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The amount of electrical
energy that can be generated from a water
source depends primarily on two things: the
distance the water has to fall and the
quantity of water flowing. Hydro-electric
power stations are therefore situated where
they can take advantage of the greatest fall
of a large quantity of water- at the bottom
of a deep and steep-sided valley or gorge,
or near the base of a dam (see figure 1).

Water is collected and
stored in the dam above the station for use
when it is required. Some dams create big
reservoirs to store water by raising the
levels of rivers to increase their capacity.
Other dams simply arrest the flow of rivers
and divert the water down to the power
station through pipelines. While a water
turbine is much more sophisticated than the
old water wheels, it is similar in
operation. In both cases blades are attached
to a shaft and when flowing water presses
against the blades, the shaft rotates. (The
effect is the same as wind pressing against
the blades of a windmill.) After the water
has given up its energy to the turbine, it
is discharged through drainage pipes or
channels called the "tailrace" of the power
station for irrigation or water supply
purposes or, in some parts of the world,
even into the ocean.

In a conventional
coal-fired (thermal) power station each
"generating unit" consists of a boiler, a
steam turbine, and the generator itself. A
hydro-electric generating unit is simpler
and consists of a water turbine to convert
the energy of flowing water into mechanical
energy, and an electric generator to convert
mechanical energy into electrical energy.
The amount of energy available from water
depends on both the quantity of water
available and its pressure at the turbine.
The pressure is referred to the head, and is
measured as the height that the surface of
the water is above the turbine. The greater
the height (or head) of the water above the
turbine, the more energy each cubic metre of
water can impart to spin a turbine (which in
turn drives a generator). The greater the
quantity of water, the greater the number
and size of turbines that may be spun, and
the greater the power output of the
generators.
Type of Water Turbines
Water for a
hydro-electric power station’s turbines can
come from a specially constructed dam set
high up in a mountain range, or simply from
a river close to ground level. As water
sources vary, water turbines have been
designed to suit the different locations.
The design used is determined largely by
head and quantity of water available at a
particular site. The three main types are
Pelton wheels, Francis turbines, and Kaplan
or propeller type turbines (named after
their inventors). All can be mounted
vertically or horizontally. The Kaplan or
propeller type turbines can be mounted at
almost any angle, but this is usually
vertical or horizontal. The Pelton wheel
(see figure 3) is used where a small flow of
water is available with a ‘large head’. It
resembles the waterwheels used at water
mills in the past. The Pelton wheel has
small ‘buckets’ all around its rim. Water
from the dam is fed through nozzles at very
high speed hitting the buckets, pushing the
wheel around.

The Francis turbine (see
figure 4) is used where a large flow and a
high or medium head of water is involved.

The Francis turbine is
also similar to a waterwheel in that it
looks like a spinning wheel with fixed
blades in between two rims. This wheel is
called a ‘runner’. A circle of guide vanes
surround the runner and control the amount
of water driving it. Water is fed to the
runner from all sides by these vanes causing
it to spin. Propeller type turbines are
designed to operate where a small head of
water is involved. These turbines resemble
ship’s propellers. However, with some of
these (Kaplan turbines, see figure 5) the
angle (pitch) of the blades can be altered
to suit the water flow.

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