What Are the Different Types of Energy?
Energy can take several forms — such as heat energy, light energy, electrical energy, and mechanical energy. But two general types of energy are especially important to chemists: kinetic energy and potential energy.
Energy is one of two components of the universe. Matter is the other component. Energy is the ability to do work.
Kinetic energy
Kinetic energy is energy of motion. A baseball flying through the air toward a batter has a large amount of kinetic energy. Ask anyone who’s ever been hit with a baseball, and they’re likely to agree!
Chemists sometimes study moving particles, especially gases, because the kinetic energy of these particles helps determine whether a particular reaction may take place. The reason is that collisions between particles and the transfer of energy cause chemical reactions to occur.
The kinetic energy of moving particles can be transferred from one particle to another. Have you ever shot pool? You transfer kinetic energy from your moving pool stick to the cue ball to (hopefully) the ball you’re aiming at.
Kinetic energy can be converted into other types of energy. In a hydroelectric dam, the kinetic energy of the falling water is converted into electrical energy. In fact, a scientific law — The Law of Conservation of Energy — states that in ordinary chemical reactions (or physical processes), energy is neither created nor destroyed but can be converted from one form to another.
Potential energy
Suppose you take a ball and throw it up into a tree where it gets stuck. You gave that ball kinetic energy — energy in motion — when you threw it. But where’s that energy now? It’s been converted into the other major category of energy — potential energy.
Potential energy is stored energy. Objects may have potential energy stored in terms of their position. That ball up in the tree has potential energy due to its height. If the ball were to fall, that potential energy would be converted to kinetic energy.
Potential energy due to position isn’t the only type of potential energy. In fact, chemists really aren’t all that interested in potential energy due to position. Chemists are far more interested in the energy stored (potential energy) in chemical bonds, which are the forces that hold atoms together in compounds.
It takes a lot of energy to run a human body. If there were no way to store the energy you extract from food, you’d have to eat all the time just to keep your body going. But humans can store energy in terms of chemical bonds. And then later, when we need that energy, our bodies can break those bonds and release it.
The same is true of the fuels we commonly use to heat our homes and run our automobiles. Energy is stored in these fuels — gasoline, for example — and is released when chemical reactions take place.

Chemistry Glossary
Archimedes Principle
A principle discovered by the Greek mathematician Archimedes which states that the volume of a solid is equal to the volume of water it displaces.

Chemistry Glossary
atomic number
The number of protons in the nucleus of an atom.

Chemistry Glossary
Bohr model
A model of atomic structure developed by Niels Bohr, a Danish scientist. In this model, electrons occur in orbits of differing energy levels around the nucleus of an atom.

Chemistry Glossary
condensation
The change in the physical state of matter from a gaseous state to a liquid state.

Chemistry Glossary
deposition
The change in the physical state of matter from a gaseous state to a solid state without ever becoming a liquid. The reverse of sublimation.

Chemistry Glossary
electrolytes
Substances that can conduct electricity either in the molten state or when dissolved in water.

Chemistry Glossary
electron configuration notation
A method used by chemists to represent electrons in bonding and chemical reactions.

Chemistry Glossary
electronegativity
A measure of an atom’s strength to attract a bonding pair of electrons to itself.

Chemistry Glossary
energy level diagram
A method used by chemists to diagram the electrons for an atom (including orbitals and subshells) in bonding and chemical reactions.

Chemistry Glossary
heterogeneous mixture
A mixture whose composition varies from position to position within a sample.

Chemistry Glossary
homogeneous mixture
A mixture whose composition is the same from position to position within a sample.

Chemistry Glossary
isotopes
Atoms of the same element that have varying numbers of neutrons.

Chemistry Glossary
mass number
The sum of the protons and neutrons in a particular isotope; also called atomic weight.

Chemistry Glossary
nonelectrolytes
Substances that do not conduct electricity in the molten state or when dissolved in water.

Chemistry Glossary
nuclear fission
A nuclear reaction in which an atom’s nucleus splits into smaller parts.

Chemistry Glossary
nuclear fusion
A process in which lighter nuclei of atoms join together into a heavier nucleus; essentially the opposite of nuclear fission.

Chemistry Glossary
nuclear reaction
Any reaction that involves a change in nuclear structure.

Chemistry Glossary
periodic table
A table that displays all known chemical elements in an arrangement that is based on the properties of the elements; changes over time as new elements are discovered.

Chemistry Glossary
quantum mechanical model
A model of atomic structure that is based on mathematics and can be used to explain observations made on complex atoms.

Chemistry Glossary
radioactivity
The spontaneous decay of an unstable nucleus in an atom.

Chemistry Glossary
SI system
A worldwide measurement system that is based on the older metric system. The SI comes from the French Systeme International.

Chemistry Glossary
sublimation
The change in the physical state of matter from a solid state to a gaseous state without ever becoming a liquid (such as dry ice).

Chemistry Glossary
valence electrons
The electrons in the outermost energy level of an atom, the farthest away from the nucleus.