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Energy and Power: Production, Distribution, and Society

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This course is an introduction to energy and power within a societal context.

Useful Prerequisites

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A general knowledge base in these topics will facilitate learning.

References

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Topics

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Energy Consumption: Utility and Inequality

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  1. World Portfolio
  2. United States Energy Policy

Basic Ideas: Exercises and Review

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  1. The Conservation of Energy
  2. Work and Heat in Thermodynamic Analysis
  3. Circuits: Resistors, Capacitors, and Inductors
  4. Transformers, Motors, and Turbines
  5. Distribution of Electric Energy

Energy Sources: Technology, Cost, and Potential

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  1. Special Topic: Non-Renewable, Renewable, Sustainable
  2. Fossil
  3. Nuclear
  4. Solar
  5. Water
  6. Biomass
  7. Wind
  8. Geothermal

Energy Storage and Conversion

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  1. Gasification
  2. Waste to Energy
  3. Fuel Cells
  4. Hydrogen
  5. Micro-Turbines
  6. Flywheels
  7. Batteries
  8. Electricity
  9. Distributed Generation
  10. Diesel Generators
  11. Turbines

Building Energy Use

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  1. Green Building Design
  2. Time-Dependent Demand
  3. Commercial and Residential

Transportation

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  1. Spark Ignition, Diesel, and Hybrid Vehicles
  2. Freight and Shipping
  3. Air Travel

Energy-Intensive Industrial Processes

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The Path of Emerging Technologies

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Power Cycles and Car Engine Design

  1. Otto Cycle
  2. Diesel Cycle

Power Cycles and Power Plant Design

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  1. Rankine Cycle
  2. Brayton
  3. Issues in Efficiency and Cost

Combustion and Pollution

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  1. Combustion and Chemical Energy
  2. Kinetics
  3. Common Pollutants and Concerns
  4. Regulation

Economics and Energy Markets

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  1. Limited Natural Resource Economics
  2. Pollution Caps and Trading
  3. Electricity
  4. Developmental Economics and Energy
  5. Econometrics and Energy Forecasting

Sustainability and Energy

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  1. Global Warming
  2. Energy Sources and Magnitudes
  3. Special Topic: Consumption, Capitalism, and Unsustainable Growth

The Future: Scenarios of Disaster and Opportunity

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  1. Economic and Environmental Forces for Change
  2. The Role of the Engineer: Ideas with Potential

Further reading

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