Title: Introduction to Energy Generation and Distribution
1Introduction to Energy Generation and Distribution
- The History of Electricity
2The History of Electricity
- Electrical Discoveries
- Natural occurrences of electricity
- Lightning
- Static-amber rods rubbed with cat fur
- Electric fish (electric eels, electric catfish,
others) - Nerve operation
- Brain activity
3The History of Electricity
- Electrical Discoveries
- Numerous scientists from 1600s on started
treating this as more than a curiosity - Benjamin Franklins kite experiment in 1752
proved lightning was electricity - Luigi Galvani in 1791 proved that electricity is
what makes nerves work
4Ben Franklin
5The History of Electricity
- Electrical Inventions
- Electromagnetism united electricity and magnetism
in 1819 (Orsted and Ampere) - Faraday invented the electric motor in 1821
- 1830s several inventors created the telegraph
- Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone in
1876 - Thomas Edison invented the electric light bulb in
1879 - Nikola Tesla invented Alternating Current
6Thomas Edison
7Nikola Tesla
8The History of Electricity
- Electrical Inventions
- Whale oil, town gas, kerosene primary means of
providing gas lights for many years prior to
electricity - Widespread use of electricity to operate lights
- Batteries
- Electric vehicles
- Enhanced and larger electric motors AC and DC
- Large generating systems AC and DC
9The History of Electricity
- The Industrial Revolution
- 2nd half of the 1700s through the 1800s
- Mechanization transformed modern society
- Large industries sprang up, many powered by
horses, then by steam engines - Agrarian farm life rapidly declined as farmers
went to work in factories to earn better wages - Textiles, iron manufacturing, invention of
concrete , all spurred growth in industrial
systems
10The History of Electricity
- The Industrial Revolution
- Prior to steam power, horse power and water power
were the dominant forms of primary power for
industry - Most fast-moving water was in New England states
- Development of steam power opened up other areas
of US for industrial development - Transportation changed dramatically thanks to
steam-powered trains
11Steam Locomotive
12The History of Electricity
- The War of the Currents AC vs. DC
- Edison promoted his Direct Current(DC) as the
only safe way to deliver electricity to large
populations - Westinghouse promoted Alternating Current (AC) as
the only way to transport electricity over long
distances - DC commercial power canonly be transported a few
miles. - Edison invented large scale DC generators
- Westinghouse bought patents for AC from Tesla
13George Westinghouse
14The History of Electricity
- The War of the Currents AC vs. DC
- Edison started General Electric, later lost it to
bankers - 1882 Edison builds Pearl Street DC station in
NYC - 1894 Niagra Falls Power Company powered Buffalo,
NY - Westinghouse/Tesla team eventually won the war of
the currents - Today AC electricity can be transported 1000s of
miles by increasing the voltage at the generator
to extreme levels
15The History of Electricity
- Electrical Distribution Begins
- Various frequencies of AC were tried. Settled on
60Hz - 60Hz was used because of easy timing with clocks.
- Also any frequency above about 40-50Hz makes
flicker-free lighting important in AC systems - Also higher frequencies would require faster
spinning generators, creating mechanical
challenges - 1893 Westinghouse/Tesla system demonstrated AC
at Chicago Exposition
16The History of Electricity
- 1900s Electrical Distribution Begins
- Once an electrical power generating systems
begins, all generators tied to that grid must
be same frequency and phase - When loads increase demand for electricity, more
generators must be added. - Numerous safeguards must be built in for safety
and isolation of failures - First distribution systems were in cities where
it was economical for the electric utilities to
build and sell power to large customer bases
17The History of Electricity
- REA and TVA
- Rural Electrification Administration
- Tennessee Valley Authority
- Great Depression of 1929
- Public power vs. private (investor-owned)
utilities hotly contested during 1920s
18The History of Electricity
- REA and TVA
- Prior to 1933, privately owned utilities refused
to extend their service to rural areas, claiming
lack of profitability - Private power companies set rural rates 4 times
higher than city rates - Obviously, this was not perceived as a fair
treatment of rural families
19The History of Electricity
- TVA
- Tennessee Valley Authority
- Federally-owned private corporation
- Established in May 1933 to provide
- Flood control
- Navigation of waterways
- Affordable electricity for rural communities
- Fertilizer for more effective, productive farming
- Economic development
20The History of Electricity
- TVA
- Cover s most of Tennessee, parts of Alabama,
Mississippi, Kentucky, a few other SE States. - Nations largest public power company
- FDR campaigned on this issue during Presidential
race 1932 - Nebraska Senator George Norris from McCook, NE
partnered with Franklin Roosevelt to help
establish public power entities - Reddams purplenuclear power yellowfossil
power
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22The History of Electricity
- REA
- Rural Electrification Administration established
1935 - Made loans available to local electric
cooperatives to compete with big power companies - 1930 10 of rural homes had electricity
- 1940 90 of rural homes had electricity
23The History of Electricity
- REA
- PUHCA (Public Utility Holding Company Act) 1935
- Regulate electric utilities
- Get control of private utilities
- REA has been reorganized (1994) and is now called
RUS (Rural Utilities Service) - RUS is an agency of the United States Dept of
Agriculture - RUS Tasked with providing to rural areas the
following utilities - Electricity
- Telephone
- Water
- Sewer
24The History of Electricity
- US Electrical Distribution Today
- Three separate grids
- Eastern interconnection
- Western interconnection
- Texas interconnection (ERCOT Electric
Reliability Council of Texas) - Alaskan and some Canadian grids separate from the
three main USA grids
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26The History of Electricity
- US Electrical Distribution Today
- Reliability of each grid is critical
- Each grid started independently at different
times - Very little interconnection between the three
grids - 60 Hz phase is different in each grid
- Can not directly connect grids together
- Must convert 60Hz AC to DC, then back to AC at
the receiving grids phase
27The History of Electricity
- US Electrical Distribution Today
- Utility generators create 2300 to 30,000 volts
- A transformer steps this voltage up to a higher
voltage for long-distance transmission - When voltage is stepped up, current is stepped
down - Some power is lost in the transformation of
voltage/current - Numerous high voltage systems in use across North
America - 765,000 volts 500,000 volts 345,000
volts 230,000 volts - 138,000 volts 115,000 volts
28The History of Electricity
- US Electrical Distribution Today
- At various locations, sub-stations reduce the
transmission voltage to more usable levels - 4000 volts 69,000 volts
- Final users get their power at lower voltages of
120-480 volts. - Transformers are used to change voltage levels,
up and down. Only AC power can do this
29Electrical Distribution System