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Unit of study_

AMME5101: Energy and the Environment

2024 unit information

This unit is suitable for any engineering discipline student who is interested in developing an understanding of analysis and design in energy, power generation, environment and relevant economic issues. The aim is to acquaint students with the methods engineers use to design and evaluate the processes used for the conversion of energy into useful work. This course concentrates on thermal energy conversion. It also assesses and deals with the environmental consequences of energy conversion. At the end of this unit students will be able to critically analyse technical, economic and societal impacts of energy conversion systems. A series of topics, each containing a series of lectures, will be covered in relation to energy. The course content will include: The Status of Energy Today; Energy for Electricity Generation; Nuclear Energy; Energy for Transportation; Future Energy Usage.

Unit details and rules

Managing faculty or University school:

Aerospace, Mechanical and Mechatronic

Code AMME5101
Academic unit Aerospace, Mechanical and Mechatronic
Credit points 6
Prerequisites:
? 
MECH3260 or MECH9260 or MECH8260 or AERO3261 or AERO9261 or AERO8261
Corequisites:
? 
None
Prohibitions:
? 
AMME8101
Assumed knowledge:
? 
Students are expected to be familiar with the basic laws of thermodynamics, fluid mechanics and heat transfer

At the completion of this unit, you should be able to:

  • LO1. work as an independent engineer through creative and analytical design, use of state-of-the-art engineering literature
  • LO2. communicate complex engineering ideas orally through in class discussions and in written form through report and essay writing
  • LO3. interact with peers to perform complementary work in teams
  • LO4. describe and quantify the environmental, economic and operational parameters related to thermal energy conversion systems
  • LO5. influence decision making through persuasive written reports that are evidence based
  • LO6. complete open-ended conceptual and preliminary design of energy conversion systems
  • LO7. analyse real-world energy systems through application of the theory of thermodynamics, heat transfer and energy conversion
  • LO8. perform required calculations to analyse open-ended engineering problems.

Unit availability

This section lists the session, attendance modes and locations the unit is available in. There is a unit outline for each of the unit availabilities, which gives you information about the unit including assessment details and a schedule of weekly activities.

The outline is published 2 weeks before the first day of teaching. You can look at previous outlines for a guide to the details of a unit.

Session MoA ?  Location Outline ? 
Semester 1 2024
Normal day Camperdown/Darlington, Sydney
Session MoA ?  Location Outline ? 
Semester 1 2020
Normal day Camperdown/Darlington, Sydney
Semester 1 2021
Normal day Remote
Semester 1 2022
Normal day Camperdown/Darlington, Sydney
Semester 1 2022
Normal day Remote
Semester 1 2023
Normal day Camperdown/Darlington, Sydney

Modes of attendance (MoA)

This refers to the Mode of attendance (MoA) for the unit as it appears when you’re selecting your units in Sydney Student. Find more information about modes of attendance on our website.

Important enrolment information

Departmental permission requirements

If you see the ‘Departmental Permission’ tag below a session, it means you need faculty or school approval to enrol. This may be because it’s an advanced unit, clinical placement, offshore unit, internship or there are limited places available.

You will be prompted to apply for departmental permission when you select this unit in Sydney Student.

Read our information on departmental permission.

Additional advice

This unit requires departmental permission to ensure appropriate foundational knowledge is met. If the prerequisite unit/s were completed at the University of Sydney or if you are enrolled in the Master of Engineering, your request will be approved without supporting documentation being required. If you have completed studies at another institution, you must include your transcript when submitting your permission request for review by the Faculty.