energy, sources of: Heat Energy
Heat Energy
The invention of the steam engine, which converts the chemical energy of fuels into heat energy and the heat into mechanical energy, provided another source of energy. The steam engine is called an external-combustion engine, since fuel is burned outside the engine to create the steam used inside it. During the 19th cent. the internal-combustion engine was developed; a variety of fuels, depending on the type of internal-combustion engine, are burned directly in the engine's chambers to provide a source of mechanical energy. Both steam engines and internal-combustion engines found application as stationary sources of power for different purposes and as mobile sources for transportation, as in the steamship, the railroad locomotive (both steam and diesel), and the automobile. All these sources of energy ultimately depend on the combustion of fuels for their operation.
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- The Search for New Sources of Energy
- Environmental Considerations
- Nuclear Energy
- Electrical Energy
- Heat Energy
- Chemical and Mechanical Energy
- Bibliography
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