Sunday, March 7, 2010

March 7th

Natural Gas Glossary

Anticline
An anticline is an area of the earth's crust where folding has made a dome like shape in the once flat rock layers. Anticlines often provide an environment where natural gas can become trapped beneath the earth's surface, and extracted. See also Traps, Faults, Permeability, and Porosity.
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Bcf - Billion Cubic Feet
Gas measurement approximately equal to one trillion (1,000,000,000,000) Btu's. See also Mcf, Tcf, Quad.
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Brine
Brine is a kind of sedimentary rock found near shores. It is composed of the shells of many sea creatures that have formed a layer of sediment, which then formed a layer of rock.
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Btu - British Thermal Unit
The Btu is a unit of measurement for energy. It represents the amount of heat that is necessary to raise the temperature of one pound of water by 1 degree, Fahrenheit.
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Bundled Service
Gas sales service and transportation service packaged together in a single transaction in which the pipeline, on behalf of the utility, buys gas from producers and then delivers it to the utility. See also, Unbundled Services, FERC Order 636.
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Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990
This legislation to improve the quality of the atmosphere and curb acid rain promotes the use of cleaner fuels in vehicles and stationary sources.
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Canadian Gas Association
The Canadian Gas Association (CGA) is a trade organization representing all segments of the gas industry in Canada. Founded in 1907, it specifically represents distributors, transmission companies, producers, pipeline contractors, manufacturers and allied service organizations. CGA set up a standards writing, inspection and product certification program in the mid 1950's at a time when natural gas was being extended to Eastern Canada and the West Coast. CGA has been accredited by the National Standards Council of Canada to prepare National Standards of Canada in the area of equipment for use with natural gas and propane.
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Carbonate Rock
A rock consisting primarily of a carbonate mineral such as calcite or dolomite, the chief minerals in limestone and dolostone, respectively.
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Casing
A casing is used to line the walls of a gas well to prevent collapse of the well, and also to protect the surrounding earth and rock layers from being contaminated by petroleum, or the drilling fluids.
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Cathodic Protection
Cathodic protection refers to the method of preventing corrosion in metal structures that involves using electric voltage to slow or prevent corrosion. It is used along natural gas pipelines, as well as in certain bridges or other large metal structures that need to resist corrosion over an extended period of time.
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Coal Bed Methane
Prior to the mid-1980's, methane from coal seams was classified as an uneconomic resource - one of vast potential, but low value due to poor recovery rates and high associated water production. By applying new production technologies to this resource, coalbed methane has become the single largest new source of gas supply in the past decade. Current estimates show approximately 100 Tcf of coalbed methane that appears to be economically recoverable in the lower 48 states alone.
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CFC's Chlorofluorocarbons
Quite a mouthful, it's easy to see why Chlorofluorocarbons are often abbreviated to CFC's. These gaseous compounds are used for cooling, but are being rapidly replaced by new materials because their release into the atmosphere has produced ozone depletion. See also HCFC's.
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Christmas Tree
A Christmas Tree, when referring to gas production, is the term given to the series of pipes and valves that sits on top of a producing gas well. Since some gas wells have natural lift because of the high pressures underground, they don't require an artificial pumping mechanism to produce the gas. In these cases, a Christmas Tree is used in place of a pump to extract the gas from the well.
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Citygate
A location at which custody of gas passes from a gas pipeline company to an LDC.
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Natural Gas Co-Firing
Co-Firing refers to the injection of natural gas with pulverized coal or oil into the primary combustion zone of a boiler. Co-firing is not new technology, but efforts to determine optimal natural gas injection levels for both environmental and operational benefits are relatively recent. Co-firing only produces a mild increase in production costs, but benefits plants by offering cleaner overall operation. Slag that builds up inside boilers is reduced, and precipitators, which capture soot and ash from coal or oil firing, foul up less frequently.
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Compression
Natural gas is compressed during transportation and storage. The standard pressure that gas volumes are measured at is 14.7 Pounds per Square inch (psi). When being transported through pipelines, and when being stored, gas is compressed to save space. Pipelines have compressing stations installed along the line (one about every 100 miles) to ensure that the gas pressure is held high while the gas is being transported. Current pipelines can compress natural gas to nearly 1500 psi, but most tend to operate at closer to 1000psi.
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CSST - Corrugated Stainless-Steel Tubing
Flexible piping used to install gas service in residential and commercial areas.
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Cubic Foot
A unit of measurement for volume. It represents an area one foot long, by one foot wide, by one foot deep. Natural gas is measured in cubic feet, but the measurements are usually expressed in terms of Bcf, Tcf, Mcf, or Quads.
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Cutting
A cutting is a piece of rock or dirt that is brought to the surface of a drilling site as debris from the bottom of well. Cuttings are often used to obtain data for logging.
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Delivery or Receipt Point
Designates the point where natural gas is transferred from one party to another. The city gate is the delivery point for a pipeline or transportation company because this is where the gas is transfered to the LDC.
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Dip
A layer's dip refers to the angle at which it lies in relation to a flat line at the surface. Most layers of rock do not lie flat because they have been folded one or more times throughout their history. The dip of a rock layer can tell a geologist important information that could help locate possible petroleum traps.
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DOE-Department of Energy
Main government agency responsible for regulating many energy sources, gas included.
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Electronic Bulletin Board (EBB)
An electronic bulletin board (in the context of the natural gas industry) is an electronic service that provides information about pipeline company rates, available capacity on lines, confirmation of delivery and so forth. Under FERC Order 636, most pipelines are required to post data about excess capacity.
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EPACT - Energy Policy Act of 1992
Comprehensive energy legislation that is expected to expand natural gas use by reforming PUHCA restrictions, allowing wholesale electric transmission access and providing incentives to developers of clean fuel vehicles.
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Fault
A fault occurs when a part of the earth's crust fractures due to forces exerted on it by movement of plates on the earth's crust. Faults often occur along with earthquakes that result from the rapid movement of the plates against one another. Faults can have movement that is horizontal or vertical, and they can be classified as normal or reverse. With regard to natural gas, faults are of interest because they often form traps.
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FERC Order 380
FERC Order 380, issued in 1983, invalidated contract requirements that a gas utility pay a pipeline for a certain amount of gas even if it could not take the gas. This paved the way for utilities to buy gas directly from producers and marketing companies. For other FERC orders, see FERC.
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FERC Order 436
FERC Order 436, issued in April of 1985, set up a voluntary open-access transportation program that allowed pipelines to offer transportation service not linked to gas sales service, making it easier for utilities and gas customers to purchase gas directly from producers and marketing companies and have it transported by pipelines. For other FERC orders, see FERC.
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FERC Order 451
FERC Order 451, issued in 1987, provided the opportunity for sellers of gas from older wells to receive a more market-sensitive price. For other FERC orders, see FERC.
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FERC Order 500
FERC Order 500, issued in late 1989, was an addendum to FERC Order 436 and provided mechanisms for settling certain contract liabilities incurred by pipelines that could not take all of the gas they had ordered from producers. For other FERC orders, see FERC.
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FERC - Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
The federal agency that regulates interstate gas pipelines and interstate gas sales under the Natural Gas Act. Successor to the Federal Power Commission, the FERC is considered an independent regulatory agency responsible primarily to Congress, but it is housed in the Department of Energy. See also FERC - 380, FERC - 436, FERC - 451, FERC - 500, FERC - 636.
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Firm Service Contract
A type of contracted service where the distributor agrees to provide the buyer with uninterrupted supply of gas. This type of contract is usually more expensive, and is used primarily by those firms who cannot afford to risk loss of fuel for any period of time. See also Interruptible Service.
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Formation
A formation refers to either a certain layer of the earth's crust, or a certain area of a layer. It often refers to the area of rock where a petroleum reservoir is located.
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Fracturing
Fracturing refers to a method used by producers to extract more natural gas from a well by opening up rock formations using hydraulic or explosive force. Advanced fracturing techniques are enhancing producers' ability to find and recover natural gas, as well as extending the longevity of older wells.
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Fuel Cell
Fuel cell technology is one of the most exciting and environmentally sound advances in Natural Gas technology. These cells were first used by NASA in the 1960's for power generation in space capsules. The high price of fuel cell technology has limited the growth of their implementation, but now cells are being used to generate power in hospitals, and soon vehicles may employ this technology. Fuel cells rely on the chemical interaction of natural gas and certain other metals, such as platinum, gold and other electrolytes to produce electricity. The only by product of a fuel cell's operation is water, which is pure enough to drink.
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Hydrocarbon
An organic compound containing only carbon and hydrogen. Hydrocarbons often occur in petroleum products, natural gas, and coals.
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HCFC's - Hydrochlorofluorocarbons
Hydrochlorofluorocarbons, or HCFC's to most, are gaseous compounds that meet current environmental standards for minimizing stratospheric ozone depletion. See also CFC's.
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Horizontal Drilling
Horizontal Drilling, heralded today as "causing the greatest change in the industry since the invention of the rotary bit," is the most rapidly growing movement in the petroleum industry. Essentially, in addition to the vertical shaft in an oil or gas well, special equipment allows producers to extend horizontal shafts into areas that could not otherwise be reached. This technique is especially useful in off shore drilling, where one platform may service many horizontal shafts, thus increasing efficiency. Horizontal wells can be categorized as short (extending only 20-40ft from vertical), medium (300-700ft from vertical) or long (1000-4500ft from vertical) radius. The larger radius wells are typically found off-shore.
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Independent Producer
The basic definition of an Independent Producer is a non-integrated company which receives nearly all of its revenues from production at the wellhead. They are exclusively in the exploration and production segment of the industry, with no marketing or refining within their operations. The tax definition, published by the IRS, states that a firm is an Independent if its refining capacity is less than 50,000 barrels per day in any given day or their retail sales are less than $5 million for the year.
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Interruptible Service
Interruptible service contracts allow a distributing party to temporarily suspend delivery of gas to a buyer in order to meet the demands of customers who purchased firm service. Interruptible service is less expensive than firm service, and is used by customers who can either accommodate interruption, or switch to alternative fuels temporarily.
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Independent Power Producer
Private firms producing electricity, as opposed to utility companies.??
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Knot or Nautical Mile
The Knot is the unit of measurement for water speed. It is nearly equivalent to miles per hour for land. It is also used to measure wind speeds over water.
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Local Distribution Company
A retail gas distribution company that delivers natural gas to end users.
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Lithology
Lithology is the study of rocks. It is important for exploration and drilling crews to have an understanding of lithology as it relates to the production of gas and oil. Often, cuttings have to by analyzed to make important decisions about a well. See also logging.
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Logging
Logging refers to the lowering of different types of measuring instruments into the wellbore and gathering and recording data on Porosity, Permeability and types of fluids present near the current well. This data is then used to construct subsurface maps of a region to aid in further exploration.
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LORAN
LORAN is a satellite navigation system commonly used by ships and naval vessels to precisely locate their position while at sea.
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Magnetometer
This device is able to measure small changes in the earth's magnetic field at the surface, which indicates what kind of rock formations might be present underground. Originally, this technology was only mildly useful because the magnetometers were bulky and only small areas could be surveyed. However, with increasing technology, magnetometers can now be placed in helicopters, airplanes, and in 1981 NASA launched a magnetometer satellite, named Magsat.
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Magsat Satellite
The Magsat is a satellite launched by NASA in 1981 that is used as a magnetomoter to study magnetic fluctuations in the earth's crust.
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MAGSAT
In 1981, NASA developed sufficient technology to launch a magnometer satellite. This satellite serves as a useful tool for structural geologists to use when studying formations of rock within the earth's surface. See also Magnetometer.
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Magsat Satellite
The Magsat is a satellite launched by NASA in 1981 that is used as a magnetomoter to study magnetic fluctuations in the earth's crust.
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MAGSAT
In 1981, NASA developed sufficient technology to launch a magnometer satellite. This satellite serves as a useful tool for structural geologists to use when studying formations of rock within the earth's surface. See also Magnetometer.
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Mcf - Thousand Cubic Feet
Mcf stands for one thousand cubic feet. It's a unit of measure that is more commonly used in the low volume sectors of the gas industry, such as stripper well production. See also Btu, Bcf, Tcf, Quad.
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Methane
Methane, commonly known as natural gas (or CH4 to a scientist), is the most common hydrocarbon gas. It is colorless and naturally odorless, and burns efficiently without many by products. Natural gas only has an odor when it enters your home because the local distributor who sells it to you adds it as a safety measure.
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MER or Most Efficient Recovery
The MER, or most efficient recovery rate, is based on the most oil and gas that can be extracted for a sustained period of time without harming the formation. Generally, most wells cannot produce oil and gas for 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, or the rock formation could be damaged, which would result in less oil and gas being produced in the long run.
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Muds
Muds are used in drilling to lubricate the drilling bit in rotary drilling rigs. These fluids cool the bit, remove cuttings and debris, and coat the wellbore with a cake. Most fluids have a clay base, and are customized for the specific formations that are encountered at a given site. The cake that forms from the fluids serves to coat the walls of the wellbore until a steel casting can be put in place to prevent collapse.
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Multiple Completions
Sometimes, in order to take full advantage of all the gas and oil present in a reserve, it is beneficial to drill to several different depths from a single well to increase the rate of production or the amount of recoverable petroleum. See also casing.
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Natural Gas Act
The Natural Gas Act was passed in 1938, giving the Federal Power Commission (now the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission or FERC) jurisdiction over companies engaged in interstate sale or transportation of natural gas. The act instituted federal oversight of rates charged by interstate gas-transmission companies, and also limited certification authority. Nobody was allowed to build an interstate pipeline to deliver gas into a market already served by another gas pipeline without first obtaining a Federal Power Commission certificate. The principle aims of the Natural Gas Act were to:
1) provide a stable financial and regulatory environment for the financing and construction of interstate gas pipelines; and
2) prevent the "naturally monopolistic" pipelines from engaging in undue discrimination and other feared abuses, including those attendant on their control by utility holding companies or major oil and gas producers.
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The Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978
The gas market before 1978 was drastically different than the one currently existing in the United States. The changes in the market since the 1970's have come partially from increasing technology, but also largely from changes in natural gas regulation. The Natural Gas Policy Act was one of the first efforts to deregulate the gas industry. Congress intended to allow the supply, demand, and thus the price of natural gas to be dictated by market forces, rather than regulation. Other deregulation bills include Order 636.
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Natural Gas Resource Base
An estimate of the amount of natural gas available, based on the combination of proved reserves, and those additional volumes that have not yet been discovered, but are estimated to be "discoverable" given current technology and economics. Current estimates for the resource base in the lower 48 states range from 900 to 1,300 Tcf.
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NES- National Energy Strategy
A 1991 federal proposal that focused on national security, conservation and regulatory reform, with options that encourage natural gas use.
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Natural Gas Vehicle (NGV)
A natural gas vehicle is a new breed of car, bus or truck that is powered by a natural gas, either in compressed or liquefied form, rather than the traditional gasoline or diesel fuel. These vehicles offer an extremely clean, safe and efficient alternative to traditional transportation. With the passage of the Clean Air Act Amendments and the Energy Policy Act of 1992, these alternative fuel vehicles are expected to proliferate in the later 1990's. Already, major car manufacturers are offering natural gas vehicles, and there are over 700 fueling stations nationwide.
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NOx - Nitrogen Oxides
Acid deposition, commonly called acid rain, occurs when sulfur dioxide (SO2) and, to a lesser extent, NOx emissions are transformed in the atmosphere and return to the earth as dry deposition or in rain, fog or snow. Highway vehicles - autos, trucks and buses - account for nearly 30 percent of all NOx and non-methane hydrocarbons emitted annually in the United States. Burning any fossil fuel produces NOx, and it is difficult to generalize with respect to the relative NOx emissions of the various fuel types for different applications. However, the substitution of new high-efficiency gas equipment can offer significant NOx reductions, relative to older and less efficient equipment. For example, replacing a coal-fired electricity generating unit with a new gas-fired combined-cycle unit can reduce NOx by some 95 percent. See also SO2, CFC, HCFC.
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NPC - National Petroleum Council
An advisory body of appointed members whose purpose is to advise the Secretary of Energy.
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Off Peak Period
The period of time during a day, week, month or year when gas use on a particular system is not at its maximum.
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Order 636
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's 1992 order that required pipelines to unbundle their transportation, sales and storage services. Its biggest impact was to convert pipelines from being sellers of gas to being primarily shippers of gas that is bought and sold by other parties. See also NGPA.
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Peak Shaving
Using sources of energy, such as natural gas from storage, to supplement the normal amounts delivered to customers during peak-use periods. Using these supplemental sources prevents pipelines from having to expand their delivery facilities just to accomodate short periods of extremely high demand (see Peak Use Periods).
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Peak Use Period
The period of time when gas use on a particular system is at its maximum. This is the period when gas supply is most likely to be suspended for interruptible service customers. Distributors also employ techniques such as peak shaving to soften the impacts of high demand on the pipelines.
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Permeability
Permeability is the measure of how easily a fluid can pass through a section of rock. If fluid can pass relatively easily through a given layer, then the permeability is said to be high. However, if a layer effectively blocks fluids, or no fluids can flow through the layer at all, then the layer is said to be impermeable. Such layers are known as layersin traps. See also Porosity.
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P.I.G.s
Not your typical farm animal, these robotic agents roam the pipeline collecting data. Intelligent PIGS are used to inspect pipeline interior walls for corrosion and defects, measure pipeline interior diameters, remove accumulated debris and for other specialty tasks. As the PIG travels through the pipeline, it takes thousands of sensor measurements for later computer analysis and comparison with other historical data. Advances in these technologies are improving pipeline reliability and reducing the need for excavating long sections of pipe for inspection.
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Porosity
Pores are spaces between grains of sediment in sedimentary rock. A sedimentary rock with larger grain size will generally be more porous, allowing more fluid or air to flow through it. Very porous rock acts somewhat like a sponge, soaking up water, air and petroleum. Generally, porosity, or the degree to which a formation can hold fluid, decreases with depth because increased pressures press grains together, thus decreasing the space between grains. See also Permeability.
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Producer
A natural gas producer is generally involved in exploration, drilling, and refinement of natural gas. There are independent producers, as well as integrated producers, which are generally larger companies that produce, transport and distribute natural gas.
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Proved Resources
The part of the Natural Gas Resource Base that includes the working inventory of natural gas - volumes that have already been discovered and are readily available for production and delivery. Out of an estimated 900 to 1300 Tcf of gas in the resource base in the lower 48 states, about 155 Tcf are proved resources.
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Proved Resources
The part of the Natural Gas Resource Base that includes the working inventory of natural gas - volumes that have already been discovered and are readily available for production and delivery. Out of an estimated 900 to 1300 Tcf of gas in the resource base in the lower 48 states, about 155 Tcf are proved resources.
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Pounds Per Square Inch Gauge (psig)
Pressure measured with respect to that of the atmosphere. This is a pressure gauge reading in which the gauge is adjusted to read zero at the surrounding atmospheric pressure. It is commonly called gauge pressure.
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PUHCA - Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935
Amended by EPACT, to allow power generation by independent power producers (IPPs) without restrictions on corporate structure. Many IPP projects will use natural gas.
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Quad
An abbreviation for a quadrillion (1,000,000,000,000,000) Btu. For natural gas, roughly equivalent to one trillion (1,000,000,000,000) cubic feet, or 1 Tcf. See also Bcf, Mcf.
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Reburning
Natural gas reburning is an effective and economic means of reducing NOx emissions from all types of industrial and electric utility boilers. Gas reburn may be used in coal or oil boilers, and it is even effective in cyclone and wet-bottom boilers, for which other forms of NOx control are either not available or very expensive. A reburn application which entails the injection of natural gas into a coal-fired boiler above the primary combustion zone- representing 15 to 20 percent of the total fuel mix- can produce NOx reductions in the 50 to 70 percent range and SO2 reductions in the 20 to 25 percent range.
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Reserve Additions
Volumes of the Natural Gas Resource Base that are continuously moved from the resource category to the proved resources category. Reserve additions represent the volumes that become part of the gas industry's working inventory as producers replace volumes that are sold and used.
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SCADA - Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition
Remote controlled equipment used by pipelines and LDCs to operate their gas systems. These computerized networks can acquire immediate data concerning flow, pressure or volumes of gas, as well as control different aspects of gas transmission throughout a pipeline system. See also EBBs, Compression.
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Separator Tank
These tanks are usually located at the well site. They are used to separate oil, gas and water before sending each off to be processed at different locations.
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SO2 - Sulfur Dioxides
Acid deposition, commonly called acid rain, occurs when sulfur dioxide and, to a lesser extent, nitrogen oxides (NOx) emissions are transformed in the atmosphere and return to the earth as dry deposition or in rain, fog or snow. Roughly 23 million tons of SO2 is emitted annually in the United States, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The combustion of natural gas produces virtually no SO2 and, with proper design, far less NOx than combustion of coal or fuel oil.The Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 will have major impacts on electric utility power plants. Together, these plants must reduce their SO2 emissions by roughly 10 million tons annually, by the year 2000. In addition, an absolute cap of 8.9 million tons will be placed on the electric utility sector in 2000. See also NOx, CFC, HCFC.
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Spot Market
A product of deregulation, the spot market is a method of contract purchasing whereby commitments by the buyer and seller are of a short duration at a single volume price. The duration of these contracts is typically less than a month, and the complexity of the contracts is significantly less than their traditional market counterparts.
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Spot Purchase
Natural gas purchased on the spot market, which involves short-term contracts for specified amount of gas, at a one-time purchase price.
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Stripper Wells
Stripper wells are natural gas wells that produce less than 60,000 cubic feet of gas per day. Ohio, West Virginia, Texas, Kentucky and New Mexico all have significant numbers of stripper wells. In 1994 there were 159,369 stripper wells in the United States, and they produced 940,420,777 Mcf.
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Three Dimensional (3-D) Seismic
Possibly the single most important advancement in exploration technology in years, the three dimensional seismic allows producers to see into the earths crust to find promising formations for retrieval of fossil fuel. Taking advantage of highly advanced supercomputers, geologists process millions of pieces of data to generate a detailed, three dimensional image of underground structures. They can rotate and slice these models for closer examination, searching for evidence of hydrocarbons. Using 3-D seismic, drilling has become more precise and the risk of costly dry holes has diminished.
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Trillion Cubic Feet
A volume measurement of natural gas. Approximately equivalent to one Quad. See also Btu's, Bcf, Mcf.
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Traps
A trap is a generic term for an area of the earth's crust that has developed in such a way as to trap petroleum beneath the surface. When exploring for natural gas and oil, geologists look for evidence of traps. For a full description of the exploration process. See also Faults, Permeability, and Porosity.
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Unbundled Services
Unbundling, or separating, pipeline transmission, sales and storage services, along with guaranteeing 'open access' to space on the pipelines for all gas shippers. See also Bundled Service, FERC Order 636..
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Underground Gas Storage
The use of sub-surface facilities for storing gas that has been transferred from its original location for the primary purpose of load balancing. The facilities are usually natural geological reservoirs, such as depleted oil or gas fields or water-bearing sands on the top by and impermeable cap rock. There are currently more than 400 underground storage facilities spread across 27 states and Canada, which together can hold more than 3 quads of gas.
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Viscosity
Viscosity is the measure of a fluid's thickness, or how well it flows. Water would have a very low viscosity since it flows very easily, while maple syrup or mollasses would have a very higher viscosity since they flow slowly.
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http://www.pmel.org/NaturalGas-Glossary.htm

Glossary
annual contract quantity (ACQ). Yearly total delivery quantity as specified in a gas sale agreement or an LNG sale and purchase agreement.

associated gas. Natural gas that occurs with crude oil reservoirs, either as free gas or dissolved in solution. It is usually produced with crude oil.

barrel of oil equivalent (boe). A unit used to equate natural gas and other nonliquid fuels to crude oil based on the amount of heat released when combusted. In general, 1 boe ? 5.8 Mcf to 6.0 Mcf natural gas, depending on the heat content and composition of the gas.

base load. The minimum amount of steady electric power generated over a given period of time, operated to serve around-the-clock demand.

bcf. An abbreviation for billion (109) cubic feet. Unit used to measure large quantities of gas, approximately equal to 1 trillion (1012) Btu.

bcfd. An abbreviation for billion cubic feet per day. Unit used to measure the daily volume of gas produced, stored, transported, or consumed.
bcm. An abbreviation for billion cubic meters. Unit used to measure large quantities of gas, approximately equal to 35.3 bcf.

bcmd. An abbreviation for billion cubic meters per day. Unit used to measure the daily volume of gas produced, stored, transported, or consumed.

British thermal unit (Btu). An energy unit equivalent to the amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of 1 pound of water 1°F from 58.5°F to 59.5°F under standard pressure of 30 in. of mercury. Commonly used for measuring gas and other energy sales quantities.

butane (C4H10). A normally gaseous LPG hydrocarbon extracted from natural gas or refinery gas streams.

cascade process. A natural gas liquefaction process that uses a series of refrigerants to obtain successively lower temperatures. This process is mainly promoted by ConocoPhillips and Bechtel.

ceiling price. The maximum contracted price that may be charged for gas, LNG, and other commodities as specified in the sales contract. Contrast with floor price, which is the lowest or minimum price that can be charged, as specified in the sales contract.

coal bed methane (CBM). Natural gas, primarily methane, generated during coal formation and recovered by pumping water from coal seams, allowing gas to escape through shallow wells.

combined cycle. An electric generating technology in which conventional gas combustion turbines are combined with heat recovery steam-powered generation units, increasing the overall efficiency of the generating facility. Electricity is produced from both the feed gas as well as from otherwise lost waste heat exiting gas turbines. In a conventional steam power generating facility, electricity is generated only from the feed gas.

compressed natural gas (CNG). Highly compressed natural gas stored and transported in high-pressure containers, typically greater than 3,000 psi (200 bar). Commonly used for transport fuel.

condensates. Light hydrocarbon compounds that condense into liquid at surface temperatures and pressures. They are generally produced with natural gas.

conventional gas resources. General term used to describe associated and nonassociated gas found within sandstone and limestone reservoirs.

cost-insurance-freight (CIF). LNG sales contract in which the buyer takes ownership of the LNG cargo at the loading port or during the ship's voyage to the receiving facility. The LNG seller is responsible for the delivery of the cargo, and the contracted sales price includes transportation and insurance costs.

cubic feet (cf). Common unit of measurement of gas volume equivalent to the amount of gas required to fill a volume of 1 cubic foot under given temperature and pressure conditions.

daily contract quantity (DCQ). Average daily quantity of natural gas contracted by the gas seller to the gas buyer.

delivered ex-ship (DES). LNG sales contract in which the buyer takes ownership of the LNG cargo at the receiving port. The LNG seller is responsible for the delivery of the cargo, and the contracted sales price includes transportation and insurance costs.

dry gas (lean gas). Natural gas, mainly methane, which remains after liquid hydrocarbon components have been removed, making it suitable for pipeline shipping, LNG processing, or industrial usage.

engineering, procurement, construction (EPC) contract. Contract, typically on a lump-sum basis, awarded to an engineering company during the project execution phase for detailed design, procurement of all the equipment, and construction of the project. The engineering company is responsible for directly contracting with subcontractors and suppliers.

ethane (C2H6). A normally gaseous NGL hydrocarbon extracted from natural gas or refinery gas streams.

flaring. The process of disposing uncommercial or otherwise unwanted gas by burning. Operators often flare associated gas in regions with limited gas markets.

floor price. The minimum contracted price that may be charged for gas, LNG, or other commodities as specified in the sales contract. Contrast with ceiling price, the maximum price that may be charged for the commodity as specified in the sales contract.

fractionation. The step process that separates NGL hydrocarbons into distinct components, such as ethane, propane, and butane.

free-on-board (FOB). LNG sales contract in which the buyer takes ownership of LNG as it is loaded on ships at the LNG export facility. The buyer is responsible for LNG delivery, either on its own ships or ships chartered by the buyer. The contracted sales price does not include transportation costs or insurance.

front-end engineering design (FEED) study. Project design study typically conducted by an engineering company during the project definition phase.

gas cap. Natural gas present in upper portions of a reservoir, typically above the oil and water layers.

gas initially in place (GIIP). The total gas volume present in a reservoir or field. Reserve estimates include the proportion of GIIP volumes that can actually be produced.

gas/oil ratio (GOR). The proportional amount of produced gas to produced oil.

gas sales agreement (GSA). The contract between a seller and buyer for the sale and purchase of a specified quantity of natural gas for a specified price and term.

gas-to-liquids (GTL) process. A process that converts natural gas into synthetic liquid petroleum products, such as diesel fuel and blending feedstock.

heads of agreement (HOA). A preliminary agreement covering the main terms of a future agreement yet to be finalized. It may or may not be binding and is similar to a term sheet.

intermediate (cycling) load. Power consumption required for a certain number of hours per day, usually supplied by generation plants at moderate fixed and operating costs.

Japan crude cocktail or Japan custom clearing (JCC) price. Crude oil price based on an average Japan importing price of a basket of crude oil, commonly used as an index for Asian LNG pricing.

joules (J). Metric unit of energy used for gas sales, mainly in Europe and Australia. Because 1 J is a very small unit of energy, kilojoules (1 X 103 J), terajoules (1 x 1012 J), and petajoules (1 x 1015 J) are commonly used. Specifically, 1 kilojoule = 0.948 Btu.

lean gas. See dry gas.

line pack. Gas storage within a pipeline or pipeline network created by increasing the pressure and volume above normal operating levels. This is used to handle short-term demand swings. Sometimes refers to the minimum inventory needed to fill the pipeline to working pressure.

liquefied natural gas (LNG). Natural gas, mainly methane, that has been cooled to -161.5°C or -259°F and condensed into a transportable colorless and odorless liquid.

liquefied petroleum gas (LPG). Gas mainly composed of propane and butane, which has been liquefied at low temperatures and moderate pressures. LPGs are extracted from produced natural gas streams or produced in a refinery.

maximum daily quantity (MDQ). Maximum daily quantity of natural gas contracted by the gas seller to the gas buyer.

MBtu. An abbreviation for thousand or 103 Btu.

Mcf. An abbreviation for thousand (103) cubic feet.

methane (C1H4). The lightest and most abundant of the hydrocarbon gases, it is the principal component of natural gas and LNG.

mixed refrigerant process. LNG liquefaction process in which methane is first precooled by propane and subsequently liquefied by a mixed-component refrigerant produced from a combination of nitrogen, propane, ethane, and methane.

MMBtu. Unit of energy produced. An abbreviation for million (106) British thermal units.

MMcf (MMf3). Unit of gas volume. An abbreviation for million (106) cubic feet.

MMcfd. Unit of daily gas volume production. An abbreviation for million (106) cubic feet per day.

MT. An abbreviation for million tons.

MTA. An abbreviation for million tons per annum (year).

natural gas. Naturally occurring mixture of hydrocarbon gases from underground sources composed mainly of methane (more than 85% in some cases), ethane, propane, butane, pentane, and impurities including carbon dioxide, helium, nitrogen, and hydrogen sulfide.

natural gas liquids (NGLs). Natural gas components-including ethane, propane, butane, pentane, and condensates-that are liquid at surface conditions. It does not include methane, which remains in gaseous phase at surface conditions.

nonassociated gas. Natural gas produced from fields that do not produce oil.

peak load. Maximum electricity or gas demand during a given 24-hour period or otherwise specified period of time.

pentane (C5H12). A normally liquid NGL hydrocarbon extracted from natural gas or refinery gas streams.

petajoules (PJ). A unit of energy equal to 1015 joules.

petroleum. General term for all naturally occurring hydrocarbon compounds found in rock, including both liquid and gaseous compounds.

pig. A device with blades, brushes, or measurement instruments inserted into a pipeline for cleaning and inspection purposes.

PJ. An abbreviation for petajoules.

possible reserves. Unproved hydrocarbon reserves that are estimated to have at least a 10% chance of being technically and economically producible. These reserves are included in proved + probable + possible (3P) calculations.

power purchase agreement (PPA). A contract for the purchase of electricity, normally between the owner of the power plant and the buyer of the electricity.

probable reserves. Unproved hydrocarbon reserves that are estimated to have at least a 50% chance of being technically and economically producible. These reserves are included in proved + probable (2P) calculations.

project financing. A common method of financing infrastructure or investments in which lenders rely on cash flows generated by the project to repay the debt and on the project assets as collateral for the debt.

propane (C3H8). A normally gaseous LPG hydrocarbon extracted from natural gas or refinery gas streams.

proved reserves (P reserves). Proved hydrocarbon reserves that can be estimated with reasonable certainty and having at least a 90% chance of being technically and economically producible under current conditions. These can be further divided into proved developed reserves and proved undeveloped reserves depending on infrastructure available.

quad. A unit of energy equal to 1015 Btu, roughly equal to 1 tcf.

regasification (regas) facilities. Facilities to convert LNG to pipeline-transportable gas, mainly methane. The facilities are usually located adjoining ship receiving berths and may include LNG storage facilities.

reserves. Volumes of hydrocarbons that have a chance of being economically and technically producible.

reservoir. A subsurface rock or formation having sufficient porosity and permeability to store and transmit fluids such as gas, oil, and water. Reservoirs are typically composed of sedimentary rocks with an overlying or adjoining impermeable seal or cap rock.

rich gas. See wet gas.

sales and purchase agreement (SPA). The contract between a seller and buyer for the sale and purchase of a specified quantity of LNG for a specified price and term.

shrinkage. Volume of natural gas that is extracted into liquid products, water, and impurities during gas processing.

standard temperature and pressure (STP) conditions. Environmental conditions defined as 20°C and 1 atmosphere (14.7 psi).

stranded gas (remote gas). Gas field located far from available infrastructure or available markets.

sweet gas. Transportable and marketable natural gas containing small or negligible amounts of hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide.

swing. Seasonal, daily, or hourly changes in gas or electricity demand.

take-or-pay (TOP). Minimum contractual volume obliged to be purchased by the buyer, regardless of whether the buyer actually takes delivery.

tcf. An abbreviation for trillion (1012) cubic feet. Unit used to measure large quantities of gas, typically reserve sizes. Approximately equal to 1 quad of energy.

terajoules (TJ). A unit of energy equal to 1012 joules.

therm. Unit of energy equal to 100,000 Btu, commonly used in the United Kingdom for gas pricing; 1 therm is approximately equal to 100 ft3 of gas.

wet gas (rich gas). Natural gas with significant NGL components.

Copyright © Vivek Chandra



Glossary of Terms


A A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | Y | Z

Absorber: A material that readily absorbs photons to generate charge carriers (free electrons or holes).

Absorbers: Dark-colored objects that soak up heat in solar collectors.

Absorption coefficient: The factor by which photons are absorbed as they travel a unit distance through a material.

Acceptor: A dopant material, such as boron, which has fewer outer shell electrons than required in an otherwise balanced crystal structure, providing a hole, which can accept a free electron.

Accessible: (As applied to wiring methods) Capable of being removed or exposed without damaging the building structure or finish, or not permanently closed in by the structure or finish of the building.

Accessible: (as applied to equipment) Admitting close approach: not guarded by locked doors, elevation, or other effective means. (see Accessible, Readily)

Accessible, Readily: (Readily Accessible) Capable of being reached quickly for operation, renewal, or inspections, without requiring those to whom ready access is requisite to climb over or remove obstacles or to resort to portable ladders, chairs, etc.

Actinide: an element with atomic number of 89 (actinium) or above.

Activation product: A radioactive isotope of an element (e.g., in the steel of a reactor core) which has been created by neutron bombardment.

Active solar heater: A solar water or space-heating system that moves heated air or water using pumps or fans.

Affected employee: An employee whose job requires him or her to operate or use a machine or equipment on which servicing or maintenance is being performed under lockout or tagout, or whose job requires him or her to work in an area in which such servicing or maintenance is being performed.

Air Circuit Breakers: These are used to interrupt circuits while current flows through them. Compressed air is used to quench the arc when the connection is broken.

Air mass: The ratio of the mass of atmosphere in the actual observer-sun path to the mass that would exist if the observer was at sea level, at standard barometric pressure, and the sun was directly overhead. Note: (sometimes called air mass ratio).

Air mass 1.5 (AM1.5) standard reference spectrum: The solar spectral irradiance distribution (diffuse and direct) incident at sea level on a sun-facing 37-degree tilted surface. The atmospheric conditions for AM1.5 are: precipitable water vapor, 14.2 mm; total ozone, 3.4 mm; turbidity (base e, lambda=0.5 mm), 0.27. [ASTM E 892, Table 2]

Alternating current: Electric current in which the direction of flow is reversed at frequent intervals: usually 100 or 120 times per second (50 or 60 cycles per second or 50//60 Hz).

ALARA: As Low As Reasonably Achievable, economic and social factors being taken into account. This is the optimization principle of radiation protection.

Alpha particle: A positively-charged particle from the nucleus of an atom, emitted during radioactive decay. Alpha particles are helium nuclei, with 2 protons and 2 neutrons.

Alternative fuels: Solid fuels such as municipal solid waste (MSW), refuse derived fuel (RDF), biomass, rubber tires, and other combustibles that are used instead of fossil fuels (gas, oil, or coal) in a boiler to produce steam for the generation of electrical energy.

Ambient Temperature: The temperature of the air, water, or surrounding earth. Conductor ampacity is corrected for changes in ambient temperature including temperatures below 86°F. The cooling effect can increase the current carrying capacity of the conductor. (Review Section 310-10 of the Electrical Code for more understanding)

Ammeter: An electric meter used to measure current, calibrated in amperes.

Ampacity: The current-carrying capacity of conductors or equipment, expressed in amperes.

Ampere (A) or amp: The basic SI unit measuring the quantity of electricity. The unit for the electric current; the flow of electrons. One amp is 1 coulomb passing in one second. One amp is produced by an electric force of 1 volt acting across a resistance of 1 ohm.

Ampere-hour (Ah): Quantity of electricity or measure of charge. (1 Ah = 3600 C [Coulomb])

Amorphous semiconductor: A non-crystalline semiconductor material that has no long-range order.

Annual solar savings: The annual solar savings of a solar building is the energy savings attributable to a solar feature relative to the energy requirements of a non-solar building.

Anthropogenic: Referring to alterations in the environment due to the presence or activities of humans.

Antireflection coating: A thin coating of a material, which reduces the light reflection and increases light transmission, applied to a photovoltaic cell surface.

Armored Cable: A cable provided with a wrapping of metal, usually steel wires or tapes, primarily for the purpose of mechanical protection.

Arc-over Voltage: The minimum voltage required to cause an arc between electrodes separated by a gas or liquid insulation.

Array: Any number of photovoltaic modules connected together to provide a single electrical output. Arrays are often designed to produce significant amounts of electricity.

Atom: A particle of matter which cannot be broken up by chemical means. Atoms have a nucleus consisting of positively-charged protons and uncharged neutrons of the same mass. The positive charges on the protons are balanced by a number of negatively-charged electrons in motion around the nucleus.

Attendant: An employee assigned to remain immediately outside the entrance to an enclosed or other space to render assistance as needed to employees inside the space.

Attenuation: (l) The ratio of the input to output power levels in a network (transmission line) when it is excited by a matched source and terminated in a matched load. (2) Power loss in an electrical system.

Authorized employee: An employee who locks out or tags out machines or equipment in order to perform servicing or maintenance on that machine or equipment. An affected employee becomes an authorized employee when that employee's duties include performing servicing or maintenance covered under this section.

Automatic circuit re-closer: A self-controlled device for interrupting and re-closing an alternating current circuit with a predetermined sequence of opening and re-closing followed by resetting, hold-closed, or lockout operation.

Autonomous system: A stand-alone Photovoltaic system that has no back-up generating source. May or may not include storage batteries.

Availability: Describes the reliability of power plants. It refers to the number of hours the turbines are available to produce power divided by the total hours in a year.

Avoided cost: The minimum amount an electric utility is required to pay an independent power producer, under the PURPA regulations of 1978, equal to the costs the utility calculates it avoids in not having to produce that power (usually substantially less than the retail price charged by the utility for power it sells to customers).



B A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | Y | Z

Background radiation: The naturally-occurring ionizing radiation which every person is exposed to, arising from the earth's crust (including radon) and from cosmic radiation.

Balance of system: Represents all components and costs other than the Photovoltaic modules. It includes design costs, land, site preparation, system installation, support structures, power conditioning, operation and maintenance costs, indirect storage, and related costs.

Band gap: In a semiconductor, the energy difference between the highest valence band and the lowest conduction band.

Band gap energy (EG): The amount of energy (in electron volts) required to free an outer shell electron from its orbit about the nucleus to a free state and, thus, to promote it from the valence level to the conduction level.

Band-to-band Auger recombination: Recombination of an electron and a hole occurring between bands of the same energy in which no magnetic radiation is emitted.

Bare Conductor: A conductor not covered with insulating material.

Barricade: A physical obstruction such as tapes, cones, or A-frame type wood or metal structures intended to provide a warning about and to limit access to a hazardous area.

Barrier: A physical obstruction which is intended to prevent contact with energized lines or equipment or to prevent unauthorized access to a work area.

Barrier energy: The energy given up by an electron in penetrating the cell barrier; a measure of the electrostatic potential of the barrier.

Barrier, fire: A continuous membrane, either vertical or horizontal, such as a wall or floor assembly, that is designed and constructed with specified fire resistance rating to limit the spread of fire and that will also restrict the movement of smoke. Such barriers can have protected openings.

Base load: That part of electricity demand which is continuous, and does not vary over a 24-hour period. Approximately equivalent to the minimum daily load.

Base power: Power generated by a utility unit that operates at a very high capacity factor.

Baseline performance value: Initial values of short-circuit current, open-circuit voltage, and current at maximum power measured by the accredited laboratory and corrected to Standard Test Conditions, used to validate the manufacturer's performance measurements provided with the qualification modules per IEEE 1262.

Batteries: These are used in the substation control house as a backup to power the control systems in case of a power blackout.

Battery energy storage: The three main applications for battery energy storage systems include spinning reserve at generating stations, load leveling at substations, and peak shaving on the customer side of the meter. Battery storage has also been suggested for holding down air emissions at the power plant by shifting the time of day of the emission or shifting the location of emissions.

Bayonet Coupling: A quick coupling device for plug and receptacle connectors, accomplished by rotation of a cam operating device designed to bring the connector halves together.

Becquerel: The SI unit of intrinsic radioactivity in a material. One Bq measures one disintegration per second and is thus the activity of a quantity of radioactive material which averages one decay per second. (In practice, GBq or TBq are the common units.)

Beryllium Copper (BeCu): A relatively expensive contact material with properties superior to brass and phosphor bronze. It is recommended for contact applications requiring repeated extraction and reinsertion because of its resistance to fatigue at high operating temperatures.

Beta particle: A particle emitted from an atom during radioactive decay. Beta particles may be either electrons (with negative charge) or positrons.

BIPV (Building-Integrated Photovoltaic): A term for the design and integration of Photovoltaic into the building envelope, typically replacing conventional building materials. This integration may be in vertical facades, replacing view glass, spandrel glass, or other facade material; into semitransparent skylight systems; into roofing systems, replacing traditional roofing materials; into shading "eyebrows" over windows; or other building envelope systems.

Biological shield: A mass of absorbing material (e.g., thick concrete walls) placed around a reactor or radioactive material to reduce the radiation (especially neutrons and gamma rays respectively) to a level safe for humans.

Blocking diode: A diode used to restrict or block reverse current from flowing backward through a module. [UL 1703] Alternatively, diode connected in series to a Photovoltaic string; it protects its modules from a reverse power flow and, thus, against the risk of thermal destruction of solar cells.

Boiling water reactor (BWR): A common type of light water reactor (LWR), where water is allowed to boil in the core thus generating steam directly in the reactor vessel. (cf PWR)

Bonding Jumper: A bare or insulated conductor used to ensure the required electrical conductivity between metal parts required to be electrically connected. Frequently used from a bonding bushing to the service equipment enclosure to provide a path around concentric knockouts in an enclosure wall - also used to bond one raceway to another.

Boron (B): A chemical element, atomic number 5, semi-metallic in nature, used as a dopant to make p-semiconductor layers.

Boule: A sausage-shaped synthetic single-crystal mass grown in a special furnace, pulled and turned at a rate necessary to maintain the single-crystal structure during growth.

Breakdown Voltage: The voltage at which an insulator or dielectric ruptures, or at which ionization and conduction take place in a gas or vapor.

Breed: To form fissile nuclei, usually as a result of neutron capture, possibly followed by radioactive decay.

Breeder reactor: see Fast Breeder Reactor and Fast Neutron Reactor.

British thermal unit (Btu): The amount of heat energy required to raise the temperature of one pound of water from 60 degrees F to 61 degrees F at one atmosphere pressure.

Burnable poison: A neutron absorber included in the fuel which progressively disappears and compensates for the loss of reactivity as the fuel is consumed. Gadolinium is commonly used.

Burnup: Measure of thermal energy released by nuclear fuel relative to its mass, typically Gigawatt days per tonne (GWd/tU).

Bushing: An insulating structure, including a through conductor or providing a passageway for such a conductor, with provision for mounting on a barrier, conducting or otherwise, for the purposes of insulating the conductor from the barrier and conducting current from one side of the barrier to the other.

Bus Support Insulators: These are porcelain or fiberglass insulators that serve to isolate the bus bar switches and other support structures and to prevent leakage current from flowing through the structure. These insulators are similar in function of other insulators used in substations and transmission poles and towers.

Bypass diode: A diode connected across one or more solar cells in a photovoltaic module such that the diode will conduct if the cell(s) become reverse biased. [UL 1703] Alternatively, diode connected anti-parallel across a part of the solar cells of a Photovoltaic module. It protects these solar cells from thermal destruction in case of total or partial shading of individual solar cells while other cells are exposed to full light.



C A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | Y | Z

Cable: A conductor with insulation, or a stranded conductor with or without insulation and other coverings (single-conductor cable), or a combination of conductors insulated from one another (multiple-conductor cable).

Cable Assembly: A cable with plugs or connectors on each end.

Cable sheath: A conductive protective covering applied to cables. Note: A cable sheath may consist of multiple layers of which one or more is conductive.

Cadmium (Cd): A chemical element, atomic number 48, used in making certain types of solar cells and batteries.

Cadmium telluride (CdTe): A polycrystalline thin-film photovoltaic material.

Calandria: (in a CANDU reactor) a cylindrical reactor vessel which contains the heavy water moderator. It is penetrated from end to end by hundreds of calandria tubes which accommodate the pressure tubes containing the fuel and coolant.

CANDU: Canadian deuterium uranium reactor, moderated and (usually) cooled by heavy water.

Capacitance: That property of a system of conductors and dielectrics that permits the storage of electricity when potential difference exists between the conductors. Its value is expressed as the ratio of quantity of electricity to a potential difference. A capacitance value is always positive.

Capacitor Bank: An array of capacitors connected into a circuit. Capacitors are used to control voltages supplied to the customer by eliminating the voltage drop in the system caused by inductive reactive loads.

Capacity factor: The amount of energy that the system produces at a particular site as a percentage of the total amount that it would produce if it operated at rated capacity during the entire year. For example, the capacity factor for a wind farm ranges from 20% to 35%. Thirty-five percent is close to the technology potential.

Cathodic protection: A method of preventing oxidation (rusting) of exposed metal structures, such as bridges and pipelines, by imposing between the structure and the ground a small electrical voltage that opposes the flow of electrons and that is greater than the voltage present during oxidation.

Cell: The basic unit of a photovoltaic system.

Cell barrier: A very thin region of static electric charge along the interface of the positive and negative layers in a photovoltaic cell. The barrier inhibits the movement of electrons from one layer to the other, so that higher-energy electrons from one side diffuse preferentially through it in one direction, creating a current and thus a voltage across the cell. Also called depletion zone, cell junction, or space charge.

Cell junction: The area of immediate contact between two layers (positive and negative) of a photovoltaic cell. The junction lies at the center of the cell barrier or depletion zone.

Central power: The generation of electricity in large power plants with distribution through a network of transmission lines (grid) for sale to a number of users. Opposite of distributed power.

Chain reaction: A reaction that stimulates its own repetition, in particular where the neutrons originating from nuclear fission cause an ongoing series of fission reactions.

Charge carrier: A free and mobile conduction electron or hole in a semiconductor.

Chemical vapor deposition (CVD): A method of depositing thin semiconductor films. With this method, a substrate is exposed to one or more vaporized compounds, one or more of which contain desirable constituents. A chemical reaction is initiated, at or near the substrate surface, to produce the desired material that will condense on the substrate.

Chlorofluorocarbon: A family of chemicals composed primarily of carbon, hydrogen, chlorine, and fluorine whose principal applications are that of refrigerants and industrial cleansers and whose principal drawback is the tendency to destroy the Earth's protective ozone layer.

Circuit: A conductor or system of conductors through which an electric current is intended to flow.

Circuit Switchers: Circuit switchers a a set of switches for redirecting current in a substation. Circuit switchers provide equipment protection for transformers, lines, cables, and capacitor banks. They also are used to energize and deenergize capacitor banks and other circuits.

Cladding: The metal tubes containing oxide fuel pellets in a reactor core.

Clearance (between objects): The clear distance between two objects measured surface to surface.

Clearance (for work): Authorization to perform specified work or permission to enter a restricted area.

Cleavage of lateral epitaxial films for transfer (CLEFT): A process for making inexpensive GaAs photovoltaic cells in which a thin film of GaAs is grown atop a thick, single-crystal GaAs (or other suitable material) substrate and then is cleaved from the substrate and incorporated into a cell, allowing the substrate to be reused to grow more thin-film GaAs.

Closed Entry Contact: A female contact designed to prevent the entry of a pin or probing device having a cross-sectional dimension (diameter) greater than the mating pin.

Coal: A black, solid fossil fuel found in the Earth. Coal is often burned to make electricity.

Coaxial Cable: A high-band width cable consisting of two concentric cylindrical conductors with a common axis that is used for high-speed data communication and video signals.

Cogeneration: The process in which fuel is used to produce heat for a boiler-steam turbine or gas for a turbine. The turbine drives a generator that produces electricity, with the excess heat used for process steam.

Combined collector: A photovoltaic device or module that provides useful heat energy in addition to electricity.

Compact fluorescent lights: Lights that use a lot less energy than regular light bulbs. We can use compact fluorescent lights for reading lights and ceiling lights.

Component Lead: The solid or stranded wire or formed conductor that extends from a component and serves as a readily formable mechanical or electrical connection or both.

Compressed-air energy storage (CAES): CAES plants use off-peak electrical energy to compress air into underground storage reservoirs for storage until times of peak or intermediate electricity demand. Wind power offers a good opportunity for charging CAES storage. The storage is typically underground in natural aquifers, depleted oil or gas fields, mined salt caverns, or excavated or natural rock caverns. To generate power, the compressed air is first heated by gas burners, then passed through a turbine.

Concentrator: A Photovoltaic module that uses optical elements to increase the amount of sunlight incident on a Photovoltaic cell.

Concentrating: arrays must track the sun and use only the direct sunlight because the diffuse portion cannot be focused onto the Photovoltaic cells.

Concentrate: See Uranium oxide concentrate (U3O8).

Concentrator (module, array, or collector): An arrangement of photovoltaic cells that includes a lens to concentrate sunlight onto small-area cells. Concentrators can increase the power flux of sunlight hundreds of times.

Concentricity: In a wire or cable, the measurement of the location of the center of the conductor with respect to the geometric center of the surrounding insulation.

Concrete Foundations: A platform made of concrete that provides a solid stable support for large equipment. Concrete foundations or pads are laid for all large equipment, support structures, and control buildings in a substation.

Conductance: The reciprocal of resistance. It is the ratio of current passing through a material to the potential difference at its ends.

Conduction band; Conduction level: Energy level at which electrons are not bound to (orbiting) a specific atomic nucleus but are free to wander among the atoms. An energy band in which electrons can move freely in a solid, producing a net transport of charge.

Conductivity: The ability of a material to conduct electric current. It is expressed in terms of the current per unit of applied voltage. It is the reciprocal of resistivity.

Conductor: A wire or combination of wires not insulated from one another, suitable for carrying electric current.

Conduits: Conduits are hollow tubes running from manhole to manhole in an underground transmission or distribution system.

Connection: That part of a circuit that has negligible impedance and that joins components, devices, etc., together.

Connector: A device providing electrical connection/disconnections. It consists of a mating plug and receptacle. Various types of connectors include DIP, card edge, two-piece, hermaphroditic and wire-wrapping configurations. Multiple contact connectors join two or more conductors with others in one mechanical assembly.

Connector Discontinuity: An ohmic change in contact resistance.

Connector Insert: For connectors with metal shells, the insert holds contacts in proper arrangement while electrically insulating them from each other and from the shell.

Connector Shell: The case that encloses the connector insert and contact assembly. Shells of mating connectors can protect projecting contacts and provide proper alignment.

Constant-speed wind turbines: Turbines that operate at a constant rotor revolutions per minute (RPM) and are optimized for energy capture at a given rotor diameter at a particular speed in the wind power curve.

Contact, Female: A contact located in an insert or body in such a manner that the mating contact is inserted into the unit. It is similar in function to a socket contact.

Contact, Male: A contact located in an insert or body in such a manner that the mating portion extends into the female contact. It is similar in function to a pin contact.

Contact Plating: Plated-on metal applied to the base contact metal to provide the required contact resistance and/or wear resistance.

Contact Resistance: Maximum permitted electrical resistance of pin and socket contacts when assembled in a connector under typical service use.

Contact Retainer: A device either on the contact or in the insert to retain the contact.

Contact Size: Defines the largest size wire that can be used with the specific contact. By specification dimensioning, it also defines the diameter of the engagement end of the pin.

Contact resistance: The resistance between metallic contacts and the semiconductor.

Continuity: The state of being whole, unbroken.

Continuous Load: A load where the maximum current is expected to continue for three hours or more. Rating of the branch circuit protection device shall not be less tan 125% of the continuous load.

Control House: The substation control house contains switchboard panels, batteries, battery chargers, supervisory control, power-line carrier, meters, and relays. The control house provides all weather protection and security for the control equipment. It is also called a doghouse.


Control Panels: Control panels contain meters, control switches and recorders located in the control building, also called a doghouse. These are used to control the substation equipment, to send power from one circuit to another or to open or shut down circuits when needed.

Control rods: Devices to absorb neutrons so that the chain reaction in a reactor core may be slowed or stopped by inserting them further, or accelerated by withdrawing them.

Control Wires: Control wires are installed connecting the control house control panels to all the equipment in the substation. A typical substation control house contains several thousand feet of conduit and miles of control wire.

Conversion: Chemical process turning U3O8 into UF6 preparatory to enrichment.

Conversion efficiency (cell or module): The ratio of the electric energy produced by a photovoltaic device (under one-sun conditions) to the energy from sunlight incident upon the cell.

Converter Stations: Converter stations are located at the terminals of a DC transmission line. Converter stations change alternating current into direct current and invert direct current to alternating current.

Coolant: The liquid or gas used to transfer heat from the reactor core to the steam generators or directly to the turbines.

Copper indium diselenide (CuInSe2, or CIS): A polycrystalline thin-film photovoltaic material (sometimes incorporating gallium (CIGS) and/or sulfur).

Core: The central part of a nuclear reactor containing the fuel elements and control devices.

Coupling Capacitors: Coupling capacitors are used to transmit communication signals to transmission lines. Some are used to measure the voltage in transmission lines.

Critical mass: The smallest mass of fissile material that will support a self-sustaining chain reaction under specified conditions.

Criticality: Condition of being able to sustain a nuclear chain reaction.

Current at maximum power (Imp): The current at which maximum power is available from a module. [UL 1703]

Current Transformers: Current transformers can be used to supply information for measuring power flows and the electrical inputs for the operation of protective relays associated with the transmission and distribution circuits or for power transformers.

Cycle life: Number of discharge-charge cycles that a battery can tolerate under specified conditions before it fails to meet specified criteria as to performance (e.g., capacity decreases to 80-percent of the nominal capacity).

Czochralski process: A method of growing large size, high quality semiconductor crystal by slowly lifting a seed crystal from a molten bath of the material under careful cooling conditions.



D A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | Y | Z

Dangling bonds: A chemical bond associated with an atom on the surface layer of a crystal. The bond does not join with another atom of the crystal, but extends in the direction of exterior of the surface.

dc to DC converter: Electronic circuit to convert DC voltages (e.g., Photovoltaic module voltage) into other levels (e.g., load voltage). Can be part of a maximum power point tracker (MPPT).

Decay: Disintegration of atomic nuclei resulting in the emission of alpha or beta particles (usually with gamma radiation). Also the exponential decrease in radioactivity of a material as nuclear disintegrations take place and more stable nuclei are formed.

Decommissioning: Removal of a facility (e.g., reactor) from service, also the subsequent actions of safe storage, dismantling and making the site available for unrestricted use.

De-energized: Free from any electrical connection to a source of potential difference and from electric charge; not having a potential different from that of the earth. Note: The term is used only with reference to current-carrying parts, which are sometimes energized (alive).

Deep discharge: Discharging a battery to 20-percent or less of its full charge.

Deflagration: Propagation of a combustion zone through a fuel-oxidizer mixture at a rate that is less than the speed of sound in the un-reacted medium and capable of producing a significant increase in pressure.

Demand Factor: For an electrical system or feeder circuit, this is a ratio of the amount of connected load (in kva or amperes) that will be operating at the same time to the total amount of connected load on the circuit. An 80% demand factor, for instance, indicates that only 80% of the connected load on a circuit will ever be operating at the same time. Conductor capacity can be based on that amount of load.

Dendrite: A slender threadlike spike of pure crystalline material, such as silicon.

Dendritic web technique: A method for making sheets of polycrystalline silicon in which silicon dendrites are slowly withdrawn from a melt of silicon whereupon a web of silicon forms between the dendrites and solidifies as it rises from the melt and cools.

Depletion zone: Same as cell barrier. The term derives from the fact that this microscopically thin region is depleted of charge carriers (free electrons and holes).

Depleted uranium: Uranium having less than the natural 0.7% U-235. As a by-product of enrichment in the fuel cycle it generally has 0.25-0.30% U-235, the rest being U-238. Can be blended with highly-enriched uranium (e.g., from weapons) to make reactor fuel.

Designated employee (designated person): An employee (or person) who is designated by the employer to perform specific duties under the terms of this section and who is knowledgeable in the construction and operation of the equipment and the hazards involved.

Detachment: The locating of a combustible particulate solid process in the open air or in a separate building.

Deuterium: "Heavy hydrogen", a stable isotope having one proton and one neutron in the nucleus. It occurs in nature as 1 atom to 6500 atoms of normal hydrogen, (Hydrogen atoms contain one proton and no neutrons).

Diallyl Phthalate (DAP): A thermosetting plastic that offers outstanding dimensional stability and resistance to most chemicals and chemical compounds. It is used in the production of connector housings.

Dielectric: (l) Any insulating medium that intervenes between two conductors. (2) A material that, having the property required to establish an electric field, is recoverable in whole or in part as electric energy.

Dielectric Constant: That property of a dielectric that determines the electrostatic energy stored per unit volume for a unit potential gradient. Permittivity is the preferred term.

Dielectric Strength: The maximum voltage that a dielectric material can withstand, under specified conditions, without rupturing. It is usually expressed as volts/unit thickness. Also called Disruptive Gradient or Electric Strength.

Dielectric Withstanding Voltage: Maximum potential gradient that a dielectric material can withstand without failure.

Diffuse insulation: Sunlight received indirectly as a result of scattering due to clouds, fog, haze, dust, or other obstructions in the atmosphere. Opposite of direct insulation.

Diffusion furnace: Furnace used to make junctions in semiconductors by diffusing dopant atoms into the surface of the material.

Diffusion length: The mean distance a free electron or hole moves before recombining with another hole or electron.

Direct current (dc): Electric current in which electrons flow in one direction only. Opposite of alternating current.

Direct gain: In direct-gain buildings, sunlight directly enters the home through the windows and is absorbed and stored in massive floors or walls. These buildings are elongated in the east-west direction, and most of their windows are on the south side. The area devoted to south windows varies throughout the country. It could be as much as 20% of the floor area in sunny cold climates, where advanced glazings or moveable insulation are recommended to prevent heat loss at night. These buildings have high insulation levels and added thermal mass for heat storage.

Direct insulation: Sunlight falling directly upon a collector. Opposite of diffuse insulation.

Discharge rate: The rate, usually expressed in amperes or time, at which electrical current is taken from the battery.

Disconnect Switches: Disconnect switches or circuit breakers are used to isolate equipment or to redirect current in a substation.

Distributed power: Generic term for any power supply located near the point where the power is used. Opposite of central power. See 'stand-alone'; 'remote site.'

Distributed systems: Systems that are installed at or near the location where the electricity is used, as opposed to central systems that supply electricity to grids. A residential photovoltaic system is a distributed system.

Distribution Bus: A distribution bus is a steel structure array of switches used to route power out of a substation.


Distribution Feeder Circuits: These are the connections between the output terminals of a distribution substation and the input terminals of primary circuits. The distribution feeder circuit conductors leave the substation from a circuit breaker or circuit recloser via underground cables, called substation exit cables.


Distribution Transformers: Distribution transformers reduce the voltage of the primary circuit to the voltage required by customers.

DOD: 'Depth of Discharge,' from 100-percent state of charge (SOC), in a battery or battery system.

Donor: An n-type dopant that puts an additional electron into an energy level very near the conduction band; this electron is easily exited into the conduction band where it increases the electrical conductivity over than of an undoped semiconductor.

Donor level: The level that donates conduction electrons to the system.

Dopant: A chemical element (impurity) added in small amounts to an otherwise pure semiconductor material to modify the electrical properties of the material. An n-dopant introduces more electrons. A p-dopant creates electron vacancies (holes).

Doping: The addition of dopants to a semiconductor.

Duct Runs: Ducts are hollow tubes running from manhole to manhole inside a conduit in an underground system. They are of various sizes usually from 2 to 6 inches in diameter.

Dustproof: Constructed or protected so that dust will not interfere with its successful operation.

Dusttight: Constructed so that dust will not enter the enclosing case under specified test conditions.

Duty, continuous: A service requirement that demands operation at a substantially constant load for an indefinitely long time.

Duty, intermittent: A service requirement that demands operation for alternate intervals of load and no load, load and rest, or load, no load, and rest.

Duty, periodic: A type of intermittent duty in which the load conditions regularly reoccur.

Duty, short time: A requirement of service that demands operations at a substantially constant load for a short and definitely specified time.

Duty, varying: A requirement of of service that demands operation at loads, and for intervals of time, both of which may be subject to wide variation.



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Edge-defined film-fed growth (EFG): A method for making sheets of polycrystalline silicon in which molten silicon is drawn upward by capillary action through a mold.

Elastomer: A material that at room temperature stretches under low stress to at least twice its length and snaps back to original length upon release of stress.

Electric circuit: Path followed by electrons from a power source (generator or battery) through an external line (including devices that use the electricity) and returning through another line to the source.

Electric current: A flow of electrons; electricity.

Electrical grid: An integrated system of electricity distribution, usually covering a large area.

Electric line truck: A truck used to transport personnel, tools, and material for electric supply line work.

Electric Strength: The maximum potential gradient that a material can withstand without rupture. Also called Dielectric Strength and Disruptive Gradient.

Electric supply: Conductors used to transmit electric energy and their necessary supporting or containing structures. Signal lines of more than 400 volts are always supply lines within this section, and those of less than 400 volts are considered as supply lines, if so run and operated throughout.

Electric supply equipment: Equipment that produces, modifies, regulates, controls, or safeguards a supply of electric energy.

Electric utility: An organization responsible for the installation, operation, or maintenance of an electric supply system.

Electrodeposition: Electrolytic process in which a metal is deposited at the cathode from a solution of its ions.

Electrolyte: A liquid conductor of electricity.

Electron volt: An energy unit equal to the energy an electron acquires when it passes through a potential difference of one volt; it is equal to 1.602 x 10-19 volt.

Element: A chemical substance that cannot be divided into simple substances by chemical means; atomic species with same number of protons.

Emc: Electromagnetic compatibility.

Emi: Electromagnetic interference.

Enclosed space: A working space, such as a manhole, vault, tunnel, or shaft, that has a limited means of egress or entry, that is designed for periodic employee entry under normal operating conditions, and that under normal conditions does not contain a hazardous atmosphere, but that may contain a hazardous atmosphere under abnormal conditions.
Note: Spaces that are enclosed but not designed for employee entry under normal operating conditions are not considered to be enclosed spaces for the purposes of this definition. Similarly, spaces that are enclosed and that are expected to contain a hazardous atmosphere are not considered to be enclosed spaces for the purposes of this definition. Such spaces meet the definition of permit spaces in 1910.146, and entry into them must be performed in accordance with that standard.
Energized (alive, live): Electrically connected to a source of potential difference, or electrically charged so as to have a potential significantly different from that of earth in the vicinity.

Energy audit: A survey that shows how much energy you use in your house or apartment. It will help you find ways to use less energy.

Energy contribution potential: Recombination occurring in the emitter region of a photovoltaic cell.

Energy density: The ratio of energy available from a battery to its volume (Wh/1) or mass (Wh/kg).

Energy isolating device: A physical device that prevents the transmission or release of energy, including, but not limited to, the following: a manually operated electric circuit breaker, a disconnect switch, a manually operated switch, a slide gate, a slip blind, a line valve, blocks, and any similar device with a visible indication of the position of the device. (Push buttons, selector switches, and other control-circuit-type devices are not energy isolating devices.)

Energy levels: The energy represented by an electron in the band model of a substance.

Energy source: Any electrical, mechanical, hydraulic, pneumatic, chemical, nuclear, thermal, or other energy source that could cause injury to personnel.

Enriched uranium: Uranium in which the proportion of U-235 (to U-238) has been increased above the natural 0.7%. Reactor-grade uranium is usually enriched to about 3.5% U-235, weapons-grade uranium is more than 90% U-235.

Enrichment: Physical process of increasing the proportion of U-235 to U-238.

Environment: All the natural and living things around us. The earth, air, weather, plants, and animals all make up our environment.

Epitaxial growth: The growth of one crystal on the surface of another crystal. The growth of the deposited crystal is oriented by the lattice structure of the original crystal.

Equipotential zone: A zone of equal potential used to protect workers from hazardous step and touch potentials.

Extrinsic semiconductor: The product of doping a pure semiconductor.

Explosion proof: Designed and constructed to withstand and internal explosion without creating an external explosion or fire.

Exposed: Not isolated or guarded.



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Fast breeder reactor (FBR): A fast neutron reactor configured to produce more fissile material than it consumes, using fertile material such as depleted uranium in a blanket around the core.

Fast neutron reactor: A reactor with little or no moderator and hence utilizing fast neutrons. It normally burns plutonium while producing fissile isotopes in fertile material such as depleted uranium (or thorium).

Feeder: A circuit, such as conductors in conduit or a busway run, which carries a large block of power from the service equipment to a sub-feeder panel or a branch circuit panel or to some point at which the block power is broken into smaller circuits.

Fermi level: Energy level at which the probability of finding an electron is one-half. In a metal, the Fermi level is very near the top of the filled levels in the partially filled valance band. In a semiconductor, the Fermi level is in the band gap.

Fertile (of an isotope): Capable of becoming fissile, by capturing neutrons, possibly followed by radioactive decay; e.g., U-238, Pu-240.

Fill factor: The ratio of a photovoltaic cell's actual power to its power if both current and voltage were at their maxima. A key characteristic in evaluating cell performance.

Fire Barrier Wall: A wall separating buildings or subdividing a building to prevent the spread of fire and having a fire resistance rating and structural stability.

Fire loading: The amount of combustibles present in a given area, expressed in Btu/ft2 (kJ/m2).

Fire point: The lowest temperature at which a liquid in an open container will give off sufficient vapors to burn once ignited. It generally is slightly above the flash point.

Fire protection rating: The time, in minutes or hours, that materials and assemblies used as opening protection have withstood a fire exposure as established in accordance with test procedures of NFPA 252, Standard Methods of Fire Tests of Door Assemblies, and NFPA 257, Standard on Fire Test for Window and Glass Block assemblies, as applicable.

Fissile (of an isotope): Capable of capturing a slow (thermal) neutron and undergoing nuclear fission, e.g., U-235, U-233, Pu-239.

Fissionable (of an isotope): Capable of undergoing fission: If fissile, by slow neutrons; if fertile, by fast neutrons.

Fission: The splitting of a heavy nucleus into two, accompanied by the release of a relatively large amount of energy and usually one or more neutrons. It may be spontaneous but usually is due to a nucleus absorbing a neutron and thus becoming unstable.

Fission products: Daughter nuclei resulting either from the fission of heavy elements such as uranium, or the radioactive decay of those primary daughters. Usually highly radioactive.

Flammable liquid: Any liquid having a flash point below 100°F (37.8°C) and having a vapor pressure not exceeding an absolute pressure of 40 psi (276 kPa) at 100°F (37.8°C).

Flat-plate photovoltaic module: An arrangement of photovoltaic cells mounted on a rigid flat surface with the cells exposed freely to incoming sunlight.

Flat-plate Photovoltaic: Refers to a Photovoltaic array or module that consists of non-concentrating elements. Flat-plate arrays and modules use direct and diffuse sunlight, but if the array is fixed in position, some portion of the direct sunlight is lost because of oblique sun-angles in relation to the array.

Float charge: Float charge is the voltage required to counteract the self-discharge of the battery at a certain temperature.

Float life: Number of years that a battery can keep its stated capacity when it is kept at float charge (see float charge).

Float-zone process: A method of growing a large-size, high-quality crystal whereby coils heat a polycrystalline ingot placed atop a single-crystal seed. As the coils are slowly raised the molten interface beneath the coils becomes single crystal.

Fossil fuel: A fuel based on carbon presumed to be originally from living matter, e.g., coal, oil, gas. Burned with oxygen to yield energy, used in a boiler to produce steam for the generation of electrical energy.

Fresnel lens: An optical device that focuses light like a magnifying glass; concentric rings are faced at slightly different angles so that light falling on any ring is focused to the same point. Fresnel lenses are flat rather than thick in the center and can be stamped out in a mold.

Frequency Changers: A frequency changer is a motor-generator set that changes power of an alternating current system from one frequency to one or more different frequencies, with or without a change in the number of phases, or in voltage.

Fuel: Any material that can be burned to make energy.

Fuel assembly: Structured collection of fuel rods or elements, the unit of fuel in a reactor.

Fuel cell: A device that converts the energy of a fuel directly to electricity and heat, without combustion. Because there is no combustion, fuel cells give off few emissions; because there are no moving parts, fuel cells are quiet.

Fuel fabrication: Making reactor fuel assemblies, usually from sintered UO2 pellets which are inserted into zircalloy tubes, comprising the fuel rods or elements.



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Gallium (Ga): A chemical element, atomic number 31, metallic in nature, used in making certain kinds of solar cells and semiconductor devices.

Gallium arsenide (GaAs): A crystalline high-efficiency semiconductor/photovoltaic material.

Gamma rays: High energy electro-magnetic radiation from the atomic nucleus, virtually identical to X-rays.

Gassing current: Portion of charge current that goes into electrolytic production of hydrogen and oxygen from the electrolytic liquid. This current increases with increasing voltage and temperature.

Gel-type battery: Lead-acid battery in which the electrolyte is composed of a silica gel matrix.

Genetic mutation: Sudden change in the chromosomal DNA of an individual gene. It may produce inherited changes in descendants. Mutation in some organisms can be made more frequent by irradiation (though this has never been demonstrated in humans).

Gigawatt (GW): One billion watts. One million kilowatts. One thousand megawatts.

Glazings: Clear materials (such as glass or plastic) that allow sunlight to pass into solar collectors and solar buildings, trapping heat inside.

Grain boundaries: The boundaries where crystallites in a polycrystalline material meet.

Graphite: Crystalline carbon used in very pure form as a moderator, principally in gas-cooled reactors, but also in Soviet-designed RBMK reactors.

Gray: The SI unit of absorbed radiation dose, one joule per kilogram of tissue.

Greenhouse effect: The effect of the Earth's atmosphere, due to certain gases, in trapping heat from the sun; the atmosphere acts like a greenhouse.

Greenhouse gases: Gases that trap the heat of the sun in the Earth's atmosphere, producing the greenhouse effect; the two major greenhouse gases are water vapor and carbon dioxide; lesser greenhouse gases include methane, ozone, chlorofluorocarbons, and nitrogen oxides.

Grid-connected (Photovoltaic system): A Photovoltaic system in which the Photovoltaic array acts like a central generating plant, supplying power to the grid.

Grid-interactive (Photovoltaic system): See 'Grid-connected (Photovoltaic system).'

Ground: A large conducting body (such as the earth) used as a common return for an electric circuit and as an arbitrary zero of potential.

Grounded, effectively: Intentionally connected to earth through a ground connection or connections of sufficiently low impedance and having sufficient current-carrying capacity to prevent the buildup of voltages that may result in undue hazards to connect equipment or to persons.

Grounded Conductor: A system or circuit conductor that is intentionally grounded, usually gray or white in color.

Grounding Conductor: A conductor used to connect metal equipment enclosures and/or the system grounded conductor to a grounding electrode, such as the ground wire run to the water pipe at a service; also may be a bare or insulated conductor used to ground motor frames, panel boxes, and other metal equipment enclosures used throughout electrical systems. In most conduit systems, the conduit is used as the ground conductor.

Grounding Equipment Conductor: The conductor used to connect the noncurrent-carrying metal parts of equipment, raceways, and other enclosures to the system grounded conductor, the grounding electrode conductor, or both, of the circuit at the service equipment or at the source of a separately derived system.

Grounding Electrode: The conductor used to connect the grounding electrode to the equipment grounding conductor, to the grounded conductor, or to both, of the circuit at the service equipment or at the source of a separately derived system.

Grounding Resistors: Grounding Resistors are designed to provide added safety to industrial distribution systems by limiting ground fault current to reasonable levels.


Grounding Transformers: A grounding transformer intended primarily to provide a neutral point for grounding purposes.

Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter: A device intended for the protection of personal that functions to de-energize a circuit or portion thereof within an established period of time when a current to ground exceeds some predetermined value that is less than required to operate the overcurrent protection device of the supply circuit.

Ground Fault Protection of Equipment: A system intended to provide protection of equipment from damaging line to ground fault currents by operating to cause a disconnecting means to open all ungrounded conductors of the faulted circuit. This protection is provided at current levels less than those required to protect conductors from damage through the operations of a supply circuit overcurrent device.

Guarded: Covered, fenced, enclosed, or otherwise protected, by means of suitable covers or casings, barrier rails or screens, mats, or platforms, designed to minimize the possibility, under normal conditions, of approach or accidental contact by persons or objects. Note: Wires which are insulated, but not otherwise protected, are not considered as guarded.



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Half-life: The period required for half of the atoms of a particular radioactive isotope to decay and become an isotope of another element.

Hazardous atmosphere: An atmosphere that may expose employees to the risk of death, incapacitation, impairment of ability to self-rescue (that is, escape unaided from an enclosed space), injury, or acute illness from one or more of the following causes:
Flammable gas, vapor, or mist in excess of 10 percent of its lower flammable limit (LFL);
Airborne combustible dust at a concentration that meets or exceeds its LFL; Note: This concentration may be approximated as a condition in which the dust obscures vision at a distance of 5 feet (1.52 m) or less.
Atmospheric oxygen concentration below 19.5 percent or above 23.5 percent;
Atmospheric concentration of any substance for which a dose or a permissible exposure limit is published and which could result in employee exposure in excess of its dose or permissible exposure limit;
• Note: An atmospheric concentration of any substance that is not capable of causing death, incapacitation, impairment of ability to self-rescue, injury, or acute illness due to its health effects is not covered by this definition.
Any other atmospheric condition that is immediately dangerous to life or health.
• Note: For air contaminants for which OSHA has not determined a dose or permissible exposure limit, other sources of information, such as Material Safety Data Sheets that comply with the Hazard Communication Standard, 1910.1200, published information, and internal documents can provide guidance in establishing acceptable atmospheric conditions.

Heat pump: Like an air conditioner or refrigerator, a heat pump moves heat from one location to another. In the cooling mode, heat pumps reduce indoor temperatures in the summer by transferring heat to the ground. Unlike an air conditioning unit, however, a heat pump's cycle is reversible. In winter, a heat pump can extract heat from the ground and transfer it inside. The energy value of the heat thus moved can be more than three times the cost of the electricity required to perform the transfer process.

Heavy water: Water containing an elevated concentration of molecules with deuterium ("heavy hydrogen") atoms.

Heavy water reactor (HWR): A reactor which uses heavy water as its moderator, e.g., Canadian CANDU (pressurized HWR or PHWR).

Heterojunction: A region of electrical contact between two different semiconductor materials.

High-level wastes: Extremely radioactive fission products and transuranic elements (usually other than plutonium) in spent nuclear fuel. They may be separated by reprocessing the spent fuel, or the spent fuel containing them may be regarded as high-level waste.

Highly (or High)-enriched uranium (HEU): Uranium enriched to at least 20% U-235. (In weapons it is about 90% U-235.)

High-power tests: Tests in which fault currents, load currents, magnetizing currents, and line-dropping currents are used to test equipment, either at the equipment's rated voltage or at lower voltages.

High Voltage Underground Cables: High voltage cables are designed to carry high voltage current and are constructed in many different ways, but are usually shielded cables. They are made with a conductor, conductor-strand shielding, insulation, semi-conducting insulation shielding, metallic insulation shielding, and a sheath.

High voltage direct current (HVDC) converter station: A facility that functions as an electrical rectifier (ac-dc) to control and transmit power in a high voltage network. There are two types of HVDC valves: the mercury arc valve and the present-day technology solid state thyristor valve. Both types of valves present a fire risk due to high voltage equipment that consists of oil-filled converter transformers, wall bushings, and capacitors in addition to various polymeric components.

High Voltage Fuses: High voltage fuses are used to protect the electrical system in a substation from power transformer faults. They are switched for maintenance and safety.

High-voltage tests: Tests in which voltages of approximately 1000 volts are used as a practical minimum and in which the voltage source has sufficient energy to cause injury.

High wind: A wind of such velocity that the following hazards would be present:
An employee would be exposed to being blown from elevated locations, or
an employee or material handling equipment could lose control of material being handled, or
an employee would be exposed to other hazards not controlled by the standard involved.
• Note: Winds exceeding 40 miles per hour (64.4 kilometers per hour), or 30 miles per hour (48.3 kilometers per hour) if material handling is involved, are normally considered as meeting this criteria unless precautions are taken to protect employees from the hazardous effects of the wind.
Hole: The vacancy where an electron would normally exist in a solid; behaves like a positively charged particle.

Homojunction: The region between an n-layer and a p-layer in a single material photovoltaic cell.

Hybrid system: A Photovoltaic system that includes other sources of electricity generation, such as wind or diesel generators.

Hydrogenated amorphous silicon: Amorphous silicon with a small amount of incorporated hydrogen. The hydrogen neutralizes dangling bonds in the amorphous silicon, allowing charge carriers to flow more freely.



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Impedance: The total opposition that a circuit offers to the flow of alternating current or any other varying current at a particular frequency.

Incident light: Light that shines onto the face of a solar cell or module.

Indium oxide: A wide band gap semiconductor that can be heavily doped with tin to make a highly conductive, transparent thin film. Often used as a front contact or one component of a heterojunction solar cell.

Inductive reactance: Electrical current produces heat and/or a magnetic field (such as in the windings of a motor). We refer to the tendency for current flow and changes in flow to be influenced by magnetic fields as inductance. An AC circuit that contains only inductance, capacitance or a combination of the two is defined by the total opposition to current flow expressed in reactance. Inductance only affects current flow when the current is changing. Inductance produces a self-induced voltage (called a counter emf) that opposes changes in current. Obviously, the current changes constantly in an AC circuit. Inductance in an AC circuit, therefore, causes a continual opposition. This opposition to current flow is called inductive reactance.

Infrared radiation: Electromagnetic radiation whose wavelengths lie in the range from 0.75 micrometer to 1000 micrometers.

Insertion Force: The effort, usually measured in ounces, required to engage mating components.

Insulation: A material that offers high electric resistance making it suitable for covering components, terminals and wires to prevent the possible future contact of adjacent conductors resulting in a short circuit.

Insolation: Sunlight, direct or diffuse; from 'incident solar radiation.' Not to be confused with insulation.

Insulation: Materials that prevent or slow down the movement of heat.

In situ leaching (ISL): The recovery by chemical leaching of minerals from porous ore bodies without physical excavation. Also known as solution mining.

In Sight From: (within sight from, within sight) Where it is specified that one equipment shall be "in sight from", "within sight from" or "within sight", etc. of another equipment, the specified equipment is to be visible and not more that 50´ distant from the other

Insulated: Separated from other conducting surfaces by a dielectric (including air space) offering a high resistance to the passage of current.
Note: When any object is said to be insulated, it is understood to be insulated for the conditions to which it is normally subjected. Otherwise, it is, within the purpose of this section, uninsulated.
Insulation (cable): That which is relied upon to insulate the conductor from other conductors or conducting parts or from ground.

Interconnect: A conductor within a module or other means of connection which provides an electrical interconnection between the solar cells. [UL 1703]

Interfacial Seal: Sealing of a two-piece, multiple contact connector over the whole area of the interface to provide sealing around each contact.

Interrupter Rating: The highest current at rated voltage that a device is intended to interrupt under standard test conditions.

Intrinsic semiconductor: An undoped semiconductor.

Inverters: Devices that convert DC electricity into AC electricity (single or multiphase), either for stand-alone systems (not connected to the grid) or for utility-interactive systems.

Ion: An atom that is electrically-charged because of loss or gain of electrons.

Ionizing radiation: Radiation (including alpha particles) capable of breaking chemical bonds, thus causing ionization of the matter through which it passes and damage to living tissue.

Irradiate: Material subjected to ionizing radiation. Irradiated reactor fuel and components have been subjected to neutron irradiation and hence become radioactive themselves.

Isotope: An atomic form of an element having a particular number of neutrons. Different isotopes of an element have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons and hence different atomic mass, e.g.,. U-235, U-238. Some isotopes are unstable and decay to form isotopes of other elements.

ISPRA guidelines: Guidelines for the assessment of Photovoltaic Plants, published by the Joint Research Centre of the Commission of the European Communities, Ispra, Italy.

I-type semiconductor: Semiconductor material that is left intrinsic, or undoped so that the concentration of charge carriers is characteristic of the material itself rather than of added impurities.

I-V curve: A graphical presentation of the current versus the voltage from a photovoltaic device as the load is increased from the short circuit (no load) condition to the open circuit (maximum voltage) condition. The shape of the curve characterized cell performance.

I-V data: The relationship between current and voltage of a photovoltaic device in the power-producing quadrant, as a set of ordered pairs of current and voltage readings in a table, or as a curve plotted in a suitable coordinate system (e.g., Cartesian). [ASTM E 1036]



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Jacket: Outermost layer of insulating material of a cable or wire.

Junction: A region of transition between semiconductor layers, such as a p/n junction, which goes from a region that has a high concentration of acceptors (p-type) to one that has a high concentration of donors (n-type).

Junction box: A Photovoltaic generator junction box is an enclosure on the module where Photovoltaic strings are electrically connected and where protection devices can be located, if necessary.

Junction diode: A semiconductor device with a junction and a built-in potential that passes current better in one direction than the other. All solar cells are junction diodes.



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Kilowatt (kW): 1000 watts.

Kilowatt-hour (kWh): One thousand watts acting over a period of 1 hour. The kWh is a unit of energy. 1 kWh=3600 kJ.



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Labeled: Items to which a label, trademark, or other identifying mark of nationally recognized testing labs has been attached to identify the items as having been tested and meeting appropriate standards.

Lattice: The regular periodic arrangement of atoms or molecules in a crystal.

Light-induced defects: Defects, such as dangling bonds, induced in an amorphous silicon semiconductor upon initial exposure to light.

Lightning Arresters: Lightning arresters are devices for protecting many different pieces of equipment such as, power poles and towers, power transformers, circuit breakers, bus structures, and steel superstructures, from damage from lightning strikes.

Light trapping: The trapping of light inside a semiconductor material by refracting and reflecting the light at critical angles; trapped light will travel further in the material, greatly increasing the probability of absorption and hence of producing charge carriers.

Light water: Ordinary water (H20) as distinct from heavy water.

Light water reactor (LWR): A common nuclear reactor cooled and usually moderated by ordinary water.

Lines, Communication: The conductors and their supporting or containing structures which are used for public or private signal or communication service, and which operate at potentials not exceeding 400 volts to ground or 750 volts between any two points of the circuit, and the transmitted power of which does not exceed 150 watts. If the lines are operating at less than 150 volts, no limit is placed on the transmitted power of the system. Under certain conditions, communication cables may include communication circuits exceeding these limitations where such circuits are also used to supply power solely to communication equipment.
Note: Telephone, telegraph, railroad signal, data, clock, fire, police alarm, cable television, and other systems conforming to this definition are included. Lines used for signaling purposes, but not included under this definition, are considered as electric supply lines of the same voltage.
Line-commutated inverter: An inverter that is tied to a power grid or line. The commutation of power (conversion from DC to AC) is controlled by the power line, so that, if there is a failure in the power grid, the Photovoltaic system cannot feed power into the line.

Listed: Equipment or materials included in a list published by an organization acceptable to the authority having jurisdiction and concerned with product evaluation, that maintains periodic inspection of production of listed equipment or materials, and whose listing states either that the equipment or material meets appropriate designated standards or has been tested and found suitable for use in specified manner.

Load: Anything in an electrical circuit that, when the circuit is turned on, draws power from that circuit.

Location, damp: A location subject to moderate amount of moisture such as some basements, barns, cold storage, warehouse and the like.

Location, dry: A location not normally subject to dampness or wetness: a location classified as dry may be temporarily subject to dampness or wetness, as in case of a building under construction.

Location, wet: A location subject to saturation with water or other liquids.

Low-enriched uranium: Uranium enriched to less than 20% U-235. (That in power reactors is usually 3.5: 5.0% U-235.)

Lower Flammable Limit (LFL): The lowest concentration of material that will propagate a flame from an ignition source through a mixture of flammable gas or combustible dust dispersion with a gaseous oxidizer.



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Majority carrier: Current carriers (either free electrons or holes) that are in excess in a specific layer of a semiconductor material (electrons in the n-layer, holes in the p-layer) of a cell.

Manholes: A manhole is the opening in the underground duct system which houses cables plices and which cablemen enter to pull in cable and to make splices and tests. Also called a splicing chamber or cable vault.

Marginal cost: The cost of one additional unit within a group of like units.

Maximum power point (MPP): The point on the current-voltage (I-V) curve of a module under illumination, where the product of current and voltage is maximum. [UL 1703] For a typical silicon cell, this is at about 0.45 V.

Maximum power point tracker (MPPT): Means of a power conditioning unit that automatically operates the Photovoltaic-generator at its MPP under all conditions.

Megaohm: A unit of electrical resistance equal to one million ohms.

Megaohmmeter: An instrument for measuring extremely high resistance.

Megawatt (MW): A unit of power, = 106 watts. MWe refers to electric output from a generator, MWt to thermal output from a reactor or heat source (e.g., the gross heat output of a reactor itself, typically three times the MWe figure).

Megger: A test instrument for measuring the insulation resistance of conductors and other electrical equipment; specifically, a megaohm (million ohms) meter; this is a registered trade mark of the James Biddle Co.

Metal-clad Switchgear: An outdoor metal-clad switchgear is a weatherproof housing for circuit breakers, protective relays, meters, current transformers, potential transformers, bus conductors, and other equipment. An indoor switchgear must be protected from the environment and contains the same types of equipment as the outdoor type.

Metal fuels: Natural uranium metal as used in a gas-cooled reactor.

Meters: They are measuring devices and can be an indicating meter or a recording meter. An indicating meter shows on a dial the quantity being measured. A recording meter makes a permanent record of the quantity being measured, usually by tracing a line on a chart or graph.

Micro: one millionth of a unit (e.g., microsievert is 10-6 Sv).

Microgroove: A small groove scribed into the surface of a cell which is filled with metal for contacts.

Microwave: Substations commonly use microwave communication equipment for communication with local and regional electric power system control centers. This system allows for rapid communication and signaling for controlling the routing of power.

Milling: Process by which minerals are extracted from ore, usually at the mine site.

Minimum approach distance: The closest distance an employee is permitted to approach an energized or a grounded object.

Minority carrier: A current carrier, either an electron or a hole, that is in the minority in a specific layer of a semiconductor material; the diffusion of minority carriers under the action of the cell junction voltage is the current in a photovoltaic device.

Minority carrier lifetime: The average time a minority carrier exists before recombination.

Mixed oxide fuel (MOX): Reactor fuel which consists of both uranium and plutonium oxides, usually about 5% Pu, which is the main fissile component.

Moderator: A material such as light or heavy water or graphite used in a reactor to slow down fast neutrons by collision with lighter nuclei so as to expedite further fission.

Module: See 'Photovoltaic Module.'

Monolithic: Fabricated as a single structure.

Multicrystalline: Material that is solidified at such as rate that many small crystals (crystallites) form. The atoms within a single crystallite are symmetrically arranged, whereas crystallites are jumbled together. These numerous grain boundaries reduce the device efficiency. A material composed of variously oriented, small individual crystals. (Sometimes referred to as polycrystalline or semicrystalline).

Multijunction device: A photovoltaic device containing two or more cell junctions, each of which is optimized for a particular part of the solar spectrum, to achieve greater overall efficiency.



N A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | Y | Z

Natural uranium: Uranium with an isotopic composition as found in nature, containing 99.3% U-238, 0.7% U-235 and a trace of U-234. Can be used as fuel in heavy water-moderated reactors.

Neutron: An uncharged elementary particle found in the nucleus of every atom except hydrogen. Solitary mobile neutrons traveling at various speeds originate from fission reactions. Slow (thermal) neutrons can in turn readily cause fission in nuclei of "fissile" isotopes, e.g., U-235, Pu-239, U-233; and fast neutrons can cause fission in nuclei of "fertile" isotopes such as U-238, Pu-239. Sometimes atomic nuclei simply capture neutrons.

Noninductive Circuit: A circuit in which the magnetic effect of the current flowing has been reduced by one several methods to a minimum or to zero.

Nonlinear Load: A load where the wave shape of the steady state current does not follow the wave shape of the applied voltage.

Nonrenewable fuels: Fuels that cannot be easily made or "renewed." We can use up nonrenewable fuels. Oil, natural gas, and coal are nonrenewable fuels.

N-type semiconductor: A semiconductor produced by doping an intrinsic semiconductor with an electron-donor impurity (e.g., phosphorous in silicon).

Nuclear energy: Energy that comes from splitting atoms of radioactive materials, such as uranium.

Nuclear reactor: A device in which a nuclear fission chain reaction occurs under controlled conditions so that the heat yield can be harnessed or the neutron beams utilized. All commercial reactors are thermal reactors, using a moderator to slow down the neutrons.



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"O" RING: A doughnut-shaped ring of rubber used as a seal around the periphery of the mating insulator interface of cylindrical connectors.

Ohm: The derived SI unit for electrical resistance or impedance; one ohm equals one volt per ampere.

Ohmmeter: an instrument for measuring resistance in ohms.

Oil: A black liquid fossil fuel found deep in the Earth. Gasoline and most plastics are made from oil.

Oil Circuit Breakers: Oil circuit breakers are used to switch circuits and equipment in and out of a system in a substation. They are oil filled to provide cooling and to prevent arcing when the switch is activated.

One-axis tracking: A system capable of rotating about one axis.

Open-circuit voltage (Voc): The maximum possible voltage across a photovoltaic cell or module; the voltage across the cell in sunlight when no current is flowing.

Overcurrent: Any current in excess of the rated current of equipment or the ampacity of a conductor. It may result from overload, short circuit or ground fault.

Overload: Load greater than the load for which the system or mechanism was intended. A fault, such as a short circuit or ground fault, is not an overload.

Oxide fuels: Enriched or natural uranium in the form of the oxide UO2, used in many types of reactor.



P A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | Y | Z

Packing factor: The ratio of array area to actual land area or building envelope area, for a system; or, the ratio of total Photovoltaic cell area to the total module area, for a module.

Panelboard: A single panel or group of panel units designed for assembly in the form of a single panel: includes buses and may come with or without switches and/or automatic overcurrent protective devices for the control of light, heat, or power circuits of individual as well as aggregate capacity. It is designed to be placed in a cabinet or cutout box that is in or against a wall or partition and is accessible only from the front.

Parallel connection: A way of joining two or more electricity-producing devices (i.e., Photovoltaic cells or modules) by connecting positive leads together and negative leads together; such a configuration increases the current.

Passivation: A chemical reaction that eliminates the detrimental effect of electrically reactive atoms on a photovoltaic cell's surface.

Passive solar home: A house that uses a room or another part of the building as a solar collector.

Peak load; Peak demand: The maximum load, or usage, of electrical power occurring in a given period of time, typically a day.

Peak power: Power generated by a utility unit that operates at a very low capacity factor; generally used to meet short-lived and variable high demand periods.

Peak watts (Wp): See 'Photovoltaic peak watt.'

Phosphorous (P): A chemical element, atomic number 15, used as a dopant in making n-semiconductor layers.

Photocurrent: An electric current induced by radiant energy.

Photoelectrochemical cell: A special kind of photovoltaic cell in which the electricity produced is used immediately within the cell to produce a useful chemical product, such as hydrogen. The product material is continuously withdrawn from the cell for direct use as a fuel or as an ingredient in making other chemicals, or it may be stored and used subsequently.

Photon: A particle of light that acts as an individual unit of energy.

Photovoltaic (Photovoltaic): Pertaining to the direct conversion of light into electricity.

Photovoltaic (Photovoltaic) array: An interconnected system of Photovoltaic modules that function as a single electricity-producing unit. The modules are assembled as a discrete structure, with common support or mounting. In smaller systems, an array can consist of a single module.

Photovoltaic (Photovoltaic) cell: The smallest semiconductor element within a Photovoltaic module to perform the immediate conversion of light into electrical energy (dc voltage and current).

Photovoltaic (Photovoltaic) conversion efficiency: The ratio of the electric power produced by a photovoltaic device to the power of the sunlight incident on the device.

Photovoltaic (Photovoltaic) device: A device that converts light directly into DC electricity.

Photovoltaic (Photovoltaic) efficiency: The ratio of electric power produced by a cell at any instant to the power of the sunlight striking the cell.

Photovoltaic (Photovoltaic) generator: The total of all Photovoltaic strings of a Photovoltaic power supply system, which are electrically interconnected.

Photovoltaic (Photovoltaic) module: The smallest environmentally protected, essentially planar assembly of solar cells and ancillary parts, such as interconnections, terminals, [and protective devices such as diodes] intended to generate DC power under unconcentrated sunlight. The structural (load carrying) member of a module can either be the top layer (superstrate) or the back layer (substrate). [UL 1703]

Photovoltaic (Photovoltaic) panel: often used interchangeably with Photovoltaic module (especially in one-module systems), but more accurately used to refer to a physically connected collection of modules (i.e., a laminate string of modules used to achieve a required voltage and current).

Photovoltaic (Photovoltaic) peak watt: Maximum "rated" output of a cell, module, or system. Typical rating conditions are 0.645 watts per square inch (1000 watts per square meter) of sunlight, 68 degrees F (20 degrees C) ambient air temperature and 6.2 x 10-3 mi/s (1 m/s) wind speed.

Photovoltaic (Photovoltaic) system: A complete set of components for converting sunlight into electricity by the photovoltaic process, including the array and balance of system components.

Photovoltaic-thermal (Photovoltaic/T) system: A photovoltaic system that, in addition to converting sunlight into electricity, collects the residual heat energy and delivers both heat and electricity in usable form. Also called a total energy system.

Physical vapor deposition: A method of depositing thin semiconductor films. With this method, physical processes, such as thermal evaporation or bombardment of ions, are used to deposit elemental semiconductor material on a substrate.

Plenum: Chamber or space forming a part of an air conditioning system

Plutonium: A transuranic element, formed in a nuclear reactor by neutron capture. It has several isotopes, some of which are fissile and some of which undergo spontaneous fission, releasing neutrons. Weapons-grade plutonium is produced in special reactors to give >90% Pu-239, reactor-grade plutonium contains about 30% non-fissile isotopes. About one third of the energy in a light water reactor comes from the fission of Pu-239, and this is the main isotope of value recovered from reprocessing spent fuel.

P-i-n: A semiconductor device structure that layers an intrinsic semiconductor between a p-type semiconductor and an n-type semiconductor; this structure is most often used with amorphous silicon devices.

P/n: A semiconductor device structure in which the junction is formed between a p-type layer and an n-type layer.

Point-contact cell: A high efficiency silicon concentrator cell that employs light trapping techniques and point-diffused contacts on the rear surface for current collection.

Polycrystalline: See 'Multicrystalline.'

Potential Transformers: Potential transformers are required to provide accurate voltages for meters used for billing industrial customers or utility companies.


Potheads: A type of insulator with a bell or pot-like shape used to connect underground electrical cables to overhead lines. It serves to separate the bunched-up conductors from one another in the cable to the much wider separation in the overhead line. It also seals the cable end from the weather.

Power conditioning equipment: Electrical equipment, or power electronics, used to convert power from a photovoltaic array into a form suitable for subsequent use. A collective term for inverter, converter, battery charge regulator, and blocking diode.

Power density: The ratio of the power available from a battery to its mass (W/kg) or volume (W/l).

Power factor: The ratio of the average power and the apparent volt-amperes.

Power Generation Plants: A facility designed to produce electric energy from another form of energy, such as fossil fuel, nuclear, hydroelectric, geothermal, solar thermal, and wind.


Power Line Carrier: A device for producing radio-frequency power for transmission on power lines.


Power Transformers: Transformers raise or lower the voltage as needed to serve the transmission or distribution circuits.

Pressurized water reactor (PWR): The most common type of light water reactor (LWR), it uses water at very high pressure in a primary circuit and steam is formed in a secondary circuit.

Primary Circuits: These are the distribution circuits that carry power from substations to local load areas. They are also called express feeders or distribution main feeders. The distribution feeder bay routes power from the substation to the distribution primary feeder circuits.

Projected area: The net south-facing glazing area projected on a vertical plane.

Protective Equipment: Equipment in a distribution system such as protective relays, cutout switches, disconnect switches, lightning arresters, and fuses. These all work in concert to open circuits whenever a short circuit, lightning strikes or other disruptive event occurs.

P-type semiconductor: A semiconductor in which holes carry the current; produced by doping an intrinsic semiconductor with an electron acceptor impurity (e.g., boron in silicon).

Pulse-width-modulated (pwm) wave inverter (PWM): PWM inverters are the most expensive, but produce a high quality of output signal at minimum current harmonics. The output voltage is very close to sinusoidal.

Photovoltaic: Abbreviation for photovoltaic(s).



Q A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | Y | Z

Quad: A measure of energy equal to one trillion Btus; an energy equivalent to approximately 172 million barrels of oil.

Qualified employee (qualified person): One knowledgeable in the construction and operation of the electric power generation, transmission, and distribution equipment involved, along with the associated hazards.
Note 1: An employee must have the training required by 1910.269 in order to be considered a qualified employee.

Note 2: Except as provided in 1910.260, an employee who is undergoing on-the-job training and who, in the course of such training, has demonstrated an ability to perform duties safely at his or her level of training and who is under the direct supervision of a qualified person is considered to be a qualified person for the performance of those duties.
Qualification test (Photovoltaic): A procedure applied to a selected set of Photovoltaic modules involving the application of defined electrical, mechanical, or thermal stress in a prescribed manner and amount. Test results are subject to a list of defined requirements.

Quick Disconnect: A type of connector shell that permits rapid locking and unlocking of two connector halves.

Quick Disconnect Coupling: A design feature, apparent in the quick disconnect connector; it permits relatively rapid joining and separation.



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Radiation: The emission and propagation of energy by means of electromagnetic waves or particles.

Radioactive waste: Radioactive materials left over from making nuclear energy. Radioactive waste can harm people and the environment if it is not stored safely.

Radioactivity: The spontaneous decay of an unstable atomic nucleus, giving rise to the emission of radiation.

Radionuclide: A radioactive isotope of an element.

Radiotoxicity: The adverse health effect of a radionuclide due to its radioactivity.

Radium: A radioactive decay product of uranium often found in uranium ore. It has several radioactive isotopes. Radium-226 decays to radon-222.

Radon (Rn): A heavy radioactive gas given off by rocks containing radium (or thorium). Rn-222 is the main isotope.

Radon daughters: Short-lived decay products of radon-222 (Po-218, Pb-214, Bi-214, Po-214).

Rainproof: So constructed, projected, or treated as to prevent rain from interfering with the successful operation of the apparatus under specified test conditions.

Raintight: So constructed or protected that exposure to a beating rain will not result in the entrance of water.

Rated Voltage: The maximum voltage at which an electric component can operate for extended periods without undue degradation or safety hazard.

Recombination: The action of a free electron falling back into a hole. Recombination processes are either radiative, where the energy of recombination results in the emission of a photon, or non-radiative, where the energy of recombination is given to a second electron which then relaxes back to its original energy by emitting phonons. Recombination can take place in the bulk of the semiconductor, at the surfaces, in the junction region, at defects, or between interfaces.

Rectifiers: A rectifier is a device used to convert alternating current to direct current.

Recycling: A way to reuse materials instead of just throwing them away.

Recycle mark: A design of three arrows that make up a circle. This mark tells you that you can recycle the product. It can also mean that the material is made from recycled materials.


Relays: A relay is a low-powered device used to activate a high-powered device. Relays are used to trigger circuit breakers and other switches in substations and transmission and distribution systems.

Remote systems: Systems off of the utility grid.

Renewable fuels: Fuels that can be easily made or "renewed." We can never use up renewable fuels. Types of renewable fuels are solar, wind, and hydropower energy.

RES: Acronym for the Residential Experiment Stations.

Reserve capacity: The amount of generating capacity a central power system must maintain to meet peak loads.

Resistive voltage drop: The voltage developed across a cell by the current flow through the resistance of the cell.

Reactor pressure vessel: The main steel vessel containing the reactor fuel, moderator and coolant under pressure.

Repository: A permanent disposal place for radioactive wastes.

Reprocessing: Chemical treatment of spent reactor fuel to separate uranium and plutonium from the small quantity of fission product, waste products and transuranic elements, leaving a much reduced quantity of high-level waste.

Ribbon: A thin sheet of crystalline or multi-crystalline material, such as silicon, produced in a continuous process by withdrawal from a molten bath of the parent material.

Riser: A riser is a power line pole that connects an overhead system to an underground system. A riser has a conduit from the ground up the pole where potheads are used to connect to the overhead lines.


S A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | Y | Z

Satellite power system (SPS): Concept for providing large amounts of electricity for use on the Earth from one or more satellites in geosynchronous Earth orbit. A very large array of solar cells on each satellite would provide electricity, which would be converted to microwave energy and beamed to a receiving antenna on the ground. There, it would be reconverted into electricity and distributed the same as any other centrally generated power, through a grid.

Saturation Temperature: The boiling point of a liquid, or the temperature at which the liquid vapor pressure is equal to the total local pressure. The saturation temperature for water at atmospheric pressure is 212°F (100°C).

Schottky barrier: A cell barrier established as the interface between a semiconductor, such as silicon, and a sheet of metal.

Scribing: The cutting of a grid pattern of grooves in a semiconductor material, generally for the purpose of making interconnections.

Seasonal energy-efficiency ratio (SEER): The ratio of the total seasonal cooling requirement (measured in Btu) to the total seasonal watt-hours (Wh) of energy used, expressed in terms of Btu/Wh. (The SEER rating equals 3.413 times the seasonal COP.)

Secondaries: These are the conductors originating at the low-voltage secondary winding of a distribution transformer.

Segregation: The interposing of a fire and explosion-resistant barrier between the combustible particulate solid process and other operations.

Semiconductor: Any material that has a limited capacity for conducting an electric current. Certain semiconductors, including silicon, gallium arsenide, copper indium diselenide, and cadmium telluride, are uniquely suited to the photovoltaic conversion process.

Self discharge: The rate at which a battery, without a load, will lose its charge.

Separation: The interposing of distance between the combustible particulate solid process and other operations that are in the same room.

Separately Derived System: A premises wiring system whose power is derived from a battery, a solar photovoltaic system, or from a generator, transformer, or converter windings, and that has no direct electrical connection, including solidly connected grounded circuit conductor, to supply conductors originating in another system.

Separative Work Unit (SWU): This is a complex unit which is a function of the amount of uranium processed and the degree to which it is enriched, i.e., the extent of increase in the concentration of the U-235 isotope relative to the remainder. The unit is strictly: Kilogram Separative Work Unit, and it measures the quantity of Separative work (indicative of energy used in enrichment) when feed and product quantities are expressed in kilograms, e.g., to produce one kilogram of uranium enriched to 3.5% U-235 requires 4.3 SWU if the plant is operated at a tails assay 0.30%, or 4.8 SWU if the tails assay is 0.25% (thereby requiring only 7.0 kg instead of 7.8 kg of natural U feed).

About 100-120,000 SWU is required to enrich the annual fuel loading for a typical 1000 MWe light water reactor. Enrichment costs are related to electrical energy used. The gaseous diffusion process consumes some 2400 kWh per SWU, while gas centrifuge plants require only about 60 kWh/SWU.

Series connection: A way of joining circuits by connecting positive leads to negative leads; such a configuration increases the voltage.

Series regulator: Type of battery charge regulator where the charging current is controlled by a switch connected in series with the Photovoltaic module or array.

Series resistance: Parasitic resistance to current flow in a cell due to mechanisms such as resistance from the bulk of the semiconductor material, metallic contacts, and interconnections.

Service Drop: Run of cables from the power company's aerial power lines to the point of connection to a customer's premises.

Service Conductors: The supply conductors that extend from the street main or transformers to the service equipment of the premises being supplied.

Service Entrance Conductors: (Overhead) The service conductors between the terminals of the service equipment and a point usually outside the building, clear of building walls, where they are joined by tap or splice to the service drop.

Service Entrance Conductors: (Underground) The service conductors between the terminals of the service equipment and the point of connection to the service lateral.

Service Equipment: The necessary equipment, usually consisting of a circuit breaker or switch and fuses and their accessories, located near the point entrance of supply conductors to a building and intended to constitute the main control and cutoff means for the supply to the building.

Service Lateral: The underground service conductors between the street main, including any risers at a pole or other structure or from transformers, and the first point of connection to the service-entrance conductors in a terminal box, meter, or other enclosure with adequate space, inside or outside the building wall. Where there is no terminal box, meter, or other enclosure with adequate space, the point of connection is the entrance point of the service conductors into the building.

Service Point: The point of connection between the facilities of the serving utility and the premises wiring.

Services: The wires extending from the secondaries or distribution transformer to a customer's location are called a service. A service can be above or below ground.


SF6 Circuit Breakers: These operate to switch electric circuits and equipment in and out of the system. These circuit breakers are filled with compressed sulfur-hexafluoride gas which acts to open and close the switch contacts.

Shield: Device surrounding that portion of a connector that is used for attaching wires or cables to shield against electromagnetic interference, and/or protect connector wires or cable from mechanical damage.

Shelf life of batteries: The length of time, under specified conditions, that a battery can be stored so that it keeps its guaranteed capacity.

Short-circuit current (Isc): The current flowing freely from a photovoltaic cell through an external circuit that has no load or resistance; the maximum current possible.

Shunt Reactors: These are used in an extra high-voltage substation to neutralize inductive reactance in long EHV transmission lines.

Shunt regulator: Type of a battery charge regulator where the charging current is controlled by a switch connected in parallel with the Photovoltaic generator. Overcharging of the battery is prevented by shorting the Photovoltaic generator.

Siemens process: A commercial method of making purified silicon.

Silicon (Si): A chemical element, atomic number 14, semi-metallic in nature, dark gray, an excellent semiconductor material. A common constituent of sand and quartz (as the oxide). Crystallizes in face-centered cubic lattice like a diamond. The most common semiconductor material used in making photovoltaic devices.

Sine wave inverter: An inverter that produces utility-quality, sine wave power forms.

Single-crystal material: A material that is composed of a single crystal or a few large crystals.

Sievert (Sv): Unit indicating the biological damage caused by radiation. One Joule of beta or gamma radiation absorbed per kilogram of tissue has 1 Sv of biological effect; 1 J/kg of alpha radiation has 20 Sv effect and 1 J/kg of neutrons has 10 Sv effect.

Spent fuel: Fuel assemblies removed from a reactor after use.

Stable: Incapable of spontaneous radioactive decay.

Solar cell: See 'Photovoltaic cell.'

Solar constant: The strength of sunlight; 1353 watts per square meter in space and about 1000 watts per square meter at sea level at the equator at solar noon.

Solar energy: Energy from the sun. The heat that builds up in your car when it is parked in the sun is an example of solar energy.

Solar-grade silicon: Intermediate-grade silicon used in the manufacture of solar cells. Less expensive than electronic-grade silicon.

Solar noon: That moment of the day that divides the daylight hours for that day exactly in half. To determine solar noon, calculate the length of the day from the time of sunset and sunrise and divide by two.

Solar spectrum: The total distribution of electromagnetic radiation emanating from the sun.

Solar thermal electric: Method of producing electricity from solar energy by using focused sunlight to heat a working fluid, which in turn drives a turbogenerator.

Spinning reserve: Utility generating capacity on-line and running at low power in excess of actual load.

Split-spectrum cell: A compound photovoltaic device in which sunlight is first divided into spectral regions by optical means. Each region is then directed to a different photovoltaic cell optimized for converting that portion of the spectrum into electricity. Such a device achieves significantly greater overall conversion of incident sunlight into electricity. See 'mulitjunction device.'

Sputtering: A physical vapor deposition process where high-energy ions are used to bombard elemental sources of semiconductor material, which eject vapors of atoms that are then deposited in thin layers on a substrate.

Square wave inverter: The inverter consists of a DC source, four switches, and the load. The switches are power semiconductors that can carry a large current and withstand a high voltage rating. The switches are turned on and off at a correct sequence, at a certain frequency. The square wave inverter is the simplest and the least expensive to purchase, but it produces the lowest quality of power.

Staebler-Wronski effect: The tendency of amorphous silicon photovoltaic devices to lose efficiency upon initial exposure to light; named for Dr. David Staebler and Dr. Christopher Wronski; work performed at RCA.

Standardized: For a lockout or tagout device to be standardized they must all be similar in at least one of the following ways: color, shape, size. Additionally, in the case of tagout devices, print and format should also be similar.

Stand-alone (Photovoltaic system): An autonomous or hybrid photovoltaic system not connected to a grid. May or may not have storage, but most stand-alone systems require batteries or some other form of storage.

Stand-off mounting: Technique for mounting a photovoltaic array on a sloped roof, which involves mounting the modules a short distance above the pitched roof and tilting them to the optimum angle.

Standard reporting conditions (SRC): A fixed set of conditions (including meteorological) to which the electrical performance data of a photovoltaic module are translated from the set of actual test conditions. [ASTM E 1036]

Standard test conditions (STC): Conditions under which a module is typically tested in a laboratory: (1) Irradiance intensity of 1000 W/square meter (0.645 watts per square inch), AM1.5 solar reference spectrum, and (3) a cell (module) temperature of 25 degrees C, plus or minus 2 degrees C (77 degrees F, plus or minus 3.6 degrees F). [IEC 1215]

State of charge (SOC): The available capacity remaining in the battery, expressed as a percentage of the rated capacity.

Steel Superstructures: Steel superstructures are used to support equipment, lines, and switches in substations as well as transmission and distribution line towers and poles.

Step bolt: A bolt or rung attached at intervals along a structural member and used for foot placement during climbing or standing.

Step Potential: The voltage between the feet of a person standing near an energized grounded object. It is equal to the difference in voltage, given by the voltage distribution curve, between two points at different distances from the "electrode". A person could be at risk of injury during a fault simply by standing near the grounding point.

Substrate: The physical material upon which a photovoltaic cell is made.

Substations: A high-voltage electric system facility. It is used to switch generators, equipment, and circuits or lines in and out of a system. It also is used to change AC voltages from one level to another, and/or change alternating current to direct current or direct current to alternating current.

Step-up Transmission Substation: Receives electric power from a nearby generating facility and uses a large power transformer to increase the voltage for transmission to distant locations.

Step-down Transmission Substation: These substations are located at switching points in an electrical grid. They connect different parts of a grid and are a source for subtransmission lines.

Distribution Substation: These are located near to the end-users. Distribution substation transformers change the subtransmission voltage to lower levels for use by end-users.

Underground Distribution Substation: These are also located near to the end-users. Distribution substation transformers change the subtransmission voltage to lower levels for use by end-users.
Sulfation: A condition that afflicts unused and discharged batteries; large crystals of lead sulfate grow on the plate, instead of the usual tiny crystals, making the battery extremely difficult to recharge.

Sunspace: A room that faces south, or a small structure attached to the south side of a house.

Sun tempering: A sun-tempered building is elongated in the east-west direction, with the majority of the windows on the south side. The area of the windows is generally limited to about 7% of the total floor area. A sun-tempered design has no added thermal mass beyond what is already in the framing, wall board, and so on. Insulation levels are generally high.

Superconducting magnetic energy storage (SMES): SMES technology uses the superconducting characteristics of low-temperature materials to produce intense magnetic fields to store energy. SMES has been proposed as a storage option to support large-scale use of photovoltaics and wind as a means to smooth out fluctuations in power generation.

Superconductivity: The pairing of electrons in certain materials when cooled below a critical temperature, causing the material to lose all resistance to electricity flow. Superconductors can carry electric current without any energy losses.

Superstrate: The covering on the sun side of a photovoltaic module, providing protection for the photovoltaic materials from impact and environmental degradation while allowing maximum transmission of the appropriate wavelengths of the solar spectrum.

Supervisory Control: Supervisory control refers to equipment that allows for remote control of a substation's functions from a system control center or other point of control.


Suspension Insulators: An insulator type usually made of porcelain that can be stacked in a string and hangs from a cross arm on a tower or pole and supports the line conductor.


Switches: Distribution systems have switches installed at strategic locations to redirect power flows for load balancing or sectionalizing.

Switchboard: A large single panel, frame, or assembly of panels having switches, overcurrent, and other protective devices, buses, and usually instruments mounted on the face or back or both. Switchboards are generally accessible from the rear and from the front and are not intended to be installed in cabinets.

Switch, general use: A switch intended for use in general distribution and branch circuits. It is rated in amperes and is capable of interrupting its rated voltage.

Switch, general-use snap: A type of general-use switch so constructed that it can be installed in flush device boxes or on outlet covers, or otherwise used in conjunction with wiring systems recognized by the National Electric Code.

Switch, isolating: A switch intended for isolating an electrical circuit from the source of power. It has no interrupting rating and is intended to be operated only after the circuit has been opened by some other means.

Switch, knife: A switch in which the circuit is closed by a moving blade engaging contact clips.

Switch, motor-circuit: A switch, rated in horsepower, capable of interrupting the maximum operating overload current of a motor of the same horsepower rating as the switch at the rated voltage.

Switch, transfer: A transfer switch is an automatic or non-automatic device for transferring one or more load conductor connections from one power source to another.

Switch-Leg: That part of a circuit run from a lighting outlet box where a luminaire or lampholder is installed down to an outlet box that contains the wall switch that turns the light or other load on or off: it is a control leg of the branch circuit.

Synchronous Condensers: A synchronous condenser is a synchronous machine running without mechanical load and supplying or absorbing reactive power to or from a power system. Also called a synchronous capacitor, synchronous compensator or rotating machinery.

System operator: A qualified person designated to operate the system or its parts.



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Tails: Depleted uranium, with about 0.3% U-235.

Tailings: Ground rock remaining after particular ore minerals (e.g., uranium oxides) are extracted.

Thermal electric: Electric energy derived from heat energy, usually by heating a working fluid, which drives a turbogenerator. See 'solar thermal electric.'

Thermal mass: Materials that store heat within a sunspace or solar collector.

Thermal reactor: A reactor in which the fission chain reaction is sustained primarily by slow neutrons, and hence requiring a moderator (as distinct from Fast Neutron Reactor).

Thermal Shock: Thermal shock is the effect of heat or cold applied at such a rate that non-uniform thermal expansion or contraction occur within a given material or combination of materials. In connectors, the effect can cause inserts and other insulation materials to pull away from metal parts.

Thermal storage walls (masonry or water): A thermal storage wall is a south-facing wall that is glazed on the outside. Solar heat strikes the glazing and is absorbed into the wall, which conducts the heat into the room over time. The walls are at least 8 in thick. Generally, the thicker the wall, the less the indoor temperature fluctuates.

Thermophotovoltaic (TPV) device: A device that converts secondary thermal radiation, re-emitted by an absorber or heat source, into electricity; The device is designed for maximum efficiency at the wavelength of the secondary radiation.

Thick-crystalline materials: Semiconductor material, typically measuring from 200-400 microns thick, that is cut from ingots or ribbons.

Thin film: A layer of semiconductor material, such as copper indium diselenide, cadmium telluride, gallium arsenide, or amorphous silicon, a few microns or less in thickness, used to make photovoltaic cells.

III-V (three-five) materials: Elemental materials that occupy groups III and V of the Periodic Table of the Elements.

Tin oxide: A wide band-gap semiconductor similar to indium oxide; used in heterojunction solar cells or to make a transparent conductive film, called NESA glass when deposited on glass.

Touch potential: The voltage between the energized object and the feet of a person in contact with the object. It is equal to the difference in voltage between the object and a point some distance away. It should be noted that the touch potential could be nearly the full voltage across the grounded object if that object is grounded at a point remote from the place where the person is in contact with it. For example, a crane that was grounded to the system neutral and that contacted an energized line would expose any person in contact with the crane or its uninsulated load line to a touch potential nearly equal to the full fault voltage.

Total energy system: See 'photovoltaic-thermal system.'

Total harmonic distortion (thd): The measure of closeness in shape between a waveform and its fundamental component.

Total internal reflection: The trapping of light by refraction and reflection at critical angles inside a semiconductor device so that it cannot escape the device and must eventually be absorbed by the semiconductor.

Tracking Photovoltaic array: Photovoltaic array that follows the path of the sun to maximize the solar radiation incident on the Photovoltaic surface. The two most common orientations are (1) one axis where the array tracks the sun east to west and (2) two-axis tracking where the array points directly at the sun at all times. Tracking arrays use both the direct and diffuse sunlight. Two-axis tracking arrays capture the maximum possible daily energy.

Transformer: Converts the generator's low-voltage electricity to higher voltage levels for transmission to the load center, such as a city or factory.

Transformer - Underground: An underground transformer is essentially the same as an aboveground transformer, but is constructed for the particular needs of underground installation.


Transformer Vault: A transformer vault is an underground structure or room in which power transformers, network protectors, voltage regulators, circuit breakers, meters, etc. are housed.


Transmission Bus: Transmission buses are steel structure arrays of switches used to route power in a substation.

Transmission lines: Transmit high-voltage electricity from the generation source or substation to another substation in the electric distribution system.

Overhead Transmission Lines: Overhead AC transmission lines share one characteristic; they carry 3-phase current. The voltages vary according to the particular grid system they belong to. Transmission voltages vary from 69 kv up to 765 kv.

Subtransmission Lines: These lines carry voltages reduced from the major transmission line system, usually 69 kv.

Underground Transmission Lines: These lines are becoming more common, especially in highly populated area. They may be buried with no protection, or placed in conduit, trenches, or tunnels.
Transmutation: Changing atoms of one element into those of another by neutron bombardment, causing neutron capture.

Transuranic element: A very heavy element formed artificially by neutron capture and possibly subsequent beta decay(s). Has a higher atomic number than uranium (92). All are radioactive. Neptunium, plutonium, americium and curium are the best-known.

Trickle charge: A charge at a low rate, balancing through self-discharge losses, to maintain a cell or battery in a fully charged condition.

Tunneling: Quantum mechanical concept whereby an electron is found on the opposite side of an insulating barrier without having passed through or around the barrier.

Two-axis tracking: A system capable of rotating independently about two axes (e.g., vertical and horizontal).



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Ultraviolet: Electromagnetic radiation in the wavelength range of 4 to 400 nanometers.

Uranium (U): A mildly radioactive element with two isotopes which are fissile (U-235 and U-233) and two which are fertile (U-238 and U-234). Uranium is the basic fuel of nuclear energy.

Uranium hexafluoride (UF6): A compound of uranium which is a gas above 56oC and is thus a suitable form in which to enrich the uranium.

Uranium oxide concentrate (U3O8): The mixture of uranium oxides produced after milling uranium ore from a mine. Sometimes loosely called yellowcake. It is khaki in colour and is usually represented by the empirical formula U3O8. Uranium is sold in this form.

Utility-interactive inverter: An inverter that can function only when tied to the utility grid, and uses the prevailing line-voltage frequency on the utility line as a control parameter to ensure that the Photovoltaic system's output is fully synchronized with the utility power.



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Vac: Volts ac

Vacuum evaporation: The deposition of thin films of semiconductor material by the evaporation of elemental sources in a vacuum.

Vdc: Volts DC

Vmp: Voltage at maximum power

Voc: Open-circuit voltage

Vacuum Circuit Breakers: A vacuum circuit breaker utilizes a vacuum to extinguish arcing when the circuit breaker is opened and to act as a dielectric to insulate the contacts after the arc is interrupted.

Vacuum evaporation: Method of depositing thin coatings of a substance by heating it in a vacuum system.

Vacuum zero: The energy of an electron at rest in empty space; used as a reference level in energy band diagrams.

Valence band: The highest energy band in a semiconductor that can be filled with electrons.

Valence state; Valence level energy, bound state: Energy content of an electron in orbit about an atomic nucleus.

Vault: An enclosure, above or below ground, which personnel may enter and which is used for the purpose of installing, operating, or maintaining equipment or cable.

Vented vault: A vault that has provision for air changes using exhaust flue stacks and low level air intakes operating on differentials of pressure and temperature providing for airflow which precludes a hazardous atmosphere from developing.

Vertical multijunction cell (VMJ) : A compound cell made of different semiconductor materials in layers, one above the other. Sunlight entering the top passes through successive cell barriers, each of which converts a separate portion of the spectrum into electricity, thus achieving greater total conversion efficiency of the incident light. Also called a multiple junction cell. See 'multijunction device'; 'split-spectrum cell.'

Vitrification: The incorporation of high-level wastes into borosilicate glass, to make up about 14% of it by mass. It is designed to immobilise radionuclides in an insoluble matrix ready for disposal.

Volt (V): A unit of measure of the force, or 'push,' given the electrons in an electric circuit. One volt produces one ampere of current when acting on a resistance of one ohm.

Voltage: The effective (rms) potential difference between any two conductors or between a conductor and ground. Voltages are expressed in nominal values unless otherwise indicated. The nominal voltage of a system or circuit is the value assigned to a system or circuit of a given voltage class for the purpose of convenient designation. The operating voltage of the system may vary above or below this value.

Voltage at maximum power (Vmp): The voltage at which maximum power is available from a module.

Voltage Drop: The loss of voltage between the input to a device and the output from a device due to the internal impedance or resistance of the device. In all electrical systems, the conductors should be sized so that the voltage drop never exceeds 3% for power, heating, and lighting loads or combinations of these. Furthermore, the maximum total voltage drop for conductors for feeders and branch circuits combined should never exceed 5%.



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Wafer: A thin sheet of semiconductor material made by mechanically sawing it from a single-crystal or multi-crystal ingot or casting.

Waste: Refers to radioactive wastes. High-level waste (HLW) is highly radioactive material arising from nuclear fission. It can be recovered from reprocessing spent fuel, though some countries regard spent fuel itself as HLW. It requires very careful handling, storage and disposal. Low-level waste (LLW) is mildly radioactive material usually disposed of by incineration and burial.

Watertight: So constructed that water/moisture will not enter the enclosure under specified test conditions.

Watt (W): The unit of electric power, or amount of work (J), done in a unit of time. One ampere of current flowing at a potential of one volt produces one watt of power.

Watt-hour (Wh): See 'Kilowatt-hour.'

Waveform: The shape of the curve graphically representing the change in the ac signal voltage and current amplitude, with respect to time.

Warning Signs: Display signs warning unqualified persons to 'keep out' at entrances to rooms and spaces where hazards of high voltage are present.

Weatherproof: So constructed or protected that exposure to the weather will not interfere with successful operation.

Window: A wide band gap material chosen for its transparency to light. Generally used as the top layer of a photovoltaic device, the window allows almost all of the light to reach the semiconductor layers beneath.

Winston concentrator: A trough-type parabolic collector with one-axis tracking, developed by Roland Winston.

Work function: The energy difference between the Fermi level and vacuum zero. The minimum amount of energy it takes to remove an electron from a substance into the vacuum.



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Yellowcake: Ammonium diuranate, the penultimate uranium compound in U3O8 production, but the form in which mine product was sold until about 1970. See also Uranium oxide concentrate.



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Zircaloy: Zirconium alloy used as a tube to contain uranium oxide fuel pellets in a reactor fuel assembly.

Zone refining: Method of purifying solid rods by means of melting narrow zones through the rods. These zones are slowly moved from one end of the rod to the other, sweeping out the impurities.

http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/etools/electric_power/glossary.html

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