Energy is obtained from various natural sources and converted into useful forms such as electricity. Different energy sources have advantages and disadvantages based on renewability, availability, reliability, scale, and environmental impact.
Fossil Fuels (Coal, Oil, Natural Gas)
Energy Source: Chemical energy stored in coal, oil, and natural gas.
Process:
Fossil fuels are burned in a boiler, heating water.
Steam turns a turbine.
The turbine drives a generator, producing electricity.
Advantages:
Reliable energy supply.
Large-scale electricity generation.
Disadvantages:
Non-renewable (finite supply).
Produces carbon dioxide (CO₂), contributing to climate change.
Causes air pollution (sulfur dioxide leads to acid rain).
Biofuels (Plant and Animal-Based Fuels)
Energy Source: Chemical energy in organic materials like wood, crops, and animal waste.
Process: Similar to fossil fuels—biofuels are burned to heat water and produce steam, which drives a turbine and generator.
Advantages:
Renewable (can be replenished).
Carbon neutral (absorbs CO₂ while growing, releases it when burned).
Disadvantages:
Large land use (competes with food production).
Deforestation can occur to make space to grow the crops.
Hydroelectric Power (Dams)
Energy Source: Gravitational potential energy of water stored behind a dam.
Process:
Water is released from the dam, spinning a turbine.
The turbine drives a generator, producing electricity.
Advantages:
Renewable and does not produce CO₂.
Reliable (constant energy supply).
Disadvantages:
Destroys ecosystems (flooding land).
High construction costs.
Tidal Power
Energy Source: Energy from rising and falling tides.
Process: Tidal movement spins turbines, generating electricity.
Advantages:
Renewable
Does not produce CO₂.
Reliable (tides are predictable).
Disadvantages:
Expensive
Limited locations.
Wave Power
Energy Source: Kinetic energy from ocean waves.
Process: Waves move floating generators, converting motion into electricity.
Advantages:
Renewable.
Disadvantages:
Unreliable (depends on weather).
Can harm marine life
Geothermal Energy
Energy Source: Thermal energy from Earth's hot rocks and magma.
Process:
Hot underground water produces steam.
Steam turns a turbine and generator.
Advantages:
Renewable.
Minimal CO₂ emissions.
Disadvantages:
Only available in volcanic areas.
High drilling costs.
Nuclear Power (Uranium and Plutonium)
Energy Source: Nuclear energy from splitting uranium/plutonium atoms (fission).
Process:
Nuclear fission releases heat, heating water.
Steam drives a turbine and generator.
Advantages:
No CO₂ emissions.
Produces large amounts of energy.
Reliable
Disadvantages:
Produces radioactive waste.
High accident risks (e.g., Chernobyl, Fukushima).
Non-renewable
Solar Cells (Photovoltaic Panels)
Energy Source: Light energy from the Sun.
Process: Solar panels convert light into electricity (photoelectric effect).
Advantages:
Renewable and no emissions.
Low operating costs.
Disadvantages:
Unreliable (only works in sunlight).
High installation cost.
Solar Panels for Heating & Wind Energy
Solar Heating Panels
Energy Source: Infrared radiation from the Sun.
Process:
Solar panels heat water directly for homes.
Advantages:
Renewable.
No emissions.
Disadvantages:
Only works in daylight.
Wind Power
Energy Source: Kinetic energy from wind.
Process:
Wind spins turbine blades.
The turbine drives a generator to produce electricity.
Advantages:
Renewable.
No pollution.
Low operating costs.
Disadvantages:
Unreliable (depends on wind speed).
Noisy and visually intrusive.
Not all input energy is converted into useful energy. Some energy is wasted as heat, sound, or other forms.
The Sun provides energy for most natural energy sources, except:
Geothermal Energy (from Earth's core).
Nuclear Energy (from uranium).
Tidal Energy (caused by the Moon’s gravity).