Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Generating Electricity: From water

There is no life without electricity. Thus man had to find out ways to produce electricity on large scales so as to provide electricity to everyone. Many ways were found to produce electricity but the easiest way to produce was using water. Water which flows carries a huge amount of potential energy which can be converted into electrical energy.
The basic idea was to make fall on a magnetic turbine from a great height or to simply let water flow form a higher ground to lower ground and to increase its velocity.

How it works:
A hydraulic turbine converts the energy of flowing water into mechanical energy. A hydroelectric generator converts this mechanical energy into electricity. The operation of a generator is based on the principles discovered by Faraday. He found that when a magnet is moved past a conductor, it causes electricity to flow. In a large generator, electromagnets are made by circulating direct current through loops of wire wound around stacks of magnetic steel laminations. These are called field poles, and are mounted on the perimeter of the rotor. The rotor is attached to the turbine shaft, and rotates at a fixed speed. When the rotor turns, it causes the field poles (the electromagnets) to move past the conductors mounted in the stator. This, in turn, causes electricity to flow and a voltage to develop at the generator output terminals.

At times of low demand of electricity, excess electricity is utilized for another day's produce. This is called Pumped Storage.

Pumped StoragePumped storage is a method of keeping water in reserve for peak period power demands by pumping water that has already flowed through the turbines back up a storage pool above the power plant at a time when customer demand for energy is low, such as during the middle of the night. The water is then allowed to flow back through the turbine-generators at times when demand is high and a heavy load is placed on the system.
The reservoir acts much like a battery, storing power in the form of water when demands are low and producing maximum power during daily and seasonal peak periods. An advantage of pumped storage is that hydroelectric generating units are able to start up quickly and make rapid adjustments in output. They operate efficiently when used for one hour or several hours. Because pumped storage reservoirs are relatively small, construction costs are generally low compared with conventional hydropower facilities.

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