Search: "Power Generation" Filter:"Power Generation"

6 tagged events, 2 books found.


Tagged events

April 2023

APR 21
2023 Int'l Conference on Power Generation, Transmission and Distribution (PGTD 2023) Website:https://www.scet-meeting...

Kunming,
China

June 2023

JUN 9
All of the conference papers will be EI-indexed and included in IEEE Xplore. Selected papers will be invited for possibl...

Shanghai,
China

November 2023

NOV 3
Publication: The registered and presented papers will be published into ICPEE 2023 conference proceedings. Conference c...

Singapore,
Singapore

NOV 17
Conference Proceedings: Accepted and presented papers will be published by conference proceedings, which will be online...

Shanghai,
China

NOV 17
Publication: All full papers accepted by PCEE 2023 will be published into PCEE 2023 Conference Proceedings, and indexed...

Xiamen,
China

December 2023

DEC 8
PUBLICATION: Submitted papers will be peer reviewed by the conference scientific committees and journal, and accepted p...

Krakow,
Poland

Books

Nuclear Power or a Promise Lost

A Policy Maker's Guide for a Future of Carbon Free, Sustainable Energy

by Edward T. Burns, Ph.D.

04/01/2020

This book captures the status of current electrical energy markets including the principal forces affecting decisions on selecting an energy source. It represents a seminal work that lays out the electrical energy decision tree for selecting an energy source in a world that is on the verge of catastrophic global warming because of the choices that have been made in the name of cheap energy. The impetus for this book includes the dire need to mitigate continued anthropogenic causes of global warming by turning to carbon free energy sources.Nuclear energy represents such a carbon-free energy source and could be a partial solution to the existential threat facing future society---the threat of a warming planet and its consequential, catastrophic effects on future generations. The world is at ...

by Ian A. Inman

06/15/2006

For many applications, including power generation, aerospace and the automobile industry, high temperature wear provides serious difficulties where two or more surfaces move or slide relative to one another. In aerospace, for example, demands for more powerful, efficient engines operating at ever higher temperatures, mean that conventional lubrication is no longer sufficient to prevent direct contact between metallic sliding surfaces, accelerating wear. However, one high temperature phenomenon observed to reduce metallic contact, and thus wear and friction, is the formation of ‘glazes’,essentially compacted oxide wear debris layers that sinter together to form wear resistant surfaces. This thesis studies the nature of wear encountered with four different combinations of Superalloys,...