Questions tagged [renewable-energy]

Energy sources that do not rely on the consumption of an exhaustible fuel. Tidal, geothermal, and the direct and indirect solar energies (direct: photovoltaics, CSP, solar thermal; indirect: wind, wave, biomass) are renewable energy.

The Renewable-Energy tag here covers questions about the physics (not the politics, engineering or economics) of energy sources that do not rely on the consumption of an exhaustible fuel. Tidal, geothermal, and the direct and indirect solar energies (direct: photovoltaics, CSP, solar thermal; indirect: wind, wave, biomass) are renewable energy.

The Sustainability StackExchange covers Q&A for all renewable energy, including the engineering, economics, and social aspects.

Already-commercial technologies:

Biomass

Biomass for heat is probably as old as human civilisation; more recently, biomass is used for biofuel in transport, for biogas in heating, or for burning and driving a turbine to provide electricity. All of these sources combined make biomass the world's largest source of renewable energy.

Hydro

Currently, the world's dominant source of renewable electricity, hydro-electric can come in several forms: run-of-river; storage hydro; and pumped-storage hydro. The latter is a form of energy storage rather than generation, but is nevertheless typically classified as renewable energy.

Wind

Originally used for grinding grain, now more commonly used for generating electricity in turbines

Photovoltaics (PV)

The direct conversion of sunlight into electricity.

Geothermal

The extraction of underground heat for space and water heating goes back many centuries; more recently, the heat has been used to drive turbines to generate electricity.

Solar thermal

Capturing sunlight for heating water (and occasionally for space-heating)

Concentrated Solar Power [CSP] Concentrating sunlight onto a fluid which is then used to drive a turbine or Stirling engine.

Full-scale commercial grid prototypes:

Wave

Pelamis, public domain image

The movement of waves is harnessed either through hydraulics or to drive turbines, to generate electricity.

Tidal stream

Seagen tidal turbine with blades raised above the water, from Wikimedia

Converting kinetic energy from daily / twice-daily tidal movements, with underwater turbines.

Osmotic power

Generating electricity from salinity gradients. The first prototype went in the water in Norway, in 2009.

Early-stage development:

Artificial photosynthesis

Building novel synthetic living photosynthesisers from basic genetic building blocks; or novel catalysts to harness sunlight to release hydrogen from water; various labs are working on different routes.

Tidal benthic friction

The hypothesis is that tidal water movements are mostly dissipated as friction against the bottom of the sea, and that by placing energy harvesters on the seabed, the kinetic energy can be converted to electricity. Specific harvesting technologies, scale of the resource, and the impact on benthic ecology, are currently unknown.

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Wind generators - why so few blades?

Why commercial wind generators usually have just 2-3 blades? Having more blades would allow to increase power OR decrease diameter. Decreased diameter would also reduce stress due to different wind speed on different height... But despite that…
BarsMonster
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Why are solar panels kept tilted?

I have noticed that, in my country India, most of the solar panels are tilted southward at an angle of ${45}^{\circ} .$ Even on buildings with inverted V-shaped roofs, solar panels are still oriented southward on both the sides of…
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Is plant photosynthesis more efficient than solar panels?

Is photosynthesis more efficient than solar panels? If so, by how much?
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Are tidal power plants slowing down Earth's rotation?

Are tidal power plants slowing down Earth's rotation to the speed of the orbiting moon? (1 rotation per 28 cca days) Are they vice versa increasing the speed of moon orbiting by generating some waves in gravitation field? If yes, can you calculate…
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Where does electricity go from a solar panel that is not plugged in to anything?

I found a similar question here on this site, but my question is slightly different. If a solar panel is exposed to sunlight but is not plugged in to anything--dc load, inverter, etc--where does that electricity go? In this example, I'm assuming the…
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Theoretical physics for better batteries?

It is Earth day, so I started thinking about the theoretical physics problems that could help reduce greenhouse-gas emissions and fight climate change. We actually have a reasonable range of ways to generate energy without fossil fuels. The problem…
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Are Fresnel lenses widely used for solar electricity? If not, why not?

I was just wondering why Fresnel Lenses are not widely used in the production of solar electricity. Their use there would mean that you could produce heat within a fraction of a second, up to a few minutes and run a turbine to produce…
Abhishek
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Why is the ground warm during winter and vice-versa?

I was just looking at the geothermal house heating in Iceland, and came to know that in the winter the water is warm, hence cools the house, but how is it hot, not about us feeling it.. My question is not why we feel it warm, but why is it warm? I…
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Is nuclear power desireable in the long term, given the fact that it's an unnatural heat input to our planet?

I've been reflecting on whether we want nuclear at all in the long term (compared to renewables like wind, solar, and hydro). There's a certain amount of heat (energy) entering our planet and leaving it. Greenhouse gases reduce the amount leaving,…
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Where does the electricity, generated by a solar panel, go if you don't use the electricity?

I'm sorry if this question is too trivial for this Q&A forum. I am a layman when it comes to physics (though I did cover the high-school physics courses). I was wondering what happens to the electricity, that is generated by your own solar panel, in…
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Does the second law of thermodynamics imply that renewable energy also leads to global warming/climate change?

So I have this (possibly dumb) question about the implications of the second law of thermodynamics to the use of renewable energy for the world, so please bear with me. Here goes: Apart from the finiteness of fossil fuels (FFs), which is obviously…
corius
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Energy from man-made tornadoes

Peter Thiel just paid $300,000 to Canadian inventor Louis Michaud who is working to construct useful "man-made tornadoes" or "atmospheric vortex engines" which could be components of future power plants. Less ambitiously, they could replace chimneys…
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What does the quantification of causes and effect look like, for clouds in offshore wind turbine wakes?

At Horns Rev windfarm off the coast of Denmark, sometimes in winter, clouds appears in the wake of the turbines. I've only seen photos of the phenomenon when the wind direction is exactly aligned with the grid layout - that is, it's blowing directly…
410 gone
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Is Keshe's technology for real?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UrN99RELqwo (Video Title: "Keshe Foundation Promo Intro Video (english with multiple subtitles) === PLEASE SHARE ===") In this video they claim that they can create free energy using plasma reactors. Is this…
Alex
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Theoretically speaking what are the limits for super-capacitors in terms of their storage capability?

According to wikipedia, commercially available super-capacitors in 2010 can store 30Wh/kg, with 85Wh/kg achieved in a lab in 2011. Have any theoretical calculations been done to show what can be achieved as an upper limit to super-capacitors?
Mozibur Ullah
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