𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

πŸ“

Domestic Microgeneration: Renewable and Distributed Energy Technologies, Policies and Economics

✍ Scribed by Iain Staffell (editor), Daniel J.L. Brett (editor), Nigel P. Brandon (editor), Adam D. Hawkes (editor)


Publisher
Routledge
Year
2015
Tongue
English
Leaves
600
Edition
1
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Microgeneration – producing energy for the home, in the home – is a substantial improvement over the current centralised and detached energy model employed the world over.


Domestic Microgeneration is the first in-depth reference work for this exciting and emerging field of energy generation. It provides detailed reviews of ten state-of-the-art technologies: including solar PV and thermal, micro-CHP and heat pumps; and considers them within the wider context of the home in which they are installed and the way that they are operated. Alongside the many successes, this book highlights the common pitfalls that beset the industry. It offers best-practice guidance on how they can be avoided by considering the complex linkages between technology, user, installer and government.

This interdisciplinary work draws together the social, economic, political and environmental aspects of this very diverse energy β€˜genre’ into a single must-have reference for academics and students of sustainability and energy related subjects, industry professionals, policy makers and the growing number of energy-literate householders who are looking for ways to minimise their environmental footprint and their energy bills with microgeneration.

✦ Table of Contents


| "1. Cover"
| "2. Cover"
| "3. Cover"
| "4. Title"
| "5. Copyright"
| "6. Contents"
| "7. List of figures"
| "8. List of tables"
| "9. List of contributors"
| "10. PART I Setting the scene"
| "11. 1 An introduction to microgeneration"
| "12. 2 The residential energy sector"
| "13. 3 Cross-cutting issues for microgeneration"
| "14. PART II Microgeneration technologies"
| "15. 4 Biomass heating"
| "16. 5 Heat pumps"
| "17. 6 Solar thermal panels and insulated windows"
| "18. 7 Solar photovoltaic panels"
| "19. 8 Micro-wind turbines for domestic applications"
| "20. 9 Micro-CHP engines"
| "21. 10 Fuel cell micro-CHP"
| "22. PART III Wider technical, economic and environmental aspects"
| "23. 11 Integrating microgeneration into smart energy networks"
| "24. 12 Market and policy influences"
| "25. 13 Life cycle assessment of four microgenerators: carbon footprints and payback times"
| "26. 14 Technical and economic modelling of microgeneration"
| "27. 15 Conclusion: the future of microgeneration"
| "28. Index"
| "29. Index"


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Renewable Energy: Technology, Economics
✍ Martin Kaltschmitt (editor), Wolfgang Streicher (editor), Andreas Wiese (editor) πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2007 πŸ› Springer 🌐 English

<span>The utilisation of renewable energies is not at all new; in the history of mankind renewable energies have for a long time been the primary possibility of generating energy. This only changed with industrial revolution when lignite and hard coal became increasingly more important. Later on, al

Energy Autonomy: The Economic, Social an
✍ Hermann Scheer πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2007 πŸ› Earthscan Publications 🌐 English

For 200 years industrial civilization has relied on the combustion of abundant and cheap carbon fuels. But continued reliance has had perilous consequences. On the one hand there is the insecurity of relying on the world's most unstable region - the Middle East - compounded by the imminence of peak

Renewable Energy: A Global Review of Tec
✍ Dirk Assmann, Ulrich Laumanns, Dieter Uh πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2006 πŸ› Earthscan Publications Ltd. 🌐 English

*''Diversifying the energy mix is an economic and environmental imperative. To this end we need new technologies and the right policy frameworks to trigger and deploy them. This book offers knowledge and inspiration to promote renewable energy in developing and industrialised countries.'' β€” Klaus To