Energy conversion systems are something that all people are dependent upon for transports, heating, household appliances, etc. The energy systems of the world are under a steady change and the major challenge today is how to combine sustainability with increased primary energy consumption globally. The special attention is on the close relationship between the use of primary energy and human-induced climate change.
In Sweden, the industrial sector uses more than one third of the energy (final use) and the industrial sector is the second emitter of fossil carbon dioxide after the transport sector. The supply and use of energy have become an increasingly strategic issue for energy intensive industrial companies due to volatile global energy prices and the perceived risk with unstable policy instruments intended to mitigate the use of fossil fuels (carbon taxes, energy taxes, etc.).
This course is covering advanced applied thermodynamics of importance for energy processes of industrial scale. During the course you will learn about technical, economic and, to some extent, environmental characteristics of real energy processes. The main part of the course is attributed to theory and problem solving within the field of technical thermodynamics.