1.5 Electric Power Generation From Renewable Energy Sources
1.5 Electric Power Generation From Renewable Energy Sources
Water energy has been the most widely used form of renewable energy for the
production of electricity. With today’s emphasis on environmental considerations
and conservation of fossil fuels, other renewable resources are being used to em-
ploy the energy sources of the sun and the earth for electricity generation. Some
of these resources that represent a viable alternative to fossil fuels are solar power,
wind power, geothermal, biomass, and tidal power. These resources, especially so-
lar power and wind power, have the capability to produce sustainable energy in-
definitely with no direct emission of pollutant and greenhouse gases. Power plants
using these renewable sources of energy are described in the following sections.
The aspiration for bulk generation of power in the future is nuclear fusion. If
nuclear fusion is harnessed economically, it would provide clean energy from an
abundant source of fuel, namely water.
FIGURE 1.6
Schematic diagram of a hydroelectric power plant.
converts mechanical energy into electrical energy. After passing through the tur-
bine, the water reenters the river on the downstream side of the dam. The most
significant operating characteristics of hydropower plants are rapid start-up and
loading, long life, and low operating and maintenance costs. Hydraulic turbines,
particularly those operating with a low pressure, operate at low speed. Their gen-
erators are usually salient-type rotor with many poles. To maintain the generator
voltage frequency constant, the turbine must spin the generator at a constant speed
given by
120f
n= (1.1)
p
where f is the generated voltage frequency and p is the number of poles of the
generator.
Elaborate control schemes are used to regulate the flow of water in order to
keep the turbine speed constant.
The potential energy of the water in the reservoir is proportional to the mass
of water and the difference in height between the water impoundment and the wa-
ter outflow. This height difference is called the head or effective head. That is,
P.E. = mgh. The mass of water is its volume times its density. Therefore, P.E. =
volume × ρgh and the available hydro power becomes
P.E. volume
Pw = = ρgh (1.2)
t t
or
16
Pw = qρgh W (1.3)
P = 9.81qh kW (1.4)
If η is the overall efficiency of the hydropower plant, the electrical power output in
kW is
Po = 9.81qhη kW (1.5)
where η = ηp ηt ηg
ηp = penstock efficiency, ηt = turbine efficiency, ηg = generator efficiency
There are three basic types of hydraulic turbines. Propeller or axial turbines
are used for low heads (10 to 100 ft). A Kaplan turbine is a propeller turbine with
variable-pitch blades that can be adjusted to give high efficiency during light loads.
The Francis turbine is one of the more common radial turbines used for medium
heads (15 to 1500 ft). Fixed-blade propeller turbines and Francis turbines have rel-
atively low efficiencies at light loads. The Pelton wheel is an impulse hydraulic
turbine that is normally used for heads above 150 ft to very high heads. In gen-
eral, the hydraulic turbine efficiency during normal operation is between 80 and 94
percent, and the generator efficiency is from 95 to 99 percent.
The Three Gorges hydroelectric power plant in China is the largest develop-
ment of its kind in operation in the world. Presently, the installed capacity is 19,600
MW. When completed by the year 2011, the total electric generating capacity will
be 22,400 MW. The largest installation in North America is at La Grande on James
Bay in Canada with a total installed capacity of 7,326 MW. The largest installation
in the United States is at the Grand Coulee Dam on the Columbia River in the state
of Washington, with a total capacity of about 6,500 MW. A panoramic view of the
Grand Coulee dam is shown in Figure 1.7. Powerhouse number three is located at
the lower left side of the dam.
1.6. HYDROELECTRIC POWER PLANTS 17
FIGURE 1.7
(a) Grand Coulee Dam, ”Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, Credit - Gregg M. Erickson.”
(b) Right Powerhouse Generators, ”Courtesy of US Bureau of Reclamation, Credit - C. Hubbard.”
Example 1.1
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