Title: 8'4: NonFossil Fuel Power Production
18.4 Non-Fossil Fuel Power Production
- Hydroelectric Power
- By Mic Chan
2Table of Contents
- Definition
- 8.415 - Hydroelectric schemes
- Pumped storage hydroelectricity
- Run-of-the-river plants
- Tidal power
- 8.416 - Energy transformation
- 8.417 - Solving problems involving hydroelectric
schemes
3Definition
- Power produced through the use of the
gravitational forces of falling or flowing water - Most widely used form of renewable energy
- Produces no direct waste
- Considerably different output level of carbon
dioxide than fossil fueled energy plants - Produced 19 of the worlds electricity in 2005
4Hydroelectric Schemes
- 3 types to be discussed
- Pumped storage hydroelectricity
- Run-of-the-river plants
- Tidal power
5Pumped storage hydroelectricity
- Energy stored in the form of water, pumped from a
lower elevation reservoir to a higher elevation - Low-cost off-peak electric power is used to run
the pumps - When there is higher demand, water is released
back into the lower reservoir through a turbine,
generating electricity - Reversible turbine/generator assemblies act as
pump and turbine
6Pumped storage hydroelectricity (continued)
- Although the losses of pumping process makes the
plant a net consumer of energy overall, the
system increases revenues by selling more
electricity during periods of peak demand, when
electricity prices are highest - Pumped storage is the largest-capacity form of
grid energy storage now available - Taking into account evaporation losses from the
exposed water surface and conversion losses,
approximately 70 to 85 of the electrical energy
used to pump the water into the elevated
reservoir can be regained - The technique is currently the most
cost-effective means of storing large amounts of
electrical energy on an operating basis
7Diagram of the TVA pumped storage facility at
Raccoon Mountain Pumped-Storage Plant
8Run-of-the-river plants
- The natural flow and elevation drop of a river
are used to generate electricity - Power stations of this type are built on rivers
with a consistent and steady flow, either natural
or through the use of a large reservoir at the
head of the river which then can provide a
regulated steady flow for stations down-river
9Run-of-the-river concept
- Power stations on rivers with great seasonal
fluctuations require a large reservoir in order
to operate during the dry season, resulting in
the necessity to impound and flood large tracts
of land - In contrast, run of river projects do not require
a large impoundment of water - Instead, some of the water is diverted from a
river, and sent into a pipe called a penstock - The penstock feeds the water downhill to the
power station's turbines
10Run-of-the-river concept (continued)
- Because of the difference in altitude, potential
energy from the water up river is transformed
into kinetic energy while it flows downriver
through the penstock, giving it the speed
required to spin the turbines that in turn
transform this kinetic energy into electrical
energy - The water leaves the generating station and is
returned to the river without altering the
existing flow or water levels - Most run-of-river power plants will have a dam
across the full width of the river to utilize all
the river's water for electricity generation - Such installations will have a reservoir behind
the dam but since flooding is minimal, they can
be considered "run-of-river"
11Chief Joseph Dam near Bridgeport, Washington,
USA, is a major run-of-river station without a
sizeable reservoir.
12Run-of-the-river advantages
- Flooding the upper part of the river is not
required as it doesn't need a large reservoir - As a result, people living at or near the river
don't need to be relocated and natural habitats
are preserved, reducing the environmental impact
as compared to reservoirs
13Run-of-the-river disadvantages
- The output of the power plant is highly dependent
on natural run-off - Spring melts will create a lot of energy while
dry seasons will create relatively little energy - This disadvantage can be reduced if a site with
consistent flow is chosen - A run-of-the-river power plant has little or no
capacity for energy storage and hence can't
co-ordinate the output of electricity generation
to match consumer demand
14Tidal Power
- Converts the energy of tides into electricity or
other useful forms of power - Although not yet widely used, tidal power has
potential for future electricity generation - Tides are more predictable than wind energy and
solar power
15Tidal power (continued)
- Tidal power is the only form of energy which
derives directly from the relative motions of the
Earth-Moon system, and to a lesser extent from
the Earth-Sun system - Periodic changes of water levels, and associated
tidal currents, are due to the gravitational
attraction by the Sun and Moon - The magnitude of the tide at a location is the
result of - The changing positions of the Moon and Sun
relative to the Earth - The effects of Earth rotation
- The local shape of the sea floor and coastlines
16Tidal power (continued)
- Earth's tides are caused by the tidal forces due
to gravitational interaction with the Moon and
Sun, and the Earth's rotation - Tidal power is practically inexhaustible
- Classified as a renewable energy source
- A tidal energy generator uses this phenomenon to
generate energy - The stronger the tide, either in water level
height or tidal current velocities, the greater
the potential for tidal energy generation
17Tidal power (continued)
- Tidal power can be classified into two main
types - Tidal stream systems make use of the kinetic
energy of moving water to power turbines, in a
similar way to windmills that use moving air - This method is gaining in popularity because of
the lower cost and lower ecological impact
compared to barrages
18Tidal power (continued)
- Barrages make use of the potential energy in the
difference in height between high and low tides - Barrages are essentially dams across the full
width of a tidal estuary - Disadvantages
- Suffer from very high civil infrastructure costs
- A worldwide shortage of viable sites
- Environmental issues
- Tidal lagoons, are similar to barrages, but can
be constructed as self contained structures, not
fully across an estuary - Are claimed to incur much lower cost and impact
overall - Furthermore they can be configured to generate
continuously which is not the case with barrages
19(No Transcript)
20Tidal power - environmental effects
- As a result of less water exchange with the sea,
the average salinity inside the basin decreases,
also affecting the ecosystem - "Tidal Lagoons" do not suffer from this problem
- Estuaries often have high volume of sediments
moving through them, from the rivers to the sea. - The introduction of a barrage into an estuary may
result in sediment accumulation within the
barrage, affecting the ecosystem and also the
operation of the barrage.
21Tidal power - fish
- Fish may move through sluices safely, but when
these are closed, fish will seek out turbines and
attempt to swim through them - Some fish will be unable to escape the water
speed near a turbine and will be sucked through - Even with the most fish-friendly turbine design,
fish mortality per pass is approximately 15
(from pressure drop, contact with blades,
cavitation, etc.) - Alternative passage technologies (fish ladders,
fish lifts, etc.) have so far failed to solve
this problem for tidal barrages, either offering
extremely expensive solutions, or ones which are
used by a small fraction of fish only - Research in sonic guidance of fish is ongoing
22Energy transformation
- Run-of-the-river
- Water is diverted from a river, and sent into the
penstock, which feeds the water downhill to the
power station's turbines - Because of the difference in altitude, potential
energy from the water up river is transformed
into kinetic energy while it flows downriver
through the penstock - This gives the water the speed required to spin
the turbines that in turn transform this kinetic
energy into electrical energy
23Solving problems using hydroelectric schemes
- The energy available from barrage is dependent on
the volume of water. The potential energy
contained in a volume of water is - where
- h is the vertical tidal range
- A is the horizontal area of the barrage basin
- ? is the density of water 1025 kg per cubic
meter (seawater varies between 1021 and 1030 kg
per cubic meter) - g is the acceleration due to the Earths gravity
9.81 meters per second squared - The factor half is due to the fact, that as the
basin flows empty through the turbines, the
hydraulic head over the dam reduces. The maximum
head is only available at the moment of low
water, assuming the high water level is still
present in the basin.
24Example calculation of tidal power generation
- Assumptions
- Let us assume that the tidal range of tide at a
particular place is 32 feet 10 m (approx) - The surface of the tidal energy harnessing plant
is 9 km2 (3 km ? 3 km) 3000 m ? 3000 m 9 ?
106 m2 - Specific density of sea water 1025.18 kg/m3
- Mass of the water volume of water ? specific
gravity - (area ? tidal range) of water ? mass density
- (9 ? 106 m2 ? 10 m) ? 1025.18 kg/m3
- 92 ? 109 kg (approx)
25Example calculation of tidal power generation
(continued)
- Potential energy content of the water in the
basin at high tide 1/2 area ? density ?
gravitational acceleration ? tidal range squared - 1/2 ? 9 ? 106 m2 ? 1025 kg/m3 ? 9.81 m/s2 ?(10
m)2 - 4.5 ? 1012 J (approx)
- Now we have 2 high tides and 2 low tides every
day. At low tide the potential energy is zero. - Therefore the total energy potential per day
Energy for a single high tide ? 2 - 4.5 ? 1012 J ? 2
- 9 ? 1012 J
26Example calculation of tidal power generation
(continued)
- Therefore, the mean power generation potential
Energy generation potential / time in 1 day - 9 ?1012 J / 86400 s
- 104 MW
- Assuming the power conversion efficiency to be
30 The daily-average power generated 104 MW
30 / 100 - 31 MW (approx)