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Types of Energy Sources

Systems Engineering
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Types of Energy Sources

Systems Engineering
01 May 2026

Types and Characteristics of Energy Sources

Overview

Engineered systems require energy to operate. Selecting the most appropriate energy source requires understanding the characteristics of each type — including energy density, reliability, environmental impact, cost, and suitability for the application. VCE Systems Engineering distinguishes between renewable and non-renewable energy sources.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Renewable sources replenish naturally and have lower environmental impact; non-renewable sources offer higher energy density and reliability but are finite and produce greenhouse gases. No single source is ideal for all applications.

Non-Renewable Energy Sources

Non-renewable sources are finite — once consumed, they cannot be replenished on a human timescale.

Fossil Fuels (coal, oil, natural gas)

  • Energy content: Very high (e.g. diesel ≈ 45 MJ/kg)
  • Reliability: Consistent, on-demand supply
  • Disadvantages: Produce CO₂ and other pollutants; finite reserves; extraction has environmental impacts
  • Engineering use: Internal combustion engines, industrial generators, gas turbines

Nuclear Energy

  • Energy content: Extremely high (uranium: ≈ 80,000 GJ/kg)
  • Reliability: Baseload generation; not weather-dependent
  • Disadvantages: Radioactive waste; high capital cost; public concern about safety
  • Engineering use: Power station baseload; naval propulsion

VCAA FOCUS: Non-renewable sources dominate current global energy supply but are unsustainable long-term. For VCE, understand the trade-off between energy density/reliability and environmental/sustainability impacts.

Renewable Energy Sources

Renewable sources are replenished naturally by ongoing natural processes.

Solar (Photovoltaic)

  • Principle: Photovoltaic cells convert sunlight directly to DC electricity
  • Characteristics: Zero emissions; modular (scalable from handheld to utility scale); output depends on sunlight — intermittent
  • Typical efficiency: 15–22% for commercial panels
  • Engineering use: Remote power, residential generation, calculators, IoT sensors

Wind

  • Principle: Wind turbines convert kinetic energy of moving air to rotational mechanical energy → electrical energy via generator
  • Characteristics: Zero emissions; output is variable; requires suitable wind resource
  • Engineering use: Grid-scale wind farms, small turbines for remote stations

Hydroelectric

  • Principle: Potential energy of water at height converts to kinetic energy through turbines → electrical energy
  • Characteristics: Reliable, controllable, high efficiency (>90%); requires suitable geography; large-scale environmental impact from dams
  • Engineering use: Baseload and peak power generation

Batteries (electrochemical storage)

  • Principle: Chemical energy stored in electrochemical cells converts to electrical energy on demand
  • Types:
  • Lead-acid: Heavy, inexpensive, good for high-current starting (car batteries)
  • Lithium-ion (Li-ion): Light, high energy density (150–250 Wh/kg), rechargeable; used in portable devices, EVs
  • NiMH: Moderate energy density; used in hybrid vehicles, rechargeable AA/AAA
  • Characteristics: Portable; finite charge; degrade with charge cycles
  • Engineering use: Portable electronics, electric vehicles, microcontroller projects, UPS systems

Other Renewable Sources

  • Geothermal: Heat from the Earth’s interior; consistent baseload; geographically limited
  • Tidal/wave: Kinetic/potential energy of ocean movement; predictable but geographically restricted
  • Biomass/biofuels: Chemical energy stored in organic material; carbon-neutral in principle; competes with food production

Comparison Table

Source Renewable Energy density Reliability Emissions Engineering applications
Diesel/petrol No Very high Very high High CO₂ Engines, generators
Coal No High High Very high CO₂ Power stations
Nuclear No Extremely high Very high Zero (operation) Baseload power
Solar PV Yes Low (variable) Moderate Zero Remote/portable, grid
Wind Yes Low (variable) Moderate Zero Grid, remote
Hydro Yes High (stored) High Zero Baseload, peak power
Li-ion battery Storage Moderate High Zero (discharge) Portable, EVs
Lead-acid battery Storage Low-moderate High Zero (discharge) Automotive, backup

EXAM TIP: When comparing energy sources for a specific application, structure your answer around four criteria: energy density/availability, reliability, environmental impact, and cost. Apply these to the specific context of the question.

Selecting an Energy Source for an Integrated System

Worked example: Select an energy source for a remote weather monitoring station.

  • Requirements: Continuous operation in a remote location; low maintenance; moderate power (10–50 W); no mains connection
  • Analysis:
  • Solar PV: good match — available at remote sites; zero running cost; needs battery storage for night-time
  • Li-ion battery bank: stores solar energy; provides consistent supply; must be sized for autonomy during cloudy periods
  • Diesel generator: reliable but requires fuel delivery, maintenance, produces emissions — unsuitable for remote/environmental monitoring
  • Conclusion: Solar PV + Li-ion battery bank is the most appropriate combination

APPLICATION: In real engineering design, energy source selection directly affects system cost, maintenance schedule, environmental compliance, and operational reliability. These trade-offs appear frequently in VCAA structured questions.

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