ENERGY Glossary
Letter F
FAHRENHEIT -- A temperature scale in which the boiling point of water is 212
degrees and its freezing point is 32 degrees. To convert Fahrenheit to Celsius,
subtract 32, multiply by 5, and divide the product by 9. For example: 100 degrees
Fahrenheit - 32 = 68; 68 x 5 = 340; 340 / 9 = 37.77 degrees Celsius.
FAN COIL -- A component of a heating, ventilation and
air conditioning (HVAC) system containing a fan and heating or cooling coil, used
to distribute heated or cooled air.
FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY (FEMA)
-- The federal agency in charge of disaster recovery in
locations that have been declared disaster areas by a
state's Governor and the President of the United States.
FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION (FERC) -- An independent
regulatory commission within the U.S. Department of Energy that has jurisdiction
over energy producers that sell or transport fuels for resale in interstate commerce;
the authority to set oil and gas pipeline transportation rates and to set the value of
oil and gas pipelines for ratemaking purposes; and regulates wholesale electric rates
and hydroelectric plant licenses.
FENESTRATION -- In simplest terms, windows or glass
doors. Technically fenestration is described as any transparent or translucent
material plus any sash, frame, mullion or divider. This includes windows, sliding
glass doors, French doors, skylights, curtain walls and garden windows.
FIRM ENERGY -- Power supplies that are guaranteed to be delivered under terms
defined by contract.
FISSION -- A release of energy caused by the splitting of an atom's nucleus. This is
the
energy process used in conventional nuclear power plants to make the heat needed
to run steam electric turbines.
FISSIONABLE MATERIAL -- A substance whose atoms can be split by slow
neutrons. Uranium-235, plutonium-239 and uranium-233 are fissionable
materials.
FLARE GAS -- Unwanted natural gas that is disposed of by burning as it is released
from an oil field.
FLAT PLATE -- A device used to collect solar energy. It is a piece of metal painted
black on the side facing the sun, to absorb the sun's heat.
FLEXIBLE FUEL VEHICLE (FFV) -- a vehicle
that can operate on either alcohol fuels (methanol or ethanol) or regular unleaded
gasoline or any combination of the two from the same tank.
FLUE GAS -- Gas that is left over after fuel is burned and which is disposed of
through a pipe or stack to the outer air.
FLUIDIZED BED COMBUSTION -- A process for burning powdered coal that is
poured in a liquid-like stream with air or gases. The process reduces sulfur dioxide
emissions from coal combustion.
FLUORESCENT LAMP -- A tubular electric lamp that is coated on its inner surface
with a phosphor and that contains mercury vapor whose bombardment by electrons
from the cathode provides ultraviolet light which causes the phosphor to emit
visible light either of a selected color or closely approximating daylight.
FLUOROCARBON GASES -- Propellants used in aerosol products and refrigerants
that are believed to be causing depletion of the earth's ozone shield. See CFCs.
FOOTCANDLE -- A unit of illuminance on a surface
that is one foot from a uniform point source of light of one candle and is equal to
one lumen per square foot.
FORCED AIR UNIT (FAU) -- A central furnace
equipped with a fan or blower that provides the primary means for circulation of
air.
FOSSIL FUEL -- Oil, coal, natural gas or their by-products. Fuel that was formed in
the earth in prehistoric times from remains of living-cell organisms.
FRACTIONAL DISTILLATION the process of refining crude oil into various oil
products. The various products are separated out in the order of their boiling
points.
FRAMING EFFECTS -- The effect of framing
(wood or metal studs, joists, beams, etc.) on the overall U-value of a wall, roof, floor,
window or other building surface. Framing generally increases the U-Value and
decreases the R-Value of insulated surfaces.
FRAMING PERCENTAGE -- The area of
actual framing in an envelope assembly divided by the overall area of the envelope
assembly. This percentage is used to calculate the overall U-value of an
assembly.
FREQUENCY -- The number of cycles which an alternating current moves through
in each second. Standard electric utility frequency in the United States is 60 cycles per
second, or 60 Hertz.
FUEL -- A substance that can be used to produce heat.
FUEL CELL -- A device or an electrochemical engine with no moving
parts that converts the chemical energy of a fuel, such as hydrogen, and an oxidant,
such as oxygen, directly into electricity. The principal components of a fuel cell are
catalytically activated electrodes for the fuel (anode) and the oxidant (cathode) and
an electrolyte to conduct ions between the two electrodes, thus producing
electricity.
FUEL GAS -- Synthetic gas used for heating or cooling. It has less energy content
than pipeline-quality gas.
FUEL OIL -- Petroleum products that are burned to produce heat or power.
FUEL REPROCESSING (Nuclear) -- The means for obtaining usable, fissionable
material from spent reactor fuel.
FUEL ROD (Nuclear) -- A long slender tube that holds fissionable material (fuel) for
nuclear reactor use. Fuel rods are assembled into bundles called fuel elements or
assemblies, which are loaded individually into the reactor core.
FUEL SECURITY -- See Energy Security.
FUSION ENERGY -- A power source, now under development, based on the release
of energy that occurs when atoms are combined under the most extreme heat and
pressure. It is the energy process of the sun and the stars.
Return to Glossary Page
| Homepage
| Commission Info
| Site Index
| Search Site
| Links |
Page Updated: February 10, 2003