Renewable Energy Resources (3rd Ed.)

Language: English

Approximative price 83.49 €

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Renewable Energy Resources
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Support: Print on demand

Approximative price 250.36 €

In Print (Delivery period: 13 days).

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Renewable Energy Resources
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· 18.9x24.6 cm · Hardback

Renewable Energy Resources is a numerate and quantitative text covering the full range of renewable energy technologies and their implementation worldwide. Energy supplies from renewables (such as from biofuels, solar heat, photovoltaics, wind, hydro, wave, tidal, geothermal, and ocean-thermal) are essential components of every nation?s energy strategy, not least because of concerns for the local and global environment, for energy security and for sustainability. Thus in the years between the first and this third edition, most renewable energy technologies have grown from fledgling impact to significant importance because they make good sense, good policy and good business.

This Third Edition is extensively updated in light of these developments, while maintaining the book?s emphasis on fundamentals, complemented by analysis of applications. Renewable energy helps secure national resources, mitigates pollution and climate change, and provides cost effective services. These benefits are analysed and illustrated with case studies and worked examples. The book recognises the importance of cost effectiveness and efficiency of end-use. Each chapter begins with fundamental scientific theory, and then considers applications, environmental impact and socio-economic aspects before concluding with Quick Questions for self-revision and Set Problems. The book includes Reviews of basic theory underlying renewable energy technologies, such as electrical power, fluid dynamics, heat transfer and solid-state physics. Common symbols and cross-referencing apply throughout; essential data are tabulated in appendices.

An associated eResource provides supplementary material on particular topics, plus a solutions guide to Set Problems.

Renewable Energy Resources supports multi-disciplinary master degrees in science and engineering, and specialist modules in first degrees. Practising scientists and engineers who have not had a comprehensive training in renewable energy will find it a useful introductory text and a reference book.

1. Principles of Renewable Energy  2. Solar Radiation and the Greenhouse Effect  3. Solar Water Heating  4. Other Solar Thermal Applications  5. Photovoltaic Power Technology – PV  6. Hydropower  7. Wind Resource  8. Wind Power Technology  9. Biomass Resources from Photosynthesis  10. Bioenergy Technologies  11. Wave Power  12. Tidal-current and Tidal-range Power  13. Ocean Gradient Energy: OTEC and Osmotic Power  14. Geothermal Energy  15. Energy Systems: Integration, Distribution and Storage  16. Using Energy Efficiently  17. Institutional and Economic Factors  Review 1:  Electrical Power  Review 2: Fluid Dynamics  Review 3: Heat Transfer  Review 4: Solid State Physics for Photovoltaics  Review 5: Units and Conversions: Algebraic Method  Appendix A: Units and Conversions  Appendix B: Data  Appendix C: Some Heat Transfer Formulas  Appendix D: Comparisons of Technologies  Short Answers to Selected Problems  Index

Postgraduate, Professional, and Undergraduate

John Twidell has considerable experience in renewable energy as an academic professor in both the UK and abroad, teaching undergraduate and postgraduate courses and supervising research students. He has participated in the extraordinary growth of renewable energy as a research contractor, journal editor, board member of wind and solar professional associations and company director. University positions have been in Scotland, England, Sudan and Fiji. The family home operates with solar heat and electricity, biomass heat and an all-electric car; the aim is to practice what is preached.

Tony Weir has worked on energy and environment issues in the Pacific Islands and Australia for over 30 years. He has researched and taught on renewable energy and on climate change at the University of the South Pacific and elsewhere, and was a Lead Author for the 2011 IPCC Special Report on Renewable Energy. He has also managed a large international program of renewable energy projects and been a policy adviser to the Australian Government, specialising in the interface between technology and policy.

Please visit the following link for a Q&A with the authors about the importance of the new edition, what it includes, and the state of the field!

https://www.routledge.com/sustainability/posts/652