Renewables: A Review Of Sustainable Energy Supply Options

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

This comprehensive review provides a detailed insight into renewable energy options, their current state of development and how they can provide an environmentally sustainable energy future. This second edition is extensively revised and includes the latest advances in the field.

Author(s): David Elliott
Series: IOP Series in Renewable and Sustainable Power
Edition: 2
Publisher: IOP Publishing
Year: 2019

Language: English
Pages: 225
City: Bristol

PRELIMS.pdf
Author biography
David Elliott
CH001.pdf
Chapter 1 Introduction
1.1 Renewable energy an overview of the issues and options
1.2 Why renewables?
1.3 Which sources and technologies will dominate?
1.4 What are the problems?
1.5 The structure of this book
References
CH002.pdf
Chapter 2 Power
2.1 Power for machines: hydro, wind, wave and tidal power plants
2.2 Hydro
2.2.1 Small hydro and pumped storage
2.3 Wind power
2.3.1 Offshore wind
2.3.2 Grid-balancing and system costs
2.3.3 Wind power prospects—and new ideas
2.4 Wave power
2.5 Tidal power
2.5.1 Tidal current turbines
2.5.2 Tidal energy design options
2.6 Power in perspective
References
CH003.pdf
Chapter 3 Heat
3.1 Renewable heat: bioenergy, solar thermal, geothermal
3.2 Bioenergy
3.2.1 Burning biomass for power
3.2.2 Biofuels for vehicles
3.2.3 Biomass for heating
3.2.4 New biomass options
3.2.5 Biomass energy with carbon capture and storage
3.2.6 The future for biomass
3.2.7 Bioenergy policy issues—a global market?
3.2.8 Biomass as an energy source—a retrospective view
3.3 Solar heat
3.3.1 Concentrating solar power
3.3.2 Other solar heat options
3.4 Geothermal heat and power
3.5 Heat pumps and CHP/DH
3.6 Heat in perspective
References
CH004.pdf
Chapter 4 Light
4.1 Energy from light: PV solar and direct conversion
4.2 PV solar
4.2.1 PV deployment issues and limits
4.2.2 Third generation solar cells and new applications
4.2.3 The prospects for PV solar
4.2.4 The current technology state of play
4.3 The next generation of solar
4.3.1 Direct conversion—beyond photons
4.4 One world under the Sun
4.4.1 The global spread of PV—problems and opportunities
4.4.2 A global grid—solar on tap
References
CH005.pdf
Chapter 5 Integration
5.1 Integration: grid balancing, energy storage and saving
5.2 Dealing with variability
5.2.1 Demand response
5.3 Grid balancing—beyond electricity
5.3.1 Heat networks and CHP
5.4 Energy storage
5.4.1 The technical options
5.4.2 Storage in perspective—growth and issues
5.5 A balanced future
5.5.1 The profile cost issue
5.6 Energy conservation and energy efficiency
5.7 A sustainable energy future: costs and policy choices
References
CH006.pdf
Chapter 6 Policy
6.1 Policy: global review and strategic development issues
6.2 Prospects and problems with rivals
6.3 Europe, Russia and the Middle East
6.3.1 The European Union
6.3.2 Outside the EU
6.3.3 The Russian Federation
6.3.4 The Middle East
6.4 Asia and the Pacific Area
6.5 The Americas
6.6 Africa
6.7 The way ahead
6.7.1 Economic issues
6.8 Conclusions
References
CH007.pdf
Chapter 7 Afterword
7.1 On the other hand: sceptical views
References