly transform energy rather than “use it up.”

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Nuclear fusion

Process in the Sun’s core that joins atomic nuclei and converts nuclear energy into heat and radiant (electromagnetic) energy.

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Chemical energy

Energy stored in chemical bonds between atoms in molecules.

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Electrical energy

Energy resulting from the motion of electrons.

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Electromagnetic energy (radiant energy)

Energy that travels as waves, such as sunlight.

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Mechanical energy

Energy made up of potential energy and kinetic energy.

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Potential energy

Stored energy due to an object’s position or configuration.

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Kinetic energy

Energy of motion.

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Nuclear energy

Energy stored in atomic nuclei; released by fission (splitting atoms) or fusion (joining atoms).

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Thermal energy

Energy an object has due to the movement of its molecules (heat-related energy).

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Energy

The capacity to do work or produce heat.

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Power

The rate at which energy is transferred or used (Power = Energy/time).

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Kilowatt-hour (kWh)

A unit of energy used on electric bills; calculated as Power (kW) × time (h).

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British thermal unit (Btu)

Amount of heat required to raise the temperature of 1 pound of water by 1°F.

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Horsepower (HP)

Power unit used in automobiles; 1 HP = 746 watts.

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Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics

If A is in thermal equilibrium with B and with C, then B and C are in thermal equilibrium with each other.

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First Law of Thermodynamics

Conservation of energy: energy cannot be created or destroyed.

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Second Law of Thermodynamics

In any energy conversion, useful work is less than heat supplied; some energy becomes less available (often as waste heat).

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High-quality energy

Concentrated energy capable of doing lots of useful work (example: electricity).

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Low-quality energy

Dispersed energy (often low-temperature heat) that is difficult to convert into useful work.

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Energy efficiency

Fraction of input energy that becomes useful output (Efficiency = useful output/total input).

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Conservation (energy)

Reducing energy use by using less of a service or changing behavior (e.g., driving less, turning things off).

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Renewable energy

Energy collected from resources naturally replenished on a human time scale.

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Nonrenewable energy

Energy sources that form over geologic time and are not sustainable on human time scales (e.g., fossil fuels).

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Energy carrier

A form of energy that is produced from primary sources and delivered for use (e.g., electricity, hydrogen), not a primary source itself.

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Turbine

Device spun by moving fluid (steam, wind, water) that converts fluid energy into mechanical rotational energy.

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Generator

Device that converts mechanical energy (often from a turbine) into electrical energy.

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Baseload demand

The minimum, steady level of electricity demand on the grid.

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Peak demand

Higher-demand periods (e.g., hot afternoons with heavy air-conditioning use).

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Transmission lines

Long-distance, high-voltage power lines that move electricity from generation sites toward users.

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Distribution lines

Local power lines that deliver electricity from substations to homes and businesses.

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Cogeneration (combined heat and power, CHP)

System that captures waste heat from electricity generation and uses it for heating/industrial processes, increasing overall efficiency.

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Fossil fuels

Nonrenewable energy-rich materials (coal, oil, natural gas) formed from ancient organic matter over millions of years.

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Peat

Partially decayed vegetation/organic matter formed in acidic, anaerobic conditions; can be an early stage in coal formation.

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Methane hydrates (clathrates)

Methane trapped in an ice-like structure at low temperature and high pressure (e.g., permafrost, ocean floor).

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Tar sands (oil sands)

Deposits containing bitumen (semi-solid oil) that require mining or steam-based extraction and significant processing.

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Combustion

Chemical reaction (often burning hydrocarbons) that produces CO₂, H₂O, and energy; also can create pollutants depending on conditions/impurities.

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Life-cycle thinking

Evaluating impacts across a fuel’s full chain: extraction → processing → transport → use/combustion → waste/cleanup.

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Law of Supply

All else equal, as price increases, the quantity suppliers offer increases (and vice versa).

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Law of Demand

All else equal, as price increases, the quantity purchased decreases (and vice versa).

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Lignite

Low-rank (“brown”) coal with lower energy content and often higher impurities; widely used for electricity generation.

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Acid mine drainage

Acidic runoff formed when sulfide minerals exposed by mining react with oxygen and water, producing sulfuric acid and mobilizing metals.

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Scrubbers (flue-gas desulfurization)

Pollution-control devices that “wash out” acidic gases from exhaust, especially sulfur dioxide (SO₂), and can reduce some particulates.

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Carbon capture and storage (CCS)

Technology that captures CO₂ from emissions and stores it underground; reduces climate impacts but adds cost and an energy penalty.

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Hydraulic fracturing (fracking)

Well development process that injects water, sand, and chemicals at high pressure to create/expand fractures and increase oil/gas flow.

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Methane leakage

Release of methane during natural gas extraction/processing/transport; important because methane is a potent greenhouse gas.

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Nuclear fission

Splitting a heavy atomic nucleus to release heat, which is used to make steam that spins a turbine-generator in nuclear power plants.

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Critical mass

Minimum amount of U-235 needed to sustain a nuclear chain reaction.

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Control rods

Reactor components inserted/withdrawn to absorb neutrons and slow or control the fission chain reaction.

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Photovoltaic (PV) cell

Semiconductor device that converts sunlight directly into electricity.

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Concentrated solar power (CSP)

Solar technology that uses mirrors to concentrate sunlight to heat a fluid, producing steam to spin a turbine and generate electricity.

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