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WÄRTSILÄ
Encyclopedia of Marine and Energy Technology

5803 results

energy

An oil tanker, also known as a petroleum tanker, is a ship designed for the bulk transport of oil or its products.

energy

An oil spill is the release of a liquid petroleum hydrocarbon into the environment, especially the marine ecosystem, due to human activity, and is a form of pollution.

energy

A synthetic non-condensable gas mixture (syngas) produced by oil shale thermal processing (pyrolysis).

energy

Oil sands, tar sands, crude bitumen, or bituminous sands, are a type of unconventional petroleum deposit.

energy

An oil refinery or petroleum refinery is an industrial process plant where crude oil is transformed and refined into useful products such as petroleum naphtha, gasoline, diesel fuel, asphalt base, heating oil, kerosene, liquefied petroleum gas, jet fuel and fuel oils.

energy

The availability factor of a power plant is the amount of time that it is able to produce electricity over a certain period, divided by the amount of the time in the period.

energy

A supplemental source of heating to provide additional heat to assist a geothermal heating and cooling system.

energy

A stand-alone generation system that has no backup generating source.

energy

An automotive thermoelectric generator (ATEG) is a device that converts some of the waste heat of an internal combustion engine (IC) into electricity using the Seebeck Effect.

energy

A method to reduce the human interaction with systems by use of computer programs or robotics.

energy

An automatic weather station (AWS) is an automated version of the traditional weather station, either to save human labour or to enable measurements from remote areas.

energy

Transmission and distribution systems use an automatic re-close function which is commonly used on overhead lines to attempt to restore power in the event of a transient fault.

energy

In an electric power system, automatic generation control is a system for adjusting the power output of multiple generators at different power plants, in response to changes in the load.

energy

Fire protection water spray systems are used to cool a transformer to prevent damage if exposed to radiation heat transfer from a fire involving oil released from another transformer that has failed.

energy

Autogas is the common name for liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) when it is used as a fuel in internal combustion engines in vehicles as well as in stationary applications such as generators.

energy

In electrical engineering and telecommunications, attenuation affects the propagation of waves and signals in electrical circuits, in optical fibers, and in air. Electrical attenuators and optical attenuators are commonly manufactured components in this field.

energy

The atomic nucleus is the small, dense region consisting of protons and neutrons at the center of an atom.

energy

The atomic mass number or nucleon number, is the total number of protons and neutrons (together known as nucleons) in an atomic nucleus.

energy

An atomic battery, nuclear battery, radioisotope battery or radioisotope generator is a device which uses energy from the decay of a radioactive isotope to generate electricity.

energy

The Atomic Age, also known as the Atomic Era, is the period of history following the detonation of the first nuclear weapon.