The energy required to raise the temperature of 1kg of a substance by 1°C or 1K
Power
power = energy/time
power = voltage x current
power = resistance x current2
An energy transfer of 1 joule per second is equal to a power of 1 watt
If given two motors A and B, the motor that can do the same work faster
Is more powerful
Energy can be transferred usefully, stored or dissipated but cannot be created or destroyed
In all system changes energy is dissipated, so that it is stored in less useful ways. This energy is often described as being 'wasted'
Reducing energy waste
Lubrication
Thermal Insulation
Thermal Conductivity
The higher the thermal conductivity of a material, heat is allowed to travel through the material more easily, so the higher the rate of energy transfer by conduction across the material
If the walls are thin metal sheets
Heat would be lost very quickly
Efficiency
The ratio of the useful work done by a machine, engine, device, etc, to the energy supplied to it, often expressed as a percentage
useful energy output/useful energy input x 100
Ways to increase efficiency
Reducing waste output
Recycling waste output
Main Energy Sources
Non-renewable: Fossil Fuels, Nuclear Fuel
Renewable: Biofuel, Wind, Hydro-electricity, Geothermal, Tidal, Solar, Water waves
Renewable energy
Energy which can be replenished as it is used
Non-renewable energy
Used more for large-scale energy supplies due to the large energy output per kilogram of fuel
Renewable energy has become more important due to the finite lifetime of fossil fuels, and so their development has become more important
Renewable energy is not always the most reliable as: solar doesn't work in bad weather or night, wind is only intermittent
Main Energy Uses
Transport
Electricity generation
Heating
Environmental Impact of Energy
Extraction: Fossil fuels destroy landscapes, wind turbines can be an eyesore
Use: Fossil fuels release harmful emissions, solar/wind create electricity with no emissions
During industrial revolution, fossil fuels became an important source of energy as it was easy to mine, and provided a lot of energy
Only recently has renewable energy become more suitable – technology has had to develop a lot since industrial revolution to be able to harness such energy sources efficiently
It is easier to use energy resources due to increasing pressure to cope with the public's increasing power demands but harder to solve environmental issues due to political, social, ethical and economic considerations