Title: Green Power Generation
1Green Power Generation Lecture 5
Hydroelectric Power
2- Hydroelectricity is the term referring to
electricity generated by hydropower the
production of electrical power through the use of
the gravitational force of falling or flowing
water - It is the most widely used form of renewable
energy - Once a hydroelectric complex is constructed, the
project produces no direct waste, and has a
considerably lower output level of the greenhouse
gas carbon dioxide (CO2) than fossil fuel powered
energy plants - Worldwide, an installed capacity of 777 GWe
supplied 2998 TWh of hydroelectricity in 2006 - This was approximately 20 of the world's
electricity, and accounted for about 88 of
electricity from renewable sources
3- History
- Hydropower has been used since ancient times to
grind flour and perform other tasks. In the
mid-1770s, French engineer Bernard Forest de
Belidor published Architecture Hydraulique which
described vertical- and horizontal-axis hydraulic
machines - By the late 19th century, the electrical
generator was developed and could now be coupled
with hydraulics - The growing demand for the Industrial Revolution
would drive development as well - In 1878 the world's first hydroelectric power
scheme was developed at Cragside in
Northumberland, England by William George
Armstrong - It was used to power a single light bulb in his
art gallery. - The old Schoelkopf Power Station No. 1 near
Niagara Falls in the U.S. side began to produce
electricity in 1881 - The first Edison hydroelectric power plant, the
Vulcan Street Plant, began operating September
30, 1882, in Appleton, Wisconsin, with an output
of about 12.5 kilowatts - By 1886 there were 45 hydroelectric power plants
in the U.S. and Canada. By 1889 there were 200 in
the U.S. alone
4- At the beginning of the 20th century, many small
hydroelectric power plants were being constructed
by commercial companies in mountains near
metropolitan areas - Grenoble, France held the International
Exhibition of Hydropower and Tourism with over
one million visitors - By 1920 as 40 of the power produced in the
United States was hydroelectric, the Federal
Power Act was enacted into law - The Act created the Federal Power Commission to
regulate hydroelectric power plants on federal
land and water - As the power plants became larger, their
associated dams developed additional purposes to
include flood control, irrigation and navigation - Federal funding became necessary for large-scale
development and federally owned corporations,
such as the Tennessee Valley Authority (1933) and
the Bonneville Power Administration (1937) were
created - Additionally, the Bureau of Reclamation which had
began a series of western U.S. irrigation
projects in the early 20th century was now
constructing large hydroelectric projects such as
the 1928 Hoover Dam
5- The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers was also
involved in hydroelectric development, completing
the Bonneville Dam in 1937 and being recognized
by the Flood Control Act of 1936 as the premier
federal flood control agency - Hydroelectric power plants continued to become
larger throughout the 20th century - Hydropower was referred to as white coal for its
power and plenty - Hoover Dam's initial 1,345 MW power plant was the
world's largest hydroelectric power plant in
1936 it was eclipsed by the 6809 MW Grand Coulee
Dam in 1942 - The Itaipu Dam opened in 1984 in South America as
the largest, producing 14,000 MW but was
surpassed in 2008 by the Three Gorges Dam in
China at 22,500 MW - Hydroelectricity would eventually supply some
countries, including Norway, Democratic Republic
of the Congo, Paraguay and Brazil, with over 85
of their electricity - The United States currently has over 2,000
hydroelectric power plants which supply 49 of
its renewable electricity
6-
- Cross section of a conventional hydroelectric dam
7-
- A typical turbine and generator
8- Conventional (dams)
-
- Most hydroelectric power comes from the potential
energy of dammed water driving a water turbine
and generator - The power extracted from the water depends on the
volume and on the difference in height between
the source and the water's outflow - This height difference is called the head
- The amount of potential energy in water is
proportional to the head - A large pipe (the "penstock") delivers water to
the turbine
9- Pumped-storage
-
- This method produces electricity to supply high
peak demands by moving water between reservoirs
at different elevations - At times of low electrical demand, excess
generation capacity is used to pump water into
the higher reservoir - When there is higher demand, water is released
back into the lower reservoir through a turbine - Pumped-storage schemes currently provide the most
commercially important means of large-scale grid
energy storage and improve the daily capacity
factor of the generation system
10- Run-of-the-river
- Run-of-the-river hydroelectric stations are those
with small or no reservoir capacity, so that the
water coming from upstream must be used for
generation at that moment, or must be allowed to
bypass the dam.
11- Tide
- A tidal power plant makes use of the daily rise
and fall of ocean water due to tides such
sources are highly predictable, and if conditions
permit construction of reservoirs, can also be
dispatchable to generate power during high demand
periods - Less common types of hydro schemes use water's
kinetic energy or undammed sources such as
undershot waterwheels.
12- Underground
-
- An underground power station makes use of a large
natural height difference between two waterways,
such as a waterfall or mountain lake - An underground tunnel is constructed to take
water from the high reservoir to the generating
hall built in an underground cavern near the
lowest point of the water tunnel and a horizontal
tailrace taking water away to the lower outlet
waterway
13Sizes and capacities of hydroelectric facilities
- The Three Gorges Dam in China is the largest
operating hydroelectric power station, at 22,500
MW
14- Although no official definition exists for the
capacity range of large hydroelectric power
stations, facilities from over a few hundred
megawatts to more than 10 GW are generally
considered large hydroelectric facilities - Currently, only three facilities over 10 GW
(10,000 MW) are in operation worldwide Three
Gorges Dam at 22.5 GW, Itaipu Dam in South
America at 14 GW, and Guri Dam in Venezuela at
10.2 GW - Large-scale hydroelectric power stations are more
commonly seen as the largest power producing
facilities in the world, with some hydroelectric
facilities capable of generating more than double
the installed capacities of the current largest
nuclear power stations - While many hydroelectric projects supply public
electricity networks, some are created to serve
specific industrial enterprises
15- Dedicated hydroelectric projects are often built
to provide the substantial amounts of electricity
needed for aluminum electrolytic plants, for
example. the Grand Coulee Dam switched to support
Alcoa aluminium in Bellingham, Washington, United
States for American World War II airplanes before
it was allowed to provide irrigation and power to
citizens (in addition to aluminum power) after
the war - In Suriname, the Brokopondo Reservoir was
constructed to provide electricity for the Alcoa
aluminium industry - New Zealand's Manapouri Power Station was
constructed to supply electricity to the aluminum
smelter at Tiwai Point.
16- The construction of these large hydroelectric
facilities, and their changes on the environment,
are also often on grand scales, creating as much
damage to the environment as at helps it by being
a renewable resource - Many specialized organizations, such as the
International Hydropower Association, look into
these matters on a global scale.
17- Small
-
- Small hydro is the development of hydroelectric
power on a scale serving a small community or
industrial plant - The definition of a small hydro project varies
but a generating capacity of up to 10 megawatts
(MW) is generally accepted as the upper limit of
what can be termed small hydro - This may be stretched to 25 MW and 30 MW in
Canada and the United States - Small-scale hydroelectricity production grew by
28 during 2008 from 2005, raising the total
world small-hydro capacity to 85 GW - Over 70 of this was in China (65 GW), followed
by Japan (3.5 GW), the United States (3 GW), and
India (2 GW)
18- Small hydro plants may be connected to
conventional electrical distribution networks as
a source of low-cost renewable energy - Alternatively, small hydro projects may be built
in isolated areas that would be uneconomic to
serve from a network, or in areas where there is
no national electrical distribution network - Since small hydro projects usually have minimal
reservoirs and civil construction work, they are
seen as having a relatively low environmental
impact compared to large hydro - This decreased environmental impact depends
strongly on the balance between stream flow and
power production.
19- Micro
-
- Micro hydro is a term used for hydroelectric
power installations that typically produce up to
100 KW of power - These installations can provide power to an
isolated home or small community, or are
sometimes connected to electric power networks - There are many of these installations around the
world, particularly in developing nations as they
can provide an economical source of energy
without purchase of fuel - Micro hydro systems complement photovoltaic solar
energy systems because in many areas, water flow,
and thus available hydro power, is highest in the
winter when solar energy is at a minimum.
20- A micro-hydro facility in Vietnam
21Pico
- Pico hydro is a term used for hydroelectric power
generation of under 5 KW - It is useful in small, remote communities that
require only a small amount of electricity - For example, to power one or two fluorescent
light bulbs and a TV or radio for a few homes - Even smaller turbines of 200-300W may power a
single home in a developing country with a drop
of only 1 m (3 ft) - Pico-hydro setups typically are run-of-the-river,
meaning that dams are not used, but rather pipes
divert some of the flow, drop this down a
gradient, and through the turbine before
returning it to the stream
22-
- Pico hydroelectricity in Mondulkiri, Cambodia
23- Calculating the amount of available power
-
- A simple formula for approximating electric power
production at a hydroelectric plant is P
?hrgk, where - P is Power in watts,
- ? is the density of water (1000 kg/m3),
- h is height in meters,
- r is flow rate in cubic meters per second,
- g is acceleration due to gravity of 9.8 m/s2,
- k is a coefficient of efficiency ranging from 0
to 1. - Efficiency is often higher (that is, closer to 1)
with larger and more modern turbines - Annual electric energy production depends on the
available water supply. In some installations the
water flow rate can vary by a factor of 101 over
the course of a year.
24- Advantages and disadvantages of hydroelectricity
- Advantages
- Economics
- The major advantage of hydroelectricity is
elimination of the cost of fuel - The cost of operating a hydroelectric plant is
nearly immune to increases in the cost of fossil
fuels such as oil, natural gas or coal, and no
imports are needed - Hydroelectric plants have long economic lives,
with some plants still in service after 50100
years - Operating labor cost is also usually low, as
plants are automated and have few personnel on
site during normal operation.
25- CO2 emissions
- Since hydroelectric dams do not burn fossil
fuels, they do not directly produce carbon
dioxide - While some carbon dioxide is produced during
manufacture and construction of the project, this
is a tiny fraction of the operating emissions of
equivalent fossil-fuel electricity generation - Hydroelectricity produces the least amount of
greenhouse gases and externality of any energy
source - Coming in second place was wind, third was
nuclear energy, and fourth was solar photovoltaic - The extremely positive greenhouse gas impact of
hydroelectricity is found especially in temperate
climates - The above study was for local energy in Europe
presumably similar conditions prevail in North
America and Northern Asia, which all see a
regular, natural freeze/thaw cycle (with
associated seasonal plant decay and regrowth).
26- Other uses of the reservoir
- Reservoirs created by hydroelectric schemes often
provide facilities for water sports, and become
tourist attractions themselves - In some countries, aquaculture in reservoirs is
common - Multi-use dams installed for irrigation support
agriculture with a relatively constant water
supply - Large hydro dams can control floods, which would
otherwise affect people living downstream of the
project
27- Disadvantages
- Ecosystem damage and loss of land
28- Large reservoirs required for the operation of
hydroelectric power stations result in submersion
of extensive areas upstream of the dams,
destroying biologically rich and productive
lowland and riverine valley forests, marshland
and grasslands - The loss of land is often exacerbated by the fact
that reservoirs cause habitat fragmentation of
surrounding areas - Hydroelectric projects can be disruptive to
surrounding aquatic ecosystems both upstream and
downstream of the plant site - For instance, studies have shown that dams along
the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of North America
have reduced salmon populations by preventing
access to spawning grounds upstream, even though
most dams in salmon habitat have fish ladders
installed.
29- Salmon spawn are also harmed on their migration
to sea when they must pass through turbines - This has led to some areas transporting smolt
downstream by barge during parts of the year - In some cases dams, such as the Marmot Dam in
Oregon, have been demolished due to the high
impact on fish. - Turbine and power-plant designs that are easier
on aquatic life are an active area of research - Mitigation measures such as fish ladders may be
required at new projects or as a condition of
re-licensing of existing projects
30- Generation of hydroelectric power changes the
downstream river environment - Water exiting a turbine usually contains very
little suspended sediment, which can lead to
scouring of river beds and loss of riverbanks - Since turbine gates are often opened
intermittently, rapid or even daily fluctuations
in river flow are observed - For example, in the Grand Canyon, the daily
cyclic flow variation caused by Glen Canyon Dam
was found to be contributing to erosion of sand
bars - Dissolved oxygen content of the water may change
from pre-construction conditions.
31- Depending on the location, water exiting from
turbines is typically much warmer than the
pre-dam water, which can change aquatic faunal
populations, including endangered species, and
prevent natural freezing processes from occurring - Some hydroelectric projects also use canals to
divert a river at a shallower gradient to
increase the head of the scheme - In some cases, the entire river may be diverted
leaving a dry riverbed - Examples include the Tekapo and Pukaki Rivers in
New Zealand
32- Siltation
- When water flows it has the ability to transport
particles heavier than itself downstream - This has a negative effect on dams and
subsequently their power stations, particularly
those on rivers or within catchment areas with
high siltation - Siltation can fill a reservoir and reduce its
capacity to control floods along with causing
additional horizontal pressure on the upstream
portion of the dam - Eventually, some reservoirs can become completely
full of sediment and useless or over-top during a
flood and fail
33- Flow shortage
- Changes in the amount of river flow will
correlate with the amount of energy produced by a
dam - Lower river flows because of drought, climate
change or upstream dams and diversions will
reduce the amount of live storage in a reservoir
therefore reducing the amount of water that can
be used for hydroelectricity - The result of diminished river flow can be power
shortages in areas that depend heavily on
hydroelectric power - The risk of flow shortage may increase as a
result of climate change - Studies from the Colorado River in the United
States suggest that modest climate changes, such
as an increase in temperature in 2 degree Celsius
resulting in a 10 decline in precipitation,
might reduce river run-o? by up to 40 - Brazil in particular is vulnerable due to its
heaving reliance on hydroelectricity, as
increasing temperatures, lower water ?ow and
alterations in the rainfall regime, could reduce
total energy production by 7 annually by the end
of the century
34The Hoover Dam in the United States is a large
conventional dammed-hydro facility, with an
installed capacity of 2,080 MW
35- Methane emissions (from reservoirs)
- Lower positive impacts are found in the tropical
regions, as it has been noted that the reservoirs
of power plants in tropical regions may produce
substantial amounts of methane - This is due to plant material in flooded areas
decaying in an anaerobic environment, and forming
methane, a potent greenhouse gas
36- According to the World Commission on Dams report,
where the reservoir is large compared to the
generating capacity (less than 100 watts per
square metre of surface area) and no clearing of
the forests in the area was undertaken prior to
impoundment of the reservoir, greenhouse gas
emissions from the reservoir may be higher than
those of a conventional oil-fired thermal
generation plant - Although these emissions represent carbon already
in the biosphere, not fossil deposits that had
been sequestered from the carbon cycle, there is
a greater amount of methane due to anaerobic
decay, causing greater damage than would
otherwise have occurred had the forest decayed
naturally.
37- In boreal reservoirs of Canada and Northern
Europe, however, greenhouse gas emissions are
typically only 2 to 8 of any kind of
conventional fossil-fuel thermal generation - A new class of underwater logging operation that
targets drowned forests can mitigate the effect
of forest decay - In 2007, International Rivers accused hydropower
firms of cheating with fake carbon credits under
the Clean Development Mechanism, for hydropower
projects already finished or under construction
at the moment they applied to join the CDM. These
carbon credits of hydropower projects under the
CDM in developing countries can be sold to
companies and governments in rich countries, in
order to comply with the Kyoto protocol
38- Relocation
- Another disadvantage of hydroelectric dams is the
need to relocate the people living where the
reservoirs are planned - In February 2008 it was estimated that 40-80
million people worldwide had been physically
displaced as a direct result of dam construction - In many cases, no amount of compensation can
replace ancestral and cultural attachments to
places that have spiritual value to the displaced
population - Additionally, historically and culturally
important sites can be flooded and lost - Such problems have arisen at the Aswan Dam in
Egypt between 1960 and 1980, the Three Gorges Dam
in China, the Clyde Dam in New Zealand, and the
Ilisu Dam in Turkey.
39- Failure hazard
-
- Because large conventional dammed-hydro
facilities hold back large volumes of water, a
failure due to poor construction, terrorism, or
other cause can be catastrophic to downriver
settlements and infrastructure - Dam failures have been some of the largest
man-made disasters in history - Also, good design and construction are not an
adequate guarantee of safety - Dams are tempting industrial targets for wartime
attack, sabotage and terrorism, such as Operation
Chastise in World War II
40- The Banquio Damfailure in Southern China directly
resulted in the deaths of 26,000 people, and
another 145,000 from epidemics - Millions were left homeless
- Also, the creation of a dam in a geologically
inappropriate location may cause disasters such
as 1963 disaster at Vajont Dam in Italy, where
almost 2000 people died - Smaller dams and micro hydro facilities create
less risk, but can form continuing hazards even
after being decommissioned - For example, the small Kelly Barnes Dam in
Georgia failed in 1967, causing 39 deaths with
the Toccoa Flood, ten years after its power plant
was decommissioned
41- Comparison with other methods of power generation
- Hydroelectricity eliminates the flue gas
emissions from fossil fuel combustion, including
pollutants such as sulfur dioxide, nitric oxide,
carbon monoxide, dust, and mercury in the coal - Hydroelectricity also avoids the hazards of coal
mining and the indirect health effects of coal
emissions - Compared to nuclear power, hydroelectricity
generates no nuclear waste, has none of the
dangers associated with uranium mining, nor
nuclear leaks - Unlike uranium, hydroelectricity is also a
renewable energy source - Compared to wind farms, hydroelectricity power
plants have a more predictable load factor - If the project has a storage reservoir, it can
generate power when needed, Hydroelectric plants
can be easily regulated to follow variations in
power demand.
42- Unlike fossil-fuelled combustion turbines,
construction of a hydroelectric plant requires a
long lead-time for site studies, hydrological
studies, and environmental impact assessment - Hydrological data up to 50 years or more is
usually required to determine the best sites and
operating regimes for a large hydroelectric plant - Unlike plants operated by fuel, such as fossil or
nuclear energy, the number of sites that can be
economically developed for hydroelectric
production is limited in many areas the most
cost-effective sites have already been exploited - New hydro sites tend to be far from population
centers and require extensive transmission lines - Hydroelectric generation depends on rainfall in
the watershed, and may be significantly reduced
in years of low rainfall or snowmelt - Long-term energy yield may be affected by climate
change - Utilities that primarily use hydroelectric power
may spend additional capital to build extra
capacity to ensure sufficient power is available
in low water years
43- World hydroelectric capacity
- World renewable energy share (2008), with
hydroelectricity more than 50 of all renewable
energy sources
44- The ranking of hydro-electric capacity is either
by actual annual energy production or by
installed capacity power rating - A hydro-electric plant rarely operates at its
full power rating over a full year the ratio
between annual average power and installed
capacity rating is the capacity factor - The installed capacity is the sum of all
generator nameplate power ratings. Sources came
from BP Statistical Review - Full Report 2009 - Brazil, Canada, New Zealand, Norway, Paraguay,
Switzerland, and Venezuela are the only countries
in the world where the majority of the internal
electric energy production is from hydroelectric
power - Paraguay produces 100 of its electricity from
hydroelectric dams, and exports 90 of its
production to Brazil and to Argentina - Norway produces 9899 of its electricity from
hydroelectric sources.
45Ten of the largest hydroelectric producers as at 2009.3132 Ten of the largest hydroelectric producers as at 2009.3132 Ten of the largest hydroelectric producers as at 2009.3132 Ten of the largest hydroelectric producers as at 2009.3132 Ten of the largest hydroelectric producers as at 2009.3132
Country Annual hydroelectricproduction (TWh) Installedcapacity (GW) Capacityfactor of totalcapacity
China 652.05 196.79 0.37 22.25
Canada 369.5 88.974 0.59 61.12
Brazil 363.8 69.080 0.56 85.56
United States 250.6 79.511 0.42 5.74
Russia 167.0 45.000 0.42 17.64
Norway 140.5 27.528 0.49 98.25
India 115.6 33.600 0.43 15.80
Venezuela 85.96 14.622 0.67 69.20
Japan 69.2 27.229 0.37 7.21
Sweden 65.5 16.209 0.46 44.34
46- Hydropower, hydraulic power or water power is
power that is derived from the force or energy of
moving water, which may be harnessed for useful
purposes - Prior to the development of electric power,
hydropower was used for irrigation, and operation
of various machines, such as watermills, textile
machines, sawmills, dock cranes, and domestic
lifts - Another method used a trompe to produce
compressed air from falling water, which could
then be used to power other machinery at a
distance from the water - In hydrology, hydropower is manifested in the
force of the water on the riverbed and banks of a
river. It is particularly powerful when the river
is in flood - The force of the water results in the removal of
sediment and other materials from the riverbed
and banks of the river, causing erosion and other
alterations.
47- Waterwheels and mills
- Hydropower has been used for hundreds of years.
In India, water wheels and watermills were built
in Imperial Rome, water powered mills produced
flour from grain, and were also used for sawing
timber and stone in China, watermills were
widely used since the Han Dynasty - The power of a wave of water released from a tank
was used for extraction of metal ores in a method
known as hushing - The method was first used at the Dolaucothi Gold
Minein Wales from 75 AD onwards, but had been
developed in Spain at such mines as Las Medulas - Hushing was also widely used in Britain in the
Medieval and later periods to extract lead and
tin ores - It later evolved into hydraulic mining when used
during the California gold rush
48- In China and the rest of the Far East,
hydraulically operated "pot wheel" pumps raised
water into irrigation canals - At the beginning of the Industrial revolution in
Britain, water was the main source of power for
new inventions such as Richard Arkwright's water
frame - Although the use of water power gave way to steam
power in many of the larger mills and factories,
it was still used during the 18th and 19th
centuries for many smaller operations, such as
driving the bellows in small blast furnaces (e.g.
the Dyfi Furnace) and gristmills, such as those
built at Saint Anthony Falls, which uses the
50-foot (15 m) drop in the Mississippi River - In the 1830s, at the peak of the canal-building
era, hydropower was used to transport barge
traffic up and down steep hills using inclined
plane railroads.
49- Hydraulic power pipes
- Hydraulic power networks also existed, using
pipes carrying pressurized liquid to transmit
mechanical power from a power source, such as a
pump, to end users - These were extensive in Victorian cities in the
United Kingdom - A hydraulic power network was also in use in
Geneva, Switzerland. The world famous Jet d'Eau
was originally the only over pressure valve of
this network
50- Compressed air hydro
- Where there is a plentiful head of water it can
be made to generate compressed air directly
without moving parts - A falling column of water is mixed with air
bubbles generated through turbulence at the inlet - This is allowed to fall down a shaft into a
subterranean chamber where the air separates from
the water - The weight of falling water compresses the air in
the top of the chamber - A submerged outlet from the chamber allows water
to flow to the surface at a lower height than the
intake - An outlet in the roof of the chamber supplies the
compressed air to the surface - A facility on this principal was built on the
Montreal River at Ragged Shutes near Cobalt,
Ontario in 1910 and supplied 5,000 horsepower to
nearby mines. 4
51- A conventional dammed-hydro facility
(hydroelectric dam) is the most common type of
hydroelectric power generation
52- A Pelamis wave device under test at the European
Marine Energy Centre (EMEC), Orkney, Scotland
53- Marine Power
- Marine current power, which captures the kinetic
energy from marine currents - Osmotic power, which channels river water into a
container separated from sea water by a
semi-permeable membrane - Ocean thermal energy, which exploits the
temperature difference between deep and shallow
waters - Tidal power, which captures energy from the tides
in horizontal direction. Also a popular form of
hydroelectric power generation - Tidal stream power, usage of stream generators,
somewhat similar to that of a wind turbine - Tidal barrage power, usage of a tidal dam
- Dynamic tidal power, utilizing large areas to
generate head. - Wave power, the use ocean surface waves to
generate power.
54- Calculating the amount of available power
- A hydropower resource can be measured according
to the amount of available power, or energy per
unit time. In large reservoirs, the available
power is generally only a function of the
hydraulic head and rate of fluid flow. In a
reservoir, the head is the height of water in the
reservoir relative to its height after discharge.
Each unit of water can do an amount of work equal
to its weight times the head. - The amount of energy, E, released when an object
of mass m drops a height h in a gravitational
field of strength g is given by - The energy available to hydroelectric dams is the
energy that can be liberated by lowering water in
a controlled way - In these situations, the power is related to the
mass flow rate.
55- Substituting P for E/t and expressing m/t in
terms of the volume of liquid moved per unit time
(the rate of fluid flow, f) and the density of
water, we arrive at the usual form of this
expression - or
- A simple formula for approximating electric power
production at a hydroelectric plant is - P hrgk
- where P is Power in kilowatts, h is height in
meters, r is flow rate in cubic meters per
second, g is acceleration due to gravity of 9.8
m/s2, and k is a coefficient of efficiency
ranging from 0 to 1 - Efficiency is often higher with larger and more
modern turbines
56- Some hydropower systems such as water wheels can
draw power from the flow of a body of water
without necessarily changing its height. In this
case, the available power is the kinetic energy
of the flowing water. - where v is the speed of the water, or with
- where A is the area through which the water
passes, also - Over-shot water wheels can efficiently capture
both types of energy
57- Kaplan turbine and electrical generator cut-away
view.
58- The runner of the small water turbine
59- Swirl
- The word turbine was introduced by the French
engineer Claude Bourdin in the early 19th century
and is derived from the Latin word for "whirling"
or a "vortex - The main difference between early water turbines
and water wheels is a swirl component of the
water which passes energy to a spinning rotor - This additional component of motion allowed the
turbine to be smaller than a water wheel of the
same power - They could process more water by spinning faster
and could harness much greater heads - Later, impulse turbines were developed which
didn't use swirl
60- The earliest known water turbines date to the
Roman Empire - Two helix-turbine mill sites of almost identical
design were found at Chemtou and Testier,
modern-day Tunisia, dating to the late 3rd or
early 4th century AD - The horizontal water wheel with angled blades was
installed at the bottom of a water-filled,
circular shaft - The water from the mill-race entered tangentially
the pit, creating a swirling water column which
made the fully submerged wheel act like a true
turbine - Jan Andrei Segner developed a reactive water
turbine in the mid-18th century - It had a horizontal axis and was a precursor to
modern water turbines. It is a very simple
machine that is still produced today for use in
small hydro sites - Segner worked with Euler on some of the early
mathematical theories of turbine design.
61- In 1826, Benoit Fournerior developed an
outward-flow turbine. This was an efficient
machine (80) that sent water through a runner
with blades curved in one dimension. The
stationary outlet also had curved guides - In 1844, Uriah A. Boyden developed an outward
flow turbine that improved on the performance of
the Fourneyron turbine. Its runner shape was
similar to that of a Francis turbine - In 1849, James B. Francis improved the inward
flow reaction turbine to over 90 efficiency - He also conducted sophisticated tests and
developed engineering methods for water turbine
design - The Francis turbine, named for him, is the first
modern water turbine - It is still the most widely used water turbine in
the world today - The Francis turbine is also called a radial flow
turbine, since water flows from the outer
circumference towards the centre of runner.
62- The Francis turbine is a type of water turbine
that was developed by James B. Francis in Lowell,
Massachusetts - It is an inward-flow reaction turbine that
combines radial and axial flow concepts - Francis turbines are the most common water
turbine in use today - They operate in a head range of ten meters to six
hundred and fifty meters and are primarily used
for electrical power production - The power output ranges from 10 to 750MW,
mini-hydro excluded - Runner diameters are between 1 and 10 meters
- The speed range of the turbine is from 83 to 1000
rpm - Medium size and larger Francis turbines are most
often arranged with a vertical shaft - Vertical shaft may also be used for small size
turbines, but normally they have horizontal shaft
63-
- Side-view cutaway of a Francis turbine
64- Francis Runner, Grand Coulee Dam
65- Water wheels have been used historically to power
mills of all types, but they are inefficient.
Nineteenth-century efficiency improvements of
water turbines allowed them to compete with steam
engines (wherever water was available) - In 1826 Benoit Fourneyron developed a high
efficiency (80) outward-flow water turbine - Water was directed tangentially through the
turbine runner, causing it to spin - Jean-Victor Poncelet designed an inward-flow
turbine in about 1820 that used the same
principles. S. B. Howd obtained a U.S. patent in
1838 for a similar design - In 1848 James B. Francis, while working as head
engineer of the Locks and Canals company in the
water-powered factory city of Lowell,
Massachusetts, improved on these designs to
create a turbine with 90 efficiency - He applied scientific principles and testing
methods to produce a very efficient turbine
design - More importantly, his mathematical and graphical
calculation methods improved turbine design and
engineering - His analytical methods allowed confident design
of high efficiency turbines to exactly match a
site's flow conditions
66- Three Gorges Dam Francis turbine runner
67- The Francis turbine is a reaction turbine, which
means that the working fluid changes pressure as
it moves through the turbine, giving up its
energy - A casement is needed to contain the water flow
- The turbine is located between the high-pressure
water source and the low-pressure water exit,
usually at the base of a dam - The inlet is spiral shaped
- Guide vanes direct the water tangentially to the
turbine wheel, known as a runner - This radial flow acts on the runner's vanes,
causing the runner to spin - The guide vanes (or wicket gate) may be
adjustable to allow efficient turbine operation
for a range of water flow conditions
68- Francis Turbine (exterior view) attached to a
generator
69- As the water moves through the runner, its
spinning radius decreases, further acting on the
runner - For an analogy, imagine swinging a ball on a
string around in a circle if the string is
pulled short, the ball spins faster due to the
conservation of angular momentum - This property, in addition to the water's
pressure, helps Francis and other inward-flow
turbines harness water energy efficiently - At the exit, water acts on cup-shaped runner
features, leaving with no swirl and very little
kinetic or potential energy - The turbine's exit tube is shaped to help
decelerate the water flow and recover the
pressure
70Application
- Francis turbines may be designed for a wide range
of heads and flows - This, along with their high efficiency, has made
them the most widely used turbine in the world - Francis type units cover a head range from 20
meters to 700 meters, and their output power
varies from just a few kilowatts up to one
gigawatt - Large Francis turbines are individually designed
for each site to operate at the highest possible
efficiency, typically over 90 - In addition to electrical production, they may
also be used for pumped storage, where a
reservoir is filled by the turbine (acting as a
pump) during low power demand, and then reversed
and used to generate power during peak demand
71- Inward flow water turbines have a better
mechanical arrangement and all modern reaction
water turbines are of this design - As the water swirls inward, it accelerates, and
transfers energy to the runner. Water pressure
decreases to atmospheric, or in some cases
subatmospheric, as the water passes through the
turbine blades and loses energy - Around 1890, the modern fluid bearing was
invented, now universally used to support heavy
water turbine spindles - As of 2002, fluid bearings appear to have a mean
time between failures of more than 1300 years. - Around 1913, Viktor Kaplan created the Kaplan
turbine, a propeller-type machine - It was an evolution of the Francis turbine but
revolutionized the ability to develop low-head
hydro sites.
72A new concept
- Figure from Pelton's original patent (October
1880)
73- All common water machines until the late 19th
century (including water wheels) were basically
reaction machines water pressure head acted on
the machine and produced work. A reaction turbine
needs to fully contain the water during energy
transfer - In 1866, California millwright Samuel Knight
invented a machine that took the impulse system
to a new level - Inspired by the high pressure jet systems used in
hydraulic mining in the gold fields, Knight
developed a bucketed wheel which captured the
energy of a free jet, which had converted a high
head (hundreds of vertical feet in a pipe or
penstock) of water to kinetic energy - This is called an impulse or tangential turbine
- The water's velocity, roughly twice the velocity
of the bucket periphery, does a u-turn in the
bucket and drops out of the runner at low
velocity.
74- In 1879, Lester Pelton (1829-1908), experimenting
with a Knight Wheel, developed a double bucket
design, which exhausted the water to the side,
eliminating some energy loss of the Knight wheel
which exhausted some water back against the
center of the wheel - In about 1895, William Doble improved on Pelton's
half-cylindrical bucket form with an elliptical
bucket that included a cut in it to allow the jet
a cleaner bucket entry - This is the modern form of the Pelton turbine
which today achieves up to 92 efficiency - Pelton had been quite an effective promoter of
his design and although Doble took over the
Pelton company he did not change the name to
Doble because it had brand name recognition - Turgo and Crossflow Turbineswere later impulse
designs.
75- Theory of operation
- Flowing water is directed on to the blades of a
turbine runner, creating a force on the blades - Since the runner is spinning, the force acts
through a distance (force acting through a
distance is the definition of work) - In this way, energy is transferred from the water
flow to the turbine - Water turbines are divided into two groups
reaction turbines and impulse turbines - The precise shape of water turbine blades is a
function of the supply pressure of water, and the
type of impeller selected.
76- Reaction turbines
- Reaction turbines are acted on by water, which
changes pressure as it moves through the turbine
and gives up its energy - They must be encased to contain the water
pressure (or suction), or they must be fully
submerged in the water flow - Newton's third law describes the transfer of
energy for reaction turbines. - Most water turbines in use are reaction turbines
and are used in low (lt30m/98 ft) and medium
(30-300m/98984 ft)head applications. In reaction
turbine pressure drop occurs in both fixed and
moving blades.
77- Impulse turbines
- Impulse turbines change the velocity of a water
jet. The jet pushes on the turbine's curved
blades which changes the direction of the flow - The resulting change in momentum (impulse) causes
a force on the turbine blades. Since the turbine
is spinning, the force acts through a distance
(work) and the diverted water flow is left with
diminished energy - Prior to hitting the turbine blades, the water's
pressure (potential energy) is converted to
kinetic energy by a nozzle and focused on the
turbine - No pressure change occurs at the turbine blades,
and the turbine doesn't require a housing for
operation - Newton's second law describes the transfer of
energy for impulse turbines - Impulse turbines are most often used in very high
(gt300m/984 ft) head applications
78- Newton's First Law of Motion
- I. Every object in a state of uniform motion
tends to remain in that state of motion unless an
external force is applied to it. - Newton's Second Law of Motion
- II. The relationship between an object's mass m,
its acceleration a, and the applied force F is F
ma. Acceleration and force are vectors in this
law the direction of the force vector is the same
as the direction of the acceleration vector. - Newton's Third Law of Motion
- III. For every action there is an equal and
opposite reaction.
79- Power
- The power available in a stream of water is
- where
- P power (J/s or watts)
- ? turbine efficiency
- ? density of water (kg/m³)
- g acceleration of gravity (9.81 m/s²)
- h head (m)
- For still water, this is the difference in height
between the inlet and outlet surfaces - Moving water has an additional component added to
account for the kinetic energy of the flow - The total head equals the
- pressure head plus velocity head. flow rate
(m³/s)
80- Pumped storage
- Some water turbines are designed for pumped
storage hydroelectricity - They can reverse flow and operate as a pump to
fill a high reservoir during off-peak electrical
hours, and then revert to a turbine for power
generation during peak electrical demand - This type of turbine is usually a Deriaz or
Francis in design - Efficiency
- Large modern water turbines operate at mechanical
efficiencies greater than 90 (not to be confused
with thermodynamic efficiency).
81Types of water turbines
- Various types of water turbine runners. From
left to right Pelton Wheel, two types of Francis
Turbine and Kaplan Turbine
82- Reaction turbines
- Francis
- Kaplan, Propeller, Bulb, Tube, Straflo
- Tyson
- Gorlov
- Impulse turbine
- Waterwheel
- Pelton
- Turgo
- Michell-Banki (also known as the Crossflow or
Ossberger turbine) - Jonval turbine
- Reverse overshot water-wheel
- Archimedes' screw turbine
83Design and application
84- Turbine selection is based mostly on the
available water head, and less so on the
available flow rate - In general, impulse turbines are used for high
head sites, and reaction turbines are used for
low head sites - Kaplan turbines with adjustable blade pitch are
well-adapted to wide ranges of flow or head
conditions, since their peak efficiency can be
achieved over a wide range of flow conditions. - Small turbines (mostly under 10 MW) may have
horizontal shafts, and even fairly large
bulb-type turbines up to 100 MW or so may be
horizontal - Very large Francis and Kaplan machines usually
have vertical shafts because this makes best use
of the available head, and makes installation of
a generator more economical - Pelton wheels may be either vertical or
horizontal shaft machines because the size of the
machine is so much less than the available head - Some impulse turbines use multiple water jets per
runner to increase specific speed and balance
shaft thrust.
85- Typical range of heads
- Hydraulic wheel turbine
Archimedes' screw turbine Kaplan______________
___
Francis
10 lt H lt 350
Pelton
50 lt H lt 1300
Turgo
50 lt H lt 250 -
0.2 lt H lt 4 (H head in m)
1 lt H lt 10
2 lt H lt 40
86- Specific speed
- The specific speed ns of a turbine characterizes
the turbine's shape in a way that is not related
to its size - This allows a new turbine design to be scaled
from an existing design of known performance - The specific speed is also the main criteria for
matching a specific hydro site with the correct
turbine type - The specific speed is the speed with which the
turbine turns for a particular discharge Q, with
unit head and thereby is able to produce unit
power.
87- Affinity laws
- Affinity Laws allow the output of a turbine to be
predicted based on model tests - A miniature replica of a proposed design, about
one foot (0.3 m) in diameter, can be tested and
the laboratory measurements applied to the final
application with high confidence - Affinity laws are derived by requiring similitude
between the test model and the application - Flow through the turbine is controlled either by
a large valve or by wicket gates arranged around
the outside of the turbine runner - Differential head and flow can be plotted for a
number of different values of gate opening,
producing a hill diagram used to show the
efficiency of the turbine at varying conditions
88- Runaway speed
- The runaway speed of a water turbine is its speed
at full flow, and no shaft load - The turbine will be designed to survive the
mechanical forces of this speed - The manufacturer will supply the runaway speed
rating.
89- Environmental impact
-
- Water turbines are generally considered a clean
power producer, as the turbine causes essentially
no change to the water - They use a renewable energy source and are
designed to operate for decades - They produce significant amounts of the world's
electrical supply - Historically there have also been negative
consequences, mostly associated with the dams
normally required for power production - Dams alter the natural ecology of rivers,
potentially killing fish, stopping migrations,
and disrupting peoples' livelihoods.
90- For example, American Indian tribes in the
Pacific Northwest had livelihoods built around
salmon fishing, but aggressive dam-building
destroyed their way of life - Dams also cause less obvious, but potentially
serious consequences, including increased
evaporation of water (especially in arid
regions), build up of silt behind the dam, and
changes to water temperature and flow patterns - Some people believe that it is possible to
construct hydropower systems that divert fish and
other organisms away from turbine intakes without
significant damage or loss of power historical
performance of diversion structures have been
poor. - n the United States, it is now illegal to block
the migration of fish, for example the endangered
great white sturgeon in North America, so fish
ladders must be provided by dam builders - The actual performance of fish ladders is often
poor