Sustainable energy: choosing among options (Cambridge, 2012). - ОГЛАВЛЕНИЕ / CONTENTS
Навигация

Архив выставки новых поступлений | Отечественные поступления | Иностранные поступления | Сиглы
ОбложкаSustainable energy: choosing among options / J.W.Tester et al. - 2nd ed. - Cambridge: MIT Press, 2012. - xxx, 1019 p., [16] p. of plates: ill. (some col.), maps (chiefly col.). - Incl. bibl. ref. - Ind.: p.1012-1019. - ISBN 978-0-262-01747-3
 

Оглавление / Contents
 
Preface to the First Edition .................................. xix
Acknowledgments from the First Edition ...................... xxiii
Preface to the Second Edition ............................... xxvii
Acknowledgments for the Second Edition ....................... xxix
1  Sustainable Energy: The Engine of Sustainable Development .... 1
   1.1  Sustainable Energy: The Engine of Sustainable
        Development ............................................. 2
   1.1  The Energy Portfolio ................................... 11
   1.1  Denning Energy: Scientific and Engineering
        Foundations ............................................ 14
   1.2  Aspects of Energy Production and Consumption ........... 20
   1.3  National and Global Patterns of Energy Supply and
        Utilization ............................................ 26
   1.4  Environmental Effects of Energy: Gaining
        Understanding .......................................... 30
   1.5  Confronting the Energy-Prosperity-Environmental
        Dilemma: Sustainability and Alternative Proposals ...... 39
   1.6  Mathematical Representations of Sustainability ......... 44
   1.9  The Rest of This Book .................................. 46
   Problems .................................................... 47
   References .................................................. 48
2  Estimation and Evaluation of Energy Resources ............... 51
   2.1  Units of Measurement: Energy and Power ................. 52
   2.2  Comparison of Different Forms of Energy ................ 56
   2.3  The Energy Life Cycle .................................. 60
   2.4  Estimation and Valuation of Fossil Mineral Fuels,
        Especially Petroleum ................................... 70
        2.4.1  Asking the right questions and avoiding the
               unanswerable ones ............................... 70
        2.4.2  Perspectives from mineral geology ............... 71
        2.4.3  Two interpretations of hydrocarbon fuel
               economics ....................................... 72
        2.4.4  Categories of reserves .......................... 80
        2.4.5  Forecasting mineral fuel prices and supplies .... 82
        2.4.6  Geopolitical factors and energy supply
               "crises" ........................................ 87
        2.4.1  Estimation and Valuation of Nuclear Fuel
               Resources ....................................... 90
   2.6  Estimation and Valuation of Renewable Energy
        Resources .............................................. 92
        2.6.1  Introduction and historical notes ............... 92
        2.6.2  Renewable energy resource assessment ............ 94
        2.6.3  Environmental impacts ........................... 96
        2.6.4  Technology development and deployment ........... 97
        2.6.5  The importance of storage ....................... 98
        2.6.6  Connecting renewables to hydrogen ............... 98
        2.6.7  The future of renewable energy .................. 99
        2.6.8  Additional resources ........................... 100
   2.7  Lessons for Sustainable Development ................... 100
   2.8  Summary and Conclusions ............................... 101
   Problems ................................................... 102
   References ................................................. 103
3  Technical Performance: Allowability, Efficiency,
   Production Rates ........................................... 107
   3.1  The Relation of Technical Performance to
        Sustainability ........................................ 108
   3.2  An Introduction to Methods of Thermodynamic Analysis .. 110
        3.2.1  Allowability, efficiency, and the Second Law ... 110
        3.2.2  More about entropy ............................. 112
        3.2.3  Analysis of ideal (Carnot) heat engines ........ 118
        3.2.4  Analysis of real-world (irreversible) heat
               engines ........................................ 122
   3.3  The Importance of Rate Processes in Energy
        Conversion ............................................ 136
   3.4  Chemical Rate Processes ............................... 138
   3.5  The Physical Transport of Heat ........................ 142
        3.5.1  Foundations for quantitative analysis .......... 142
        3.5.2  Thermal conduction ............................. 144
        3.5.3  Convective heat transfer ....................... 146
        3.5.4  Radiative heat transmission .................... 147
        3.5.5  Heat transfer by tandem mechanisms ............. 150
   3.6  Energy Requirements for Gas Separation Processes ...... 152
   3.7  Use and Abuse of Time Scales .......................... 154
   3.8  Energy Resources and Energy Conversion: Fertile
        Common Ground ......................................... 155
   Problems ................................................... 156
   References ................................................. 157
4  Local, Regional, and Global Environmental Effects of
   Energy ..................................................... 161
   4.1  How Energy Systems Interact with the Environment ...... 162
        4.1.1  Known and potential environmental threats ...... 162
        4.1.2  Origin of harmful agents ....................... 165
        4.1.3  Length and time scales for environmental
               impacts ........................................ 168
   4.2  Adverse Environmental Effects over Local and
        Regional Length Scales ................................ 173
        4.2.1  Ambient air pollution .......................... 173
        4.2.2  Adulteration of soil, water, and indoor air .... 181
        4.2.3  Transport and transformation of air, ground,
               and water contamination ........................ 183
   4.3  Global Climate Change: Environmental Consequences
        over Planetary Length Scales .......................... 184
        4.3.1  Introduction ................................... 184
        4.3.2  Basic science of the greenhouse effect ......... 187
        4.3.3  Energy and the greenhouse effect ............... 194
        4.3.4  Greenhouse consequences: Consensus, unknowns,
               misconceptions ................................. 199
        4.3.5  Technological and policy response strategies:
               Evolutionary and revolutionary ................. 207
   4.4  Attribution of Environmental Damage to Energy
        Utilization ........................................... 216
        4.4.1  Diagnosing receptor jeopardy and injury ........ 217
        4.4.2  Source identification .......................... 222
        4.4.3  Risk and uncertainty ........................... 223
        4.4.4  Simulation modeling to estimate environmental
               externality costs .............................. 224
   4.5  Methods of Environmental Protection ................... 227
        4.5.1  Energy and the environment as an ensemble of
               coupled complex systems ........................ 227
        4.5.2  Earth system ecology as a working paradigm ..... 228
        4.5.3  Public policy instruments ...................... 230
        4.5.4  Technological remedies ......................... 232
   4.6. Environmental Benefits of Energy ...................... 233
        4.6.1  Pollution prevention and environmental
               restoration .................................... 233
        4.6.2  Social and economic foundations for
               environmental stewardship ...................... 233
   4.7  Implications for Sustainable Energy ................... 233
        4.7.1  Environmental footprints as sustainability
               metrics ........................................ 233
        4.7.2  The unusual challenge of global climate
               change ......................................... 234
   Appendix: Lessons from S02 Emissions Trading ............... 235
   Problems ................................................... 239
   References ................................................. 242
5 Project Economic Evaluation ................................. 249
   5.1  Introduction .......................................... 250
   5.2  Time Value of Money Mechanics ......................... 252
        5.2.1  Basic aspects .................................. 252
        5.2.2  Application to a typical cash-flow scenario .... 255
        5.2.3  Derivation of relations ........................ 258
        5.2.4  Pitfalls, errors, and ambiguities .............. 258
   5.3  Current- versus Constant-Dollar Comparisons ........... 262
   5.4  Simple Payback ........................................ 266
   5.5  Economy of Scale and Learning Curve ................... 267
   5.6  Allowing for Uncertainty .............................. 271
        5.6.1  Overview ....................................... 271
        5.6.2  Analytic uncertainty propagation ............... 271
        5.6.3  The Monte Carlo method ......................... 272
        5.6.4  Decision tree method ........................... 273
   5.7  Accounting for Externalities .......................... 273
   5.8  Energy Accounting ..................................... 280
   5.9  Modeling beyond the Project Level ..................... 282
   5.10 Summary ............................................... 283
   Appendix: Derivation of Relations for Levelized Cost ....... 285
   Problems ................................................... 286
   References ................................................. 290
   Websites of Interest ....................................... 292
6  Energy Systems and Sustainability Metrics .................. 293
   6.1  Introduction and Historical Notes ..................... 293
   6.2  Energy from a Systems Perspective ..................... 298
   6.3  Systems Analysis Approaches ........................... 306
        6.3.1  Life-cycle analysis ............................ 309
        6.3.2  Simulation models .............................. 312
        6.3.3  Risk-based models .............................. 313
   6.4  Measures of Sustainability ............................ 317
        6.4.1  General indicators of sustainability ........... 318
        6.4.2  Categories of indicators ....................... 320
   6.5  Drivers of Societal Change ............................ 322
   6.6  Some General Principles of Sustainable Development
        Problems .............................................. 328
   References ................................................. 329
   Websites of Interest ....................................... 332
7  Energy, Water, and Land Use ................................ 333
   7.1  Linkages between Energy, Water, and Land Use .......... 333
   7.2  Major Systems, Interactions, and Trends ............... 336
   7.3  Major Planetary Cycles ................................ 339
        7.3.1  Water cycle .................................... 340
        7.3.2  Carbon cycle ................................... 343
        7.3.3  Nitrogen cycle ................................. 345
        7.3.4  Climate cycles ................................. 347
   7.4  Overview of Land-Use Issues ........................... 351
        7.4.1  Land-use patterns .............................. 351
        7.4.2  Human development .............................. 351
        7.4.3  Agriculture and forestry ....................... 354
        7.4.4  Monitoring land-use changes .................... 357
   7.5  Overview of Ocean-Use Issues .......................... 360
        7.5.1  Physical characteristics of the oceans ......... 360
        7.5.2  Food chains .................................... 363
        7.5.1  Fisheries and aquaculture ...................... 365
        7.5.4  Monitoring ocean changes ....................... 366
   7.6  Implications for Sustainable Energy ................... 366
   Problems ................................................... 368
   References ................................................. 369
   Websites of Interest ....................................... 371
8  Fossil Fuels and Fossil Energy ............................. 373
   8.1  Introduction .......................................... 374
        8.1.1  Definition and types of fossil fuels ........... 374
        8.1.2  Historical and current contributions of
               fossil fuels to human progress ................. 377
        8.1.3  Sustainability: Challenges and opportunities ... 380
   8.2  The Fossil-Fuel Resource Base ......................... 381
        8.2.1  How long will fossil fuels last? ............... 381
        8.2.2  "Unconventional" naturally occurring fossil
                fuels ......................................... 382
        8.2.3  Fossil resources and sustainability ............ 384
   8.3  Harvesting Energy and Energy Products from Fossil
        Fuels ................................................. 384
        8.3.1  Exploration, discovery, and extraction of
               fuels .......................................... 384
        8.3.2  Fuel storage and transportation ................ 384
        8.3.3  Fuel conversion ................................ 385
        8.3.4  Fuel combustion  ............................... 396
        8.3.5  Direct generation of electricity: Fuel cells ... 402
        8.3.6  Manufacture of chemicals and other products .... 409
   8.4  Environmental Impacts ................................. 409
        8.4.1  Pollutant sources and remedies: The fuel
               itself ......................................... 409
        8.4.2  Pollutant sources and remedies: Combustion
               pathologies .................................... 412
        8.4.3  Pollutant sources and remedies: Carbon
               management ..................................... 414
   8.5  Geopolitical and Sociological Factors ................. 418
        8.5.1  Globalization of fossil energy sources ......... 418
        8.5.2  Equitable access, revenue scaffolds, American
               Graffiti ....................................... 420
   8.6  Economics of Fossil Energy ............................ 423
   8.7  Some Principles for Evaluating Fossil and Other
        Energy Technology Options ............................. 429
   8.8  Emerging Technologies ................................. 435
   8.9  Conclusion: Why Are Fossil Fuels Important to
        Sustainable Energy? ................................... 442
        Problems .............................................. 443
   References ................................................. 443
9  Nuclear Power .............................................. 447
   9.1  Nuclear History ....................................... 448
   9.2  Physics ............................................... 450
   9.3  Nuclear Reactors ...................................... 451
   9.4  Burning and Breeding .................................. 454
   9.5  Nuclear Power Economics ............................... 455
   9.6  Nuclear Power Plant Accidents ......................... 457
   9.7  Reactor Safety ........................................ 464
   9.8  Nuclear Reactor Technologies .......................... 466
        9.8.1  Light-water reactors (LWR) ..................... 467
        9.8.2  RBMK reactors .................................. 470
        9.8.3  Heavy-water-cooled technologies ................ 474
        9.8.4  Gas-cooled reactor technologies ................ 474
        9.8.5  Liquid-metal reactor technologies .............. 477
   9.9  Actinide Burning ...................................... 479
   9.10 Advanced Reactors ..................................... 481
   9.11 Nuclear Power Fuel Resources .......................... 481
   9.12 Fuel Cycle ............................................ 482
        9.12.1 Uranium mining ................................. 483
        9.12.2 Uranium milling ................................ 484
        9.12.3 Conversion ..................................... 484
        9.12.4 Enrichment ..................................... 485
        9.12.5 Fuel fabrication ............................... 486
        9.12.6 Spent fuel ..................................... 486
        9.12.7 Reprocessing ................................... 486
        9.12.8 High-level wastes (HLW) disposal ............... 488
   9.13 Fusion Energy ......................................... 492
        9.13.1 Introduction ................................... 492
        9.13.2 Why is fusion more difficult than fission? ..... 493
        9.13.3 Magnetic fusion energy ......................... 495
        9.13.4 Inertial fusion energy ......................... 496
        9.13.5 Prospects for the future ....................... 497
   9.14 Future Prospects for Nuclear Power .................... 499
   Problems ................................................... 500
   References ................................................. 500
   Additional Resources ....................................... 502
10 Biomass Energy ............................................. 503
   10.1 Characterizing the Biomass Resource ................... 504
        10.1.1 Denning biomass ................................ 504
        10.1.2 Renewability indices and biomass resources ..... 507
   10.2 Biomass Relevance to Energy Production ................ 510
        10.2.1 Utilization options ............................ 510
        10.2.2 Advantages and disadvantages ................... 512
        10.2.3 More on resources .............................. 514
   10.3 Chemical and Physical Properties Relevant to Energy
        Production ............................................ 517
   10.4 Biofuels Production: Policy Incentives ................ 520
   10.5 Thermal Conversion of Biomass ......................... 521
        10.5.1 Biomass to electricity ......................... 521
        10.5.2 Biomass to fuels ............................... 526
   10.6 Bioconversion ......................................... 528
        10.6.1 Introduction ................................... 528
        10.6.2 Biogas ......................................... 528
        10.6.3 Fermentation ethanol from corn and cellulosic
               biomass ........................................ 529
        10.6.4 Synfuels from biomass gasification ............. 532
   10.7 Environmental Issues .................................. 532
   10.8 Economics ............................................. 535
   10.9 Research and Development Opportunities ................ 536
   10.10 Disruptive Technology ................................ 537
   10.11 Summary .............................................. 540
   Problems ................................................... 540
   References ................................................. 541
   Websites of Interest ....................................... 544
11 Geothermal Energy .......................................... 545
   11.1 Characterization of Geothermal Resource Types ......... 546
        11.1.1 Definition in general .......................... 546
        11.1.2 Natural hydrothermal systems ................... 550
        11.1.3 Geopressured systems ........................... 552
        11.1.4 Hot dry rock (enhanced geothermal systems) ..... 553
        11.1.5 Magma .......................................... 554
        11.1.6 Ultra-low-grade systems ........................ 555
        11.1.7 Markets for geothermal energy .................. 555
   11.2 Geothermal Resource Size and Distribution ............. 558
        11.2.1 Overall framework and terminology .............. 558
        11.2.2 Quality issues ................................. 559
        11.2.3 Resource base and reserve estimates ............ 560
   11.3 Practical Operation and Equipment for Recovering
        Energy ................................................ 563
        11.3.1 Drilling and field development ................. 563
        11.3.2 Reservoir fluid production ..................... 565
        11.3.3 Nonelectric, direct-heat utilization ........... 569
        11.3.4 Electric power generation ...................... 573
        11.3.5 Equipment ...................................... 577
        11.3.6 Power-cycle performance ........................ 581
   11.4 Sustainability Attributes ............................. 583
        11.4.1 Reservoir lifetime issues ...................... 583
        11.4.2 Environmental impacts .......................... 585
        11.4.3 Dispatchable heat and power delivery ........... 586
        11.4.4 Suitability for developing countries ........... 587
        11.4.5 Potential for C02 reduction and pollution
               prevention ..................................... 587
   11.5 Status of Geothermal Technology Today ................. 588
        11.5.1 Hydrothermal ................................... 588
        11.5.2 Advanced systems ............................... 592
   11.6 Competing in Today's Energy Markets ................... 604
   11.7 Research and Development Advances Needed .............. 607
   11.8 Potential for the Long Term ........................... 609
   Problems ................................................... 610
   References ................................................. 612
   Websites of Interest ....................................... 618
12 Hydropower ................................................. 619
   12.1 Overview of Hydropower ................................ 619
   12.2 Hydropower Resource Assessment ........................ 622
   12.3 Basic Energy Conversion Principles .................... 625
   12.4 Conversion Equipment and Civil Engineering
        Operations ............................................ 628
        12.4.1 Civil engineering aspects of dam construction
               and waterway management ........................ 628
        12.4.2 Turbines as energy converters .................. 629
   12.5 Sustainability Attributes ............................. 632
   12.6 Status of Hydropower Technology Today ................. 636
        12.6.1 Economic issues ................................ 636
        12.6.2 Potential for growth ........................... 637
        12.6.3 Advanced technology needs ...................... 638
   Problems ................................................... 640
   References ................................................. 641
   Websites of Interest ....................................... 643
13 Solar Energy ............................................... 645
   13.1 General Characteristics of Solar Energy ............... 646
   13.2 Resource Assessment ................................... 647
   13.3 Passive and Active Solar Thermal Energy for
        Buildings ............................................. 656
        13.3.1 Motivation and general issues .................. 656
        13.3.2 Passive systems ................................ 658
        13.3.3 Active systems ................................. 660
        13.3.4 Economic and policy issues ..................... 663
   13.4 Solar Thermal Electric Systems: Concentrating Solar
        Power (CSP) ........................................... 665
        13.4.1 Fundamentals and options ....................... 665
        13.4.2 Power tower: Central receiver systems .......... 666
        13.4.3 Parabolic troughs .............................. 668
        13.4.4 Dish-engine systems ............................ 672
        13.4.5 Current status and future potential of CSP ..... 674
   13.5 Solar Photovoltaic (PV) Systems ....................... 677
        13.5.1 Solid-state physical chemistry fundamentals .... 678
        13.5.2 Performance limits and design options .......... 680
        13.5.3 Silica-based systems (crystalline and
               amorphous) ..................................... 683
        13.5.4 Copper indium diselenide (CIS) ................. 684
        13.5.5 Cadmium telluride (CdTe) ....................... 686
        13.5.6 Current status and future potential of PV ...... 686
   13.6 Sustainability Attributes ............................. 689
   13.7 Summary and Prognosis ................................. 691
   Problems ................................................... 692
   References ................................................. 694
   Websites of Interest ....................................... 696
14 Ocean Wave, Tide, Current, and Thermal Energy Conversion ... 697
   14.1 Introduction .......................................... 697
   14.2 Energy from the Tides and Currents .................... 700
        14.2.1 Impoundment-type tidal ......................... 700
        14.2.2 Current-powered systems, tidal and otherwise ... 704
   14.3 Energy from the Waves: Overview ....................... 704
   14.4 Energy from Temperature Differences ................... 708
        14.4.1 Overview ....................................... 708
        14.4.2 Performance limits ............................. 708
        14.4.3 OTEC technology ................................ 711
   44.5 Economic Prospects .................................... 712
   14.6 Environmental and Sustainability Considerations ....... 714
   14.7 The Ocean as an Externalities Sink .................... 715
   14.8 Current Status and Future Prospects ................... 715
   Appendix: Constants and Conversion Factors ................. 716
   Problems ................................................... 717
   References ................................................. 718
   Websites of Interest ....................................... 720
15 Wind Energy ................................................ 721
   15.1 Introduction and Historical Notes ..................... 722
        15.1.1 Introduction ................................... 722
        15.1.2 Historical notes ............................... 723
   15.2 Wind Resources ........................................ 726
        15.2.1 Wind quality ................................... 728
        15.2.2 Variation of wind speed with elevation ......... 729
        15.2.3 Air density .................................... 732
        15.2.4 Maximum wind-turbine efficiency: The Betz
               limit .......................................... 733
   15.3 Wind Machinery and Generating Systems ................. 736
        15.3.1 Overview ....................................... 736
        15.3.2 Rotor blade assembly ........................... 739
        15.3.3 Tower .......................................... 739
        15.3.4 Nacelle components.............................. 740
        15.3.1 Balance-of-station subsystems .................. 740
        15.3.6 System design challenges ....................... 740
   15.4 Wind-Turbine Rating ................................... 741
   15.5 Wind-Power Economics .................................. 742
   15.6 Measures of Sustainability ............................ 745
        15.6.1 Net energy analysis ............................ 745
        15.6.2 Cost of externalities .......................... 746
        15.6.3 Environmental impact of wind power ............. 746
   15.7 Current Status and Future Prospects ................... 748
   Appendix: Conversion Factors Relevant to Wind Power ........ 751
   Problems ................................................... 752
   References ................................................. 754
   Websites of Interest ....................................... 755
16 Energy Carriers: Electric Power, Hydrogen Fuel, Other? ..... 757
   16.1 Introduction and Historical Perspectives .............. 757
        16.1.1 Growth of the electric generation industry ..... 760
        16.1.2 Life-cycle tracking of electric energy uses .... 766
        16.1.3 Overall efficiency of primary energy usage ..... 768
   16.2 Electricity as an Energy Carrier ...................... 770
        16.2.1 Electric energy ................................ 770
        16.2.2 Centralized energy generation .................. 771
        16.2.3 Electric power generation ...................... 772
        16.2.4 Environmental effects of electricity
               production ..................................... 774
        16.2.5 Siting requirements for power plants ........... 777
        16.2.6 Electricity economics .......................... 780
   16.3 Hydrogen as an Energy Carrier ......................... 782
        16.3.1 Hydrogen production ............................ 784
        16.3.2 Hydrogen safety ................................ 789
        16.3.3 Hydrogen storage and distribution .............. 791
        16.3.4 Future opportunities ........................... 792
   16.4 Sustainability Issues ................................. 792
   Problems ................................................... 796
   References ................................................. 797
   Websites of Interest ....................................... 798
17 Energy Management: Storage, Transportation, and
   Distribution ............................................... 800
   17.1 Overview of Energy Management Systems ................. 800
   17.2 Connected Efficiencies and Energy Chains .............. 805
   17.3 Modes of Energy Storage ............................... 808
        17.3.1 General characteristics ........................ 808
        17.3.2 Energy storage technologies .................... 812
        17.3.1 17.4 Energy Transmission ....................... 827
        17.4.1 General characteristics of energy
               transmission systems ........................... 827
        17.4.2 Oil transport .................................. 828
        17.4.3 Natural gas transport .......................... 829
        17.4.4 Coal transport ................................. 833
        17.4.5 Electric power transmission .................... 833
   17.5 Energy Distribution Systems ........................... 837
        17.5.1 General characteristics of central versus
               distributed systems ............................ 837
        17.5.2 Combined heat and power opportunities .......... 842
        17.5.3 Applications to renewable energy systems and
               hybrids ........................................ 842
   17.6 Ways of Organizing the Electric Economy ............... 842
        17.6.1 Demand-side management (DSM) and distributed
               generation ..................................... 843
        17.6.2 Electricity transmission and distribution and
               economic deregulation .......................... 844
        17.6.3 An example of electric industry planning
               using multiattribute assessment tools .......... 845
        17.6.4 The need for more dynamic utilization of
               transmission and distribution capacity ......... 849
   17.7 Energy Market Impacts on Electricity Generation
        Options ............................................... 851
   17.8 Sustainability Attributes ............................. 854
        17.8.1 Improved resource utilization .................. 854
        17.8.2 Environmental, safety, and health concerns ..... 854
        17.8.3 Economic and operational attributes ............ 855
   17.9 Opportunities for Advancement of Sustainable Energy
        Infrastructures ....................................... 856
   Problems ................................................... 857
   References ................................................. 860
   Websites of Interest ....................................... 862
18 Transportation Services .................................... 865
   18.1 Introduction and Historical Perspectives .............. 865
   18.2 Elements of the Transportation System ................. 874
   18.3 Transportation Fuels and the Fuel Cycle ............... 877
   18.4 Personal Vehicles ..................................... 882
        18.4.1 Historical perspectives ........................ 882
        18.4.2 Looking forward ................................ 885

   18.5 Life-Cycle Comparison of Vehicle Alternatives for
        Passenger Road Transport .............................. 887
   18.6 Freight Vehicles ...................................... 894
   18.7 Public Transit, Interurban, and Intercontinental
        Transport ............................................. 896
   18.8 Motorization Trends ................................... 899
   18.9 Sustainability Issues ................................. 901
   Problems ................................................... 903
   References ................................................. 903
   Websites of Interest ....................................... 905
19 Industrial Energy Usage .................................... 907
   19.1 Introduction and Historical Perspectives .............. 907
   19.2 Life-Cycle Analysis and Design for Sustainability ..... 911
   19.3 Metals Industries ..................................... 914
   19.4 Cement and Lime Industries ............................ 916
   19.5 Chemical Industries ................................... 917
   19.6 Forest Products and Agriculture ....................... 919
   19.7 Waste Management Industries ........................... 920
   19.8 Sustainability Issues ................................. 921
   Problems ................................................... 925
   References ................................................. 925
   Websites of Interest ....................................... 926
20 Commercial and Residential Buildings ....................... 927
   20.1 Introduction and Historical Perspectives .............. 927
   20.2 Life-Cycle Analysis ................................... 931
   20.3 Residential Buildings ................................. 936
        20.3.1 Design ......................................... 936
        20.3.2 Efficiency ..................................... 940
   20.4 Commercial Buildings .................................. 941
        20.4.1 Design ......................................... 941
        20.4.2 Efficiency ..................................... 945
   20.5 Indoor Air Quality .................................... 947
   20.6 Sustainability Issues ................................. 948
   Problems ................................................... 950
   References ................................................. 950
   Websites of Interest ....................................... 951
21 Synergistic Complex Systems ................................ 953
   21.1 Introduction and Historical Notes ..................... 954
   21.2 The Complex Systems View .............................. 957
        21.2.1 Expert panels .................................. 958
        21.2.2 Partial informational models ................... 959
        21.2.3 Decision analysis techniques ................... 964
        21.2.4 Negotiation .................................... 967
        21.2.5 How are decisions really made? ................. 968
   21.3 Some Case Studies ..................................... 969
        21.3.1 Beyond the Limits (Meadows, Meadows, and
               Randers, 1992) ................................. 970
        21.3.2 Which World? (Hammond, 1998) ................... 975
        21.3.3 MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy
               of Global Change: Integrated Global System
               Model .......................................... 976
        21.3.4 C-ROADS climate policy model ................... 979
        21.3.1 Transitional Pathways .......................... 980
   21.5 The Challenge to Society .............................. 989
   Problems ................................................... 992
   References ................................................. 993
   Websites of Interest ....................................... 995
22 Choosing among Options ..................................... 997
Conversion Factors ........................................... 1001
List of Acronyms ............................................. 1005
Index ........................................................ 1011


Архив выставки новых поступлений | Отечественные поступления | Иностранные поступления | Сиглы
 

[О библиотеке | Академгородок | Новости | Выставки | Ресурсы | Библиография | Партнеры | ИнфоЛоция | Поиск]
  Пожелания и письма: branch@gpntbsib.ru
© 1997-2024 Отделение ГПНТБ СО РАН (Новосибирск)
Статистика доступов: архив | текущая статистика
 

Документ изменен: Wed Feb 27 14:25:48 2019. Размер: 40,703 bytes.
Посещение N 1200 c 05.11.2013