CONVENSATION ENERGIES

  • FIRE
    199,999 BCE

    FIRE

    Fire has no date or creator since it is from nature.Fire was discovered by prehistoric people. Throughout history, fire has helped humanity. A fire is a chemical combustion reaction, a rapid oxidation of a combustible substance generating heat.
  • COAL
    4000 BCE

    COAL

    Coal, also known as mineral coal, is a solid fuel composed of sedimentary rocks rich in carbon and easily identifiable by its characteristic black or dark brown color. In addition to its significant presence of carbon, this mineral can contain other elements such as sulfur, oxygen, nitrogen, and hydrogen. Since its discovery, it has been used as a fossil fuel, but it is a nonrenewable resource.
  • FOSSILS
    1812 BCE

    FOSSILS

    Remains or evidence (such as bones, shells, footprints, or feces) of organisms that lived in the past and have been preserved in the Earth's crust , usually in sedimentary rocks, for at least 10,000 years. They are formed when these remains or their impression are quickly buried by sediments
  • ELECTRICITY
    600 BCE

    ELECTRICITY

    Electricity is the set of physical phenomena related to the presence and flow of electrical charge. It manifests itself in a wide variety of phenomena, such as lightning, static electricity, electromagnetic induction, and the flow of electric current. It is such a versatile form of energy that it has countless applications, including transportation, air conditioning, lighting, and computing.
  • NATURAL GAS
    500 BCE

    NATURAL GAS

    Natural gas (sometimes called fossil gas) is a naturally occurring hydrocarbon mixture of light gases. It primarily contains methane, typically including varying amounts of other alkanes, and sometimes a small percentage of carbon dioxide, nitrogen, hydrogen sulfide, and helium. It forms when layers of decaying plant and animal matter are exposed to intense heat and pressure beneath the Earth's surface for millions of years.
  • HEAT EXCHANGER

    HEAT EXCHANGER

    A steam turbine is a turbomachine that transforms the thermal energy of steam into rotary mechanical energy. Steam at high pressure and temperature expands, passing through the rotor blades, causing them to spin.
  • INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINES

    INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINES

    An internal combustion engine is a machine that converts the chemical energy of a fuel into mechanical energy, producing useful motion through a controlled explosion that occurs within the machine itself. This type of engine is widely used in cars, etc
  • COOLING TOWER

    COOLING TOWER

    Cooling towers are structures designed to lower the temperature of water and other media. The primary use of large industrial cooling towers is to lower the temperature of cooling water used in power plants, oil refineries, petrochemical plants, natural gas processing plants, and other industrial facilities.
  • NUECLEAR REACTOR

    NUECLEAR REACTOR

    The nuclear reactor is highly polluting because it uses non-renewable energy. It is oval-shaped, with the chimney at the top, through which all the smoke from the reactor escapes.
  • STEAM TURBINES

    STEAM TURBINES

    A steam turbine is a turbo-powered engine that transforms the energy of a steam flow into mechanical energy through an exchange of momentum between the fluid. Steam turbines are present in various power cycles that use a fluid capable of phase change. The most important of these is the Rankine cycle, which generates steam in a boiler, from which it emerges under high temperature and pressure conditions.