Title: Week 12 Conservation of Energy Energy Cost of Agriculture
1Week 12Conservation of EnergyEnergy Cost of
Agriculture
2Insulation
- About 12 of conductive heat losses occur
through the ceiling and 17 occurs through the
walls of a house - The R-value is the figure used to indicate the
effectiveness of a insulation material i.e. the
resistance conduction - The R value is measured in m2K / W or m2C / W
- The R value is given for a specific thickness.
E.g. R value of 2.3 m2K / W for 100 mm thick
mineral wool. Alternatively it is given as 22.3
mK / W without giving the thickness. - Rate of heat transfer A x (TH TL) / R
- A Area in m2
- T Temperatures in C or Kelvin
- R R value in m2K / W
- Sometimes the U value for insulation
- materials are supplied U 1/R
3Insulation
- E.g. The outside walls of a house measures 10 x
5 x 3 m - The average indoor and outdoor temperatures are
25 C and 10 C respectively - The R value of the brickwork is 0.8 m2K / W
- What is the heat loss through the walls?
- Q A (TH TL) / R
- 2 x (10 5) x 3 x (25 10) / 0.8
- Q 1.69 kW
- If insulation with a R value of 2.5 is added,
what would be the heat loss? - Q A (TH TL) / R
- 2 x (10 5) x 3 x (25 10) / (0.8 2.5)
- Q 0.41 kW
- R values add up (like resistors in series) when
more than one layer with different R values are
used
4(No Transcript)
5Typical SA Insulation
Thickness Price/m2 R-Value
Think Pink Aerolite 100 mm R 15.63 2.5
50 mm R 6.25 1.25
Isotherm 100 mm R 23.94 2.2
50 mm R 11.97 1.1
ThermocousTex 50 mm R 44.99 1.35
Note that using 2 plies of Isotherm will give
you an R value of 4.4 for R 47.88. This seems to
be a much better deal than paying R44.99 for 50
mm ThermocousTex with a R value of only 1.35?
This is not always the case, there might only be
limit space for the insulation and then the 50 mm
option are more viable.
6Germany
7Solar Energy
- The effect of window orientation and has a large
influence on the indoor heat gain
8Heat Pumps
- The ground temperature 1 m below the surface is
almost constant throughout the year. - In winter, this temperature could be higher than
the ambient air temperature - A heat pump uses the ground as a heat source or
stepping stone for heating the inside of a
house. - This is more economic than directly converting
electricity into heat using a conventional
electric heater
9Heat Pumps
- One unit of electricity can give 3 units of
heating
109.7 Commercial and Industrial Energy Conservation
- Commercial buildings has a much higher standard
for indoor air quality and light intensity in
comparison to residential buildings - The heat load in commercial buildings are due to
lights, people (on average 100 W or more per
person) and electrical equipment - District cooling and district heating become
viable options for commercial applications - District cooling is more economic due to
economies of scale. If night time and thermal
storage is used, the plant size and running cost
can be significantly reduced
11Cogeneration and district heating
- Cogeneration (electricity and heat) is a viable
option in many areas - District heating can also be fired by biomass
- E.g. of a small town close to Munich in Germany.
A new housing development uses a district heating
system. The connection fee is E8000 vs the
conventional E15000 installation cost for an oil
burner. - The heating cost is 50 of the conventional
heating cost - Heating is done by burning agricultural waste in
a central heating system. The process is CO2 zero
and more economic than the conventional oil
systems.
12Conservation in Industry
- About half the electricity in the world is used
to run electric motors - The majority of electric motors are constant
speed motors. The rotate at 3600 rev/min - When a constant speed motor is used to power a
pump, the flow rate is mostly done by valves.
This wastes a lot of energy. Instead a
variable-speed drive is the solution - New more efficient processes should replace
existing processes e.g. by forming steel product
to the desired shape rather than reheating it
later again
13East German Ampellman
14LED Replacements
Seattle Bridge
LED traffic lights
15LED Light emitting diodes
16Energy use in Agriculture
- First people were hunters
- Later they settled down and became farmers
- Later these farmers could support other people by
their surplus - This lead to the enhanced development of cultures
1724.1 Traditional Agriculture
- E.g. of the Tsembaga people in New Guinea
- Swidden Agriculture (Slash and burn) is practices
- A section of forest is cut and the remainder
burned. - Human power is employed for the burning, erecting
fences, planting, weeding, harvesting and
transportation of the produce. - Total energy input per hectare is estimated to be
5.8 GJ - Total energy output is 100 GJ/ha of which about
62 GJ/ha is used for human consumption, the
remainder for animal feed - Humans need 6 10 MJ/day (2.1 - 3.6 GJ/year)
- One hectare of Tsembaga farming can support 17 of
their people for a year. - The population of 200 Tsembaga people use about
35 hectares of fields. - This is small enough to allow the forest to grow
back and therefore allow for sustainable living!
1824.2 Agriculture in North America
- Humans worldwide use 25 40 of all biological
material produced on Earth - The use of people for agriculture has decreased
over the years - In the US, the 1900 style of agriculture leads to
75 of the population involved. Today less than
5 of the US populations is working in the
agricultural field
19Machines replace human labor
- Energy efficiency varies for different kinds of
production - Primitive agricultural methods are much more
energy-efficient than modern agricultural methods
20Machines replace human labor
- Figure 24.3 illustrates the decrease in human
labor over the past few decades - The decreases are due to the increase utilization
of other energy forms like machinery for
harvesting and mechanical systems for feeding
animals - Crops where a high portion of human care is
required shows the lowest decrease in human labor
e.g. tobacco
21Machines replace human labor
- The increased utilization of energy leads to
increased yields
22Pesticides and Fertilizers
- The use of pesticides has lead to increased
yields - Pesticides have side effects
- Alternatives are relying on natural enemies,
rotating of crops, applying pesticide sparingly
at the optimal time, etc - In 1970 about 642 MJ (3212 kWh) per hectare was
attributed to artificial fertilizer use.
23Pesticides and Fertilizers
- The use of fertilizer has increased over the
years - Nitrogen is the major fertilizer and in mainly
use in the form of ammonia - Ammonia is produced from natural gas (methane
CH4). This process is very energy intensive - Animal manure or rotating crops is a possible
solution to get around without using fertilizers.
2424.3 Energy efficiency of the agricultural system
- In the US, farms consume 4 of the total energy
supply. If the entire food systems is considered,
this figure becomes 17 - The figure shows all the energy role players in
the food system
2524.3 Energy efficiency of the agricultural system
- The production of energy attributed to food has
kept pace with population growth - Energy use in the food industry has far
outstripped the population growth
26Monoculture vs Diversity
- The most stable natural ecosystem seem to be the
most complex and to have the lowest apparent
productivity (from a human perspective) - This is because in nature everything depends of
feeds on everything else - Monocultures are simplified ecosystems and have
high productivity - These ecosystems are fragile due to the lack of
complexity - Nature maximize stability by complexity.
Productivity is total biomass produced - Humans maximize productivity by simplicity.
Productivity is biomass that can be harvested