Advances in Renewable Energy
Renewable energy is energy that is collected from renewable resources, which are naturally replenished on a human timescale, such as sunlight, wind, rain, tides, waves, and geothermal heat. Renewable energy often provides energy in four important areas: electricity generation, air and water heating/cooling, transportation, and rural (off-grid) energy services.
Components of the Book:
  • Chapter 1
    A comparison between fly ash‑ and basic oxygen furnace slag‑modified gold mine tailings geopolymers
  • Chapter 2
    A scoping review into the impact of animal imagery on proenvironmental outcomes
  • Chapter 3
    A typology for analysing mitigation and adaptation win-win strategies
  • Chapter 4
    Analysis of Animal Bedding Heterogeneity for Potential Use in Biorefineries Based on Farmyard Manure
  • Chapter 5
    Condition Assessment of Low Voltage Photovoltaic DC Cables under Thermal Stress Using Non‑Destructive Electrical Techniques
  • Chapter 6
    Electrochemical Synthesis of Tailor-Made Hydrocarbons from Organic Solvent Free Aqueous Fatty Acid Mixtures in a Micro Flow Reactor
  • Chapter 7
    Evaluation of the factors limiting biogas production in full-scale processes and increasing the biogas production efficiency
  • Chapter 8
    High consistency mechano-enzymatic pretreatment for kraft fibres: effect of treatment consistency on fibre properties
  • Chapter 9
    Hydrogel bacterial cellulose: a path to improved materials for new eco-friendly textiles
  • Chapter 10
    Identification of Bio-oil Compound Utilizing Yeasts Through Phenotypic Microarray Screening
  • Chapter 11
    Legitimising identity discourses and metropolitan networks: urban competitiveness versus territorial protection
  • Chapter 12
    Locally enhanced electric field treatment (LEEFT) for water disinfection
  • Chapter 13
    Mechanically Treated Fly Ash from Fluidized Bed Combustion of Peat, Wood, and Wastes in Concrete
  • Chapter 14
    On the preconditions for large-scale collective action
  • Chapter 15
    Responsibility for Increasing Mitigation Ambition in Light of the Right to Sustainable Development
  • Chapter 16
    Storage of Food Waste: Variations of Physical–Chemical Characteristics and Consequences on Biomethane Potential
  • Chapter 17
    The role of alkali metal and alkaline metal earth in natural zeolite on combustion of Albizia Falcataria sawdust
Readership: Students, academics, teachers and other people attending or interested in Automatic Renewable Energy.
Laura Thomas-Walters
Laura Thomas-Walters, Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology, University of Kent, Giles Ln, Canterbury, CT2 7NZ, UK

Frank Meissner
Frank Meissner, Frame Solution, Werder (Havel), Germany

Athanassios Ziogas
Athanassios Ziogas, Energy & Chemical Technology Department, Fraunhofer Institute for Microengineering and Microsystems IMM, Mainz, Germany

Matti Puranen
Matti Puranen, Labio Ltd, Sapelikatu 7, 15160, Lahti, Finland

Justyna Pawlik
Justyna Pawlik, Faculty of Materials Science and Ceramics, AGH University of Science and Technology, Mickiewicza Ave. 30, 30-059, Kraków, Poland

Emily T. Kostas
Emily T. Kostas, Microwave Process Engineering Research Group, Faculty of Engineering, The University of Nottingham, Nottingham, NG7 5RD, UK

and more...
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