Alternative Fuel Sources
By: Janna • Study Guide • 858 Words • December 5, 2009 • 1,276 Views
Essay title: Alternative Fuel Sources
This is just an outline for a power point slide show
Outline:
Slide 1:
Group A
Slide 2:
This would be the question we decided on.
Slide 3:
Scope of the Problem
• Gasoline Cost
• Pollution
Slide 4, 5:
Terms:
• E85: an alcohol fuel mixture that typically contains a mixture of up to 85% denatured fuel ethanol and gasoline.
• Flexible Fuel Vehicle: an automobile that can typically use different sources of fuel, either mixed in the same tank or with separate tanks and fuel systems for each fuel.
• Photovoltaics: a technology that converts light directly into electricity.
• Cellulosic Ethanol: a type of biofuel produced from lignocellulose, a structural material that comprises much of the mass of plants. Its chemically identical to ethanol from other sources but has the advantage that the lignocellulose raw material is highly abundant and diverse. (Switchgrass, Woodchip, etc.)
• Biomass: Living and recently biological matter that can be used as fuel or for industrial production.
• Electrolyzers: a machine used to decompose by electrolysis.
• Electrolysis: a method of separating chemically bonded elements and compounds by passing an electric current through them.
-www.reference.com/browse/wiki/electrolysis
-http://dictionary.reference.com/search?r=2&q=electrolyzer
- (I didn’t get references for the rest but I put what I had in)
Slide 6:
Criteria for evaluating solutions
• Pollution
• Efficiency
• Use of current Infrastructure
• Cost
Slide 7:
Solutions
• Ethanol Fuel
• Hydrogen Fuel
• Electric Vehicle
• Solar Power
• Pressurized Air Vehicle
Slide 8:
Ethanol Fuel
• Pollution
-The Production process of corn-based ethanol produces CO2. However, the biomass used to create ethanol absorbs CO2 as it grows. Ideally, ethanol adds no net CO2 to the atmosphere.
-Ethanol is water-soluble, non-toxic, and biodegradable.
-E85 contains roughly 80% less potential contaminates than gasoline.
-It can be ingested by humans; therefore it must be denatured with gasoline or a bitter agent to prevent ingestion.
-www.cecarf.org/Programs/Fuels?Fuelfacts?Bio-Fuels%20Facts.Html
-www.e85fuel.com/e85101/faqs/toxicity.php
Slide 9:
• Efficiency
-Corn-based ethanol has about 2/3 the energy content of gasoline by volume which means lower gas mileage.
-Corn-based ethanol production is energy-intensive and some studies say that it requires as much energy to produce it as it yields.
- www.cecarf.org/Programs/Fuels?Fuelfacts?Bio-Fuels%20Facts.Html
Slide 10:
• Use of Existing Infrastructure
- Ethanol use would not require any significant overhaul of the existing fuel distribution infrastructure.
- However, only Flex-Fuel Vehicles can currently be fueled using ethanol.
- Alcohols are corrosive and therefore engine parts that come in contact with ethanol must be alcohol-tolerant.
-Tolerant