Date | May 2012 | Marks available | 2 | Reference code | 12M.2.SL.TZ1.4 |
Level | Standard level | Paper | Paper 2 | Time zone | Time zone 1 |
Command term | Outline | Question number | 4 | Adapted from | N/A |
Question
This question is in two parts. Part 1 is about wind power. Part 2 is about radioactive decay.
Part 1 Wind power
Outline in terms of energy changes how electrical energy is obtained from the energy of wind.
Air of density ρ and speed v passes normally through a wind turbine of blade length r as shown below.
(i) Deduce that the kinetic energy per unit time of the air incident on the turbine is
\[\frac{1}{2}\pi \rho {r^2}{v^3}\]
(ii) State two reasons why it is impossible to convert all the available energy of the wind to electrical energy.
Air is incident normally on a wind turbine and passes through the turbine blades without changing direction. The following data are available.
Density of air entering turbine = 1.1 kg m–3
Density of air leaving turbine = 2.2 kg m–3
Speed of air entering turbine = 9.8 m s–1
Speed of air leaving turbine = 4.6 m s–1
Blade length = 25 m
Determine the power extracted from the air by the turbine.
A wind turbine has a mechanical input power of 3.0×105W and generates an electrical power output of 1.0×105W. On the grid below, construct and label a Sankey diagram for this wind turbine.
Outline one advantage and one disadvantage of using wind turbines to generate electrical energy, as compared to using fossil fuels.
Advantage:
Disadvantage:
Markscheme
kinetic energy of wind transferred to (rotational) kinetic energy of turbine/blades;
kinetic energy changed to electrical energy in generator/dynamo;
Generator/dynamo must be mentioned.
(i) volume of cylinder of air passing through blades per second =vπr2;
mass of air incident per second=ρvπr2;
kinetic energy per second= \(\frac{1}{2}m{v^2}\);
leading to \(\frac{1}{2}\pi \rho {r^2}{v^3}\)
Award [3] for answers that combine one or more steps.
(ii) the speed of the air/wind cannot drop to zero;
wind turbulence / frictional losses in turbine/any moving part / resistive
heating in wires;
kinetic energy per second of air entering turbine \( = \frac{1}{2}\pi \times 1.1 \times {25^2} \times {9.8^3} = 1.016 \times {10^6}\);
kinetic energy per second of air leaving turbine \( = \frac{1}{2}\pi \times 2.2 \times {25^2} \times {4.6^3} = 2.102 \times {10^5}\);
power extracted \( = 1.0 \times {10^6} - 2.1 \times {10^5} = 8.062 \times {10^5} \approx 8.1 \times {10^5}{\rm{W}}\);
correct shape of diagram (allow multiple arrows if power loss split into different components);
relative width of arrows correct;
labels correct;
Advantage:
wind is renewable so no resources used up / wind is free / no chemical pollution / no carbon dioxide emission / does not contribute to greenhouse effect / is “scalable” i.e. many sizes of turbine possible;
Disadvantage:
expensive initial cost / large land area needed / wind not constant / effect on movement of birds / aesthetically unpleasant / noise pollution / high maintenance costs / best locations far from population centres / low energy density;
Accept any other suitable advantage or disadvantage.