by vtsnowedin » Sun 29 Nov 2009, 06:14:49
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('zeke3000', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('zeke3000', 'M')aybe a stupid question but let´s try.
Is it theoretically possible to convert heat into electricity ? Could it be possible to convert excess heat generated by fossil fuel burning "back" into usable energy (electricity,mechanical or somethin else maybe) ? Ie. using the greenhouse effect to generate energy. E.g. Iceland is using heat (steam?) somehow to produce electricity I understood..
I believe I should rephrase my question. Could we use BOTH the extra heat generated by fossil fuel burning AND the extra heat trapped becaused of the resulting green house effect and convert both to more usable energy.
First I was thinking mostly about the climate warming (which is being debated, I´m not sure were people here stand on that), but then I realised the physical process of burning fuels also create direct heat). I guess these two "heats" differ widely in character&scale, so you may omit either one. Corrections are welcome.
Darn you got that in before I could say that yes you can make electricity by building a fire,boiling water and running the steam through a turbine. Use any fuel you want , oil,coal ,NG, or nuclear fusion any heat source will do. But now you want to limit it to waste heat.
If they could have figured that out, and sometimes they have, they wouldn't have let it go to waste to begin with.
here is a question for you. If a wind farm extracts X kilowatts of energy from an air mass is the total energy contained by the air mass reduced by X kilowatts or by a larger number based on an efficiency factor. And could that be measured by the cooling of the air mass or only by the reduction in wind speed the mass exhibits downwind of the wind farm. The wind got its velocity from sunlight heating air expanding it and creating a pressure differential between two air masses. If we stick enough windmills in the way can we change the weather?