Hydro Electric Power
Hydro Electric Power
Hydro Electric Power
INTRODUCTION
power is water.
Hydro-electric power plant main aim was to
generate power in flowing water.
The energy which is from hydel plant is
utilized to drive turbine.
In India during 1987, the first hydro-electric
power station was started near Darjeeling.
water storage
Since there is a wide variation in rain fall
It is necessary to store water for continuous
power generation
The storage capacity can be calculated by mass
curve.
Maximum storage should justify the expenditure
on the project
Two types of storages in use are
Water available for one year only (end at the
year)
Available at all the conditions
Water heat
In order to generate a requisite quantity of power it is
necessary that a large quantity of water at a sufficient head
should be available.
An increase in effective head, for a given output, reduces
the quantity of water required to be supplied to the
turbines.
LAYOUT
Catchment area
The whole area behind the dam draining into a stream or river
across which the dam has been built at a suitable place,
Reservoir
Reservoir is employed to store water which is further utilised
to generate power by running the hydraulic turbines.
A reservoir may be of the following two types
A natural reservoir is a lake in high mountains.
An artificial reservoir is built by erecting a dam across the
river.
Water held in upstream reservoir is called storage
Water behind the dam at the plant is called pondage .
COMPONENTS
Water reservoir.
Dam.
Penstock.
Fore bay.
Surge tank.
Water turbine..
WATER RESERVOIR
In hydel electric power plant, there must
DAM
PENSTOCK
A pipeline fixed between the surge tank
concrete or steel.
FOREBAY
The main function is to regulating the
reservoir.
SURGE TANK
Surge tank is introduced in between
WATER TURBINE
Water turbine converts kinetic energy
WORKING PRINCIPLE
There is supply of energy cycle in
Dam Types
Arch
Gravity
Buttress
Embankment or Earth
Arch Dams
Arch shape gives
strength
Less material
(cheaper)
Narrow sites
Need strong
abutments
dam in place
Lots of concrete
(expensive)
Buttress Dams
Face is held
up by a
series of
supports
Flat or
curved face
Embankment Dams
Earth or rock
Weight resists
flow of water
Dams Construction
ADVANTAGES
Water is cheapest source of energy. The fuels
and fuel.
DISADVANTAGE
Hydel power projects are capital intensive
TECHNOLOGY
Technology
Hydropower
Technology
Impoundment
Diversion
Pumped
Storage
Impoundment facility
Diversion Facility
Doesnt require dam
Facility channels portion
Pumped Storage
During Storage, water
Pumped Storage
Operation : Two pools of Water
Upper pool impoundment
Lower pool natural lake, river
or storage reservoir
Advantages :
Production of peak power
Can be built anywhere with
reliable supply of water
Generating Technologies
Types of Hydro Turbines:
Impulse turbines
Pelton Wheel
Cross Flow Turbines
Reaction turbines
Propeller Turbines : Bulb turbine, Straflo, Tube Turbine,
Kaplan Turbine
Francis Turbines
Kinetic Turbines
Impulse Turbines
Uses the velocity of the water to move the runner and
Pelton Wheels
Nozzles direct forceful
flow sites.
The largest units can be up
to 200 MW.
Can operate with heads as
small as 15 meters and as
high as 1,800 meters.
the inside
Second pass : from the inside back out
Larger water flows and lower heads than the Pelton.
Reaction Turbines
Combined action of pressure and moving water.
Runner placed directly in the water stream flowing over
constantly.
Through the pipe, the pressure
is constant
Pitch of the blades - fixed or
adjustable
Scroll case, wicket gates, and a
draft tube
Types: Bulb turbine, Straflo,
Tube turbine, Kaplan
Bulb Turbine
The turbine and
generator are a
sealed unit placed
directly in the water
stream.
Others
Straflo : The generator is attached directly to the perimeter of
the turbine.
Tube Turbine : The penstock bends just before or after the
runner, allowing a straight line connection to the generator
Kaplan : Both the blades and the wicket gates are adjustable,
allowing for a wider range of operation
Kaplan Turbine
The inlet is a scroll-shaped tube
Francis Turbines
The inlet is spiral shaped.
Guide vanes direct the water
the head.
Operate in rivers, man-made channels, tidal waters, or ocean
currents.
Do not require the diversion of water.
Kinetic systems do not require large civil works.
Can use existing structures such as bridges, tailraces and
channels.
ECONOMICS OF
HYDRO POWER
Global HP Economics
Cost of HP is affected by oil prices; when oil prices are low,
Local HP Economics
Development, operating, and maintenance costs, and electricity generation
First check if site is developed or not.
If a dam does not exist, several things to consider are: land/land rights,
Construction Costs
Hydro costs are highly site specific
Dams are very expensive
Civil works form two-thirds of total cost
Varies 25 to 80%
Large Western schemes: $ 1200/kW
Developing nations: $ 800 to $ 2000/kW
Compare with CCGT: $ 600 to $800/kW
Production Costs
Compared with fossil-fuelled plant
No fuel costs
Low O&M cost
Long lifetime
Parameters
Payback-HP has higher payback time(25
years)
Net present value (NPV)
Unit cost
Discounting
Payback
Unit cost
Unit cost
Conclusion
Overall CCGT appears to be the better
investment
Environmental or operational benefits not
considered
Overall HP is still a better investment for
future
Small HP costs
Machinery-includes turbine, gearbox or drive
Small HP costs
Electrical Works-control panel and control
system, wiring.
External Costs-includes the services of
someone to design the installation, costs of
obtaining a water license, planning costs and
cost of connection to the electricity network
-these two depend on maximum power output
High head
1000s
1000s
Machinery
30 - 90
15 - 60
Civil works
10 - 40
20 - 40
Electrical works
10 - 20
10 - 20
8 - 15
8 - 15
________________
________________
58 - 165
53 - 135
Total:
early as 1946.
Project still under
construction with a part of
the dam in operation.
A concrete gravity dam, 1210
meters (3970 feet) in length
and with a maximum height
of 163 meters
communicable diseases.
Extension of Shoolpaneshwar sanctuary to cover an area
of 607 sq.km.
river.
Still under construction to
supply energy and provide
inland transportation.
Project expected to
complete in 2009.
Some Facts.
Dam to provide 18.2 GW of power using 26 Francis generators
of 700 MW each.
630 Km long and 1.3 Km wide capable of allowing 10,000-ton
ocean-going freighters to sail directly into the nation's interior
for six months of each year.
More than 2 million people are to be resettled.
The amount of concrete totals 26.43 million cubic meters,
twice that of the Itaipu project in Brazil, currently the world's
largest hydroelectric dam.
The dam will disrupt heavy silt flows in the river. It could