Renewable Energy

CONTENTS OF CURRICULUM UNIT 07.05.01

  1. Unit Guide
  1. Introduction
  2. Crude Oil
  3. Gasoline in Automobiles
  4. Pollutants from Car Exhaust
  5. Pollution Effects from Transportation
  6. Carbon Cycle
  7. Forest Management and Carbon Sequestration
  8. Presenting the Transportation Options
  9. Lessons
  10. Distillation of Simulated Crude Oil
  11. Determining the Amount of Emissions Emitted by Local Commuter Vehicles
  12. Determining the Amount of Carbon Sequestered by a Woodland
  13. Student Resource Binder Articles
  14. Bibliography / Teacher Content and Teaching Resources

Petroleum: Our Best Transportation Option?

Justin T. Benz

Published September 2007

Tools for this Unit:

Guide Entry to 07.05.01

This is a unit designed for a high school environmental technology program. This unit explores the carbon cycle almost in a "cradle to grave" sense, starting with plants fixing carbon using solar radiation during the process of photosynthesis, tracking inputs from anthropogenic sources (most notably transportation), exploring the global fluxes of carbon and cycling into the carbon sinks and quantifying how carbon is sequestered by our oceans and our terrestrial systems. Students research alternatives to current transportation fuels to determine the best options for transportation in order to lower the carbon output of our transportation sector. Students gain field experience when they run biometry measurements on local woodland and then calculate the amount of carbon the woodland can sequester. Students use molecular models to understand hydrocarbons and the chemistry of the products made out of them as well as the process of combustion. Using the new knowledge gained from the unit, the students gain an appreciation for conserving our petroleum resource as feed stock for products instead of burning it all as a fuel.

(Developed for Environmental Landscape Technology, grade 10; recommended for Environmental Science, Agriscience, and Natural Resources, grades 9-12)

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