Sie sind bereits eingeloggt. Klicken Sie auf 2. tolino select Abo, um fortzufahren.
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
A great resource for beginner students and professionals alike Introduction to Energy, Renewable Energy and Electrical Engineering: Essentials for Engineering Science (STEM) Professionals and Students brings together the fundamentals of Carnot's laws of thermodynamics, Coulomb's law, electric circuit theory, and semiconductor technology. The book is the perfect introduction to energy-related fields for undergraduates and non-electrical engineering students and professionals with knowledge of Calculus III. Its unique combination of foundational concepts and advanced applications delivered with…mehr
A great resource for beginner students and professionals alike Introduction to Energy, Renewable Energy and Electrical Engineering: Essentials for Engineering Science (STEM) Professionals and Students brings together the fundamentals of Carnot's laws of thermodynamics, Coulomb's law, electric circuit theory, and semiconductor technology. The book is the perfect introduction to energy-related fields for undergraduates and non-electrical engineering students and professionals with knowledge of Calculus III. Its unique combination of foundational concepts and advanced applications delivered with focused examples serves to leave the reader with a practical and comprehensive overview of the subject. The book includes: * A combination of analytical and software solutions in order to relate aspects of electric circuits at an accessible level * A thorough description of compensation of flux weakening (CFW) applied to inverter-fed, variable-speed drives not seen anywhere else in the literature * Numerous application examples of solutions using PSPICE, Mathematica, and finite difference/finite element solutions such as detailed magnetic flux distributions * Manufacturing of electric energy in power systems with integrated renewable energy sources where three-phase inverter supply energy to interconnected, smart power systems Connecting the energy-related technology and application discussions with urgent issues of energy conservation and renewable energy - such as photovoltaics and ground-water heat pump resulting in a zero-emissions dwelling - Introduction to Energy, Renewable Energy, and Electrical Engineering crafts a truly modern and relevant approach to its subject matter.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Autorenporträt
EWALD F. FUCHS, Ph.D., has held professional engineering posts for 8 years at Siemens AG in Erlangen and Mülheim/Ruhr, Germany in the areas of control, energy conversion, and power systems, and a tenured faculty position thereafter for 35 years at the University of Colorado, teaching undergraduate and graduate energy conversion/power classes. He holds two U.S. patents on AC machines with increased torque and speed for hybrid/electric propulsion employing compensation of flux weakening (CFW). HEIDI A. FUCHS is a Senior Scientific Engineering Associate in Energy Technologies Area at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), with experience in energy use analysis, life-cycle energy and cost assessments, energy management practices, the energy-water nexus, spreadsheet modelling, and technical documentation.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments xiii
Summary xv
Preface xix
Glossary of Symbols, Abbreviations, and Acronyms xxix
About the Companion Website liii
1 Basic Concepts 1
1.1 Energy Conservation: Laws of Thermodynamics 1
1.2 Converting Heat to Mechanical Power 2
1.2.1 Carnot Cycle, Carnot Machines, and Carnot Efficiency 4
1.2.2 Rankine Cycle 8
1.2.3 Brayton Cycle 9
1.2.4 Ericsson Cycle 9
1.2.5 Internal Combustion Engines 10
1.2.6 Steam, Gas, and Oil Turbines 13
1.2.7 Energy Content of Common Fuels (e.g. Gasoline, Diesel, Methanol, Hydrogen) 15
1.3 Heat Pumps and Air-Conditioning Units 15
1.3.1 Heating Cycle Of Heat Pump 21
1.3.2 Combined Heating and Cooling Performance (CHCP) Coefficient of a Residence 22
1.4 Hydro Turbines 24
1.5 Wind Power and the Lanchester-Betz-Joukowsky Limit 26
1.6 Thermal Solar and PV Plants 28
1.7 Capacity Factors 40
1.8 Force Calculations Based on Coulomb's Law 40
1.8.1 Electric Charge 41
1.8.2 Electrostatic Force 43
1.9 Conductors, Insulators, and Semiconductors 45
1.10 Instantaneous Current i and Voltage v 46
1.10.1 Instantaneous Voltage v, Work/Energy work, and Power p 46
1.11 The Question of Frequency: AC Versus DC Distribution and Transmission Systems 47
1.12 Reference Directions and Polarities of Voltages and Currents 52
1.13 Power p 53
1.14 Ideal Passive Electric Circuit Elements 53
1.15 Independent and Dependent Voltage and Current Sources 55
1.16 Galvanic Elements, Voltaic Series, and Lead-Acid Batteries 55
1.17 Electrolysis 60
1.18 Flow Batteries and Fuel Cells 61
1.19 Reformer 61
1.20 Energy Storage Plants 62
1.21 Current Projects and Issues with Potential Solutions 62
1.22 Software in Public Domain (e.g. PSPICE, Mathematica, MATLAB/Simulink) 68
1.23 Summary 68
Problems 69
References 80
Appendix 1.A Design Data of Photovoltaic Power Plant of Figure E1.6.1 85
Appendix 1.B The Nature of Electricity and Its Manufacturing 89
Appendix 1.C The Cost of Electricity in a Renewable Energy System 99
2 Electric Circuit Laws 103
2.1 Ohm's Law and Instantaneous Electric Power p(t) 103
2.2 Kirchhoff's Current and Voltage Laws (KCL) and (KVL), Respectively 104
2.3 Application of KVL to Single-Loop Circuits 107
2.3.1 Voltage Division or Voltage Divider 108
2.4 Single-Node Pair Circuits 109
2.4.1 Current Division 110
2.5 Resistor Combinations 112
2.6 Nodal Analysis 115
2.7 Loop or Mesh Analysis 117
2.8 Superposition 118
2.8.1 Principle of Superposition 119
2.9 Source Exchange/Transformation 121
2.10 Thévenin's and Norton's Theorems 122
2.10.1 Equivalency of Thévenin and Norton Circuits 126
2.11 Wheatstone and Thomson Bridges 128
2.12 Summary 131
Problems 132
References 137
3 DC Circuit Transient Analysis 139
3.1 Capacitors 139
3.1.1 Energy Stored in a Capacitor 139
3.1.2 Capacitor Combination Formulas 146
3.2 Inductors 147
3.2.1 Energy Stored in an Inductor 148
3.2.2 Inductor Combination Formulas 151
3.3 Transient Analysis Applied to Circuits Resulting in First-Order, Ordinary Differential Equations with Constant Coefficients 152
3.3.1 RC Series Network and Time Constant tauRC 152