Utilisateur
a substance that can undergo a reaction to release energy (typically oxidation/combustion)
substance that can be replenished at the same rate at which is it consumed
carbon based
biomass trapped in anaerobic enviro for millions of years (microorganisms)
less efficient that black coal (more water in it)
closer to surface
12MjKg-1
made at a higher temp/pressure than brown
thus more energy dense
17-24MjKg-1
chem potential energy
then heat energy
then kinetic energy in steam then turbine
electrical energy in dynamo
no, due to several transformations in energy efficiency is quite low
formed in oilfields
mostly methane (CH4) due to plant life, thus simple
roughly 8 (4-12) carbons in length (non-polar)
mostly alkanes, some alkenes and cyclic hydrocarbons
44-44MJKg-1
roughly 18 (12-24) carbons in chain
44-46MJKg-1
but less volatile
thus diesel engines more efficient than petrol
made of biomass
renewable
THEORETICALLY carbon neutral
less impact on Global warming
up to 65% methan, also has CO2 (bad)
animal waste decomposing in anaerobioc enviro (cow farts)
refined from biogas (biomethane)
done through upgrading (removal of other gasses)
142 MJKg-1 (much higher than petrol)
but hard to store/use, thus isnt used
diesel alternatice as from triglycerides (plant/animal fat/oil)
it is diesel + carboxylic group
can be broken down into biodiesel through transesterification
this means adding heat, alcohol and catalyst
this breaks it up into three separate things with OCH3 on the end
refer to online or book now please
common substitue for petrol in engines
produced from fermentatio of starch/sugars
12-18% ethanol produces
then distilled (separated by bp) to 99.8%
energy effficiency/out put
economic cost/benefit
environmental considerations
sustainability
((energy obtained in desires form)/(energy available before conversion)) x100 (bc percent)
large volumes of water needed
inefficient energy source
requires large amount of arable land
(H)
the total energy locked in a substance
can be measured as change in energy (triangleH)
(triangleH)=(enthalpy of products)-(enthalpy of reactants)
change in enthalpy when substance burns in air (O2), which is always exothermic
reaction is exothermic
reaction is endothermic
when the substance is not pure, ie a mixture as it cannot be measured per mol
please look this up now
R-C(=O)-[O-H+H]-O-R -> R-C(=O)-O-R+H2O
carboxylic acid + alcohol -> ester + water
we meet our required energy needs in the future without impacting our quality of life too much
alcohol + yl, carb. acid +oate (-oic acid)
liquid not aq
small amounts of so2 nox, biofuels release less
we cannot currently use it for most of our energy needs due to (Equipment has to be made, takes up a lot of space doesnt exist in large pure quantities)
saturated ( only c-c bonds) and unsaturated (c=c bonds)
condensation reaction between glycerol and 3 fatty acids
through the catalysed hydrolysis of glycogen and starch
redox endothermic
6co2(g) +6h2o= c6h12o6 + 6o2
c6h12o6= 2ch3ch(oh)cooh (aq) lactic acid+ energy
c6h12o6= 2c2h5oh (aq) ethanol+ 2co2 (g)
glycogen, reconvert via hydrolysis
via oxidation
bc we dont make them ourselves and must come from diet
how closely a measured experiment is to the true value
the reproducability of a result (how close they are to each other)
the ability for the same person, using the same instruments, method and setup to achieve consisten results
the smallest change in quantity that can be detected by the measuring instrument
half of the smallest scale of measuring on a given instrument
the extent to which an experiment or measurement actually measures what it is intended to measure (does it directly address the aim/hypothesis)
