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PyPSA is a free software toolbox for simulating and optimizing electric power systems and allied sectors. [ 204 ] [ 205 ] It supports conventional generation, variable wind and solar generation, electricity storage, coupling to the natural gas, hydrogen, heat, and transport sectors, and hybrid alternating and direct current networks.
The book is considered the founding work of thermodynamics. [2]: viii It contains the preliminary outline of the second law of thermodynamics.Carnot stated that motive power is due to the fall of caloric (chute de calorique) from a hot to a cold body, which he analogized to the work done by a water wheel due to a waterfall (chute d'eau).
Decarburization (or decarbonization) is the process of decreasing carbon content, which is the opposite of carburization. The term is typically used in metallurgy, describing the decrease of the content of carbon in metals (usually steel ).
EnerSys is a stored energy systems and technology provider for industrial applications. The company manufactures reserve power and motive power batteries, battery chargers, power equipment, battery accessories and outdoor equipment enclosure systems.
MotivePower, Inc. (MPI) was an American manufacturer of diesel-electric locomotives.The company traces its history back to being a division of Morrison-Knudsen (MK) since 1972. [1]
Motive power may refer to: In thermodynamics, natural agents such as water or steam, wind or electricity, that do work; In mechanics, the mechanical energy associated with the motion and position of an object; In physics, a synonym for power; In mechanical engineering, the source of mechanical power of a propulsion system; It may also refer to:
Thermodynamic databases contain information about thermodynamic properties for substances, the most important being enthalpy, entropy, and Gibbs free energy.Numerical values of these thermodynamic properties are collected as tables or are calculated from thermodynamic datafiles.
In 1857, Siemens introduced the regenerative cooling concept with the Siemens cycle. [2] In 1895, William Hampson in England [3] and Carl von Linde in Germany [4] independently developed and patented the Hampson–Linde cycle to liquefy air using the Joule–Thomson expansion process and regenerative cooling. [5]