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Technical Issues
The next considerations were concerned with power production available, penstock and channel lengths
and the distance to the secondary distribution substation.
Site 1 has the greatest power potential and
the shortest transmission distance.
Site 2 has the shortest penstock, but the
longest channel length and longest transmission distance.
Site 3-b has no channel at all, but a very long penstock.The penstock has by far the greater expense than the channel,
so site 3-b does not seem good compared to site 1, which has penstock of half the length, greater power production potential
and shorter transmission distance.
Site 1 has a slighlty shorter channel and shorter transmission distance than site 2, but a penstock one and half times greater.
However the potential resource is approximately four times greater for site 1, which outweighs the benefits of site 2 in the
power orders being considered .
Site-1 was selected as the most appropriate
location for the embedded hydro-electric plant.
annual average rainfall: 2148
mm
annual average evaporation and transpiration:
350 mm
catchment area: 6 km²
Fig.2 shows daily water flow variations in
this stream for a typical year.
Fig.2. Daily water flow variations in this
stream for a typical year.
The system will consist of the following components:
-
weir
-
intake
-
channel
-
spillways
-
settling pond
-
penstock
-
power house
-
turbine
-
generator
-
step-up transformer
-
transmission lines
The proposed layout of the scheme
is shown in fig.3.
As the water flows from the intake, along the channel and down through the penstock, potential energy is lost.
These losses occur in the form of friction and turbulence losses. The losses in the channel are due to the height
difference through which the channel must fall. Losses in the penstock are caused by friction of water against
water and of water against pipe-wall, and also by turbulence at various points in the pipe. These losses effectively
reduce the head further.
The total head minus the all the losses in head is described as the effective head. This is the value used in the calculation
of the potential energy which the turbine
absorbs.
For
the case study the calculation of head loss is given here.
The values are given below.
total head,![]()
channel head loss,
penstock head loss,
There are various types of hydro-turbines, each with a preferred operating domain in terms of head and flow-rate.
Fig.4 shows the typical operating domain for
the three major turbine types - Pelton, Francis and Kaplan.
Fig.4.Typical operating domain for the three
major turbine types - Pelton, Francis and Kaplan.
The effective head at the site is 48m, which
implies the most appropriate turbine is the Francis (within our capacity range).
The efficiency of a Francis turbine is a function
of percentage of water flow - shown in fig.5.
fig.5.Efficiency of a Francis turbine
eq.1
where
is
acceleration due to gravity;
,
is
density of water, assumed here to be
is
overall system efficiency: generation & transmission (see below)
is effective head;
is
water flow at any given time
generation efficiences
turbine efficiency,
see
above
generator efficiency,
~
97% (typically)
gear efficiency,
~
98% (typically)
transformer efficiency,
~
98% (typical)
line efficiency,
~ 90% (typical)
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