Hydroelectric Power: Potential Energy Kinetic Renewable Dam
Hydroelectric Power: Potential Energy Kinetic Renewable Dam
Hydroelectric Power: Potential Energy Kinetic Renewable Dam
Hydro means "water". So, hydropower is "water power" and hydroelectric power is electricity
generated using water power. Potential energy (or the "stored" energy in a reservoir) becomes
kinetic (or moving energy). This is changed to mechanical energy in a power plant, which is then
turned into electrical energy. Hydroelectric power is a renewable resource.
In an impoundment facility (see below), water is stored behind a dam in a reservoir. In the dam
is a water intake. This is a narrow opening to a tunnel called a penstock.
Water pressure (from the weight of the water and gravity) forces the water through the penstock
and onto the blades of a turbine. A turbine is similar to the blades of a child's pinwheel. But
instead of breath making the pinwheel turn, the moving water pushes the blades and turns the
turbine.
The turbine spins because of the force of the water. The turbine is connected to an electrical
generator inside the powerhouse. The generator produces electricity that travels over long-
distance power lines to homes and businesses. The entire process is called hydroelectricity.
There are three types of hydropower facilities: impoundment, diversion, and pumped storage.
Some hydropower plants use dams and some do not. The images below show both types of
hydropower plants.
Many dams were built for other purposes and hydropower was added later. In the United States,
there are about 80,000 dams of which only 2,400 produce power. The other dams are for
recreation, stock/farm ponds, flood control, water supply, and irrigation.
Hydropower plants range in size from small systems for a home or village to large projects
producing electricity for utilities.
Impoundment
A diversion, sometimes called run-of-river, facility channels a portion of a river through a canal
or penstock. It may not require the use of a dam.
Pumped storage
When the demand for electricity is low, a pumped storage facility stores energy by pumping
water from a lower reservoir to an upper reservoir. During periods of high electrical demand, the
water is released back to the lower reservoir to generate electricity.
Large hydropower
Although definitions vary, the U.S. Department of Energy defines large hydropower as facilities
that have a capacity of more than 30 megawatts.
Small hydropower
Although definitions vary, DOE defines small hydropower as facilities that have a capacity of
100 kilowatts to 30 megawatts.
Microhydropower
Hydropower offers advantages over other energy sources but faces unique environmental
challenges.
Advantages
Hydropower is a fueled by water, so it's a clean fuel source. Hydropower doesn't pollute the air
like power plants that burn fossil fuels, such as coal or natural gas.
Hydropower relies on the water cycle, which is driven by the sun, thus it's a renewable power
source.
Hydropower is generally available as needed; engineers can control the flow of water through
the turbines to produce electricity on demand.
Disadvantages
Fish populations can be impacted if fish cannot migrate upstream past impoundment
dams to spawning grounds or if they cannot migrate downstream to the ocean.
Upstream fish passage can be aided using fish ladders or elevators, or by trapping and
hauling the fish upstream by truck. Downstream fish passage is aided by diverting fish
from turbine intakes using screens or racks or even underwater lights and sounds, and
by maintaining a minimum spill flow past the
turbine.
New hydropower facilities impact the local environment and may compete with other
uses for the land. Those alternative uses may be more highly valued than electricity
generation. Humans, flora, and fauna may lose their natural habitat. Local cultures and
historical sites may be impinged upon. Some older hydropower facilities may have
historic value, so renovations of these facilities must also be sensitive to such
preservation concerns and to impacts on plant and animal life.
History of hydropower
Humans have been harnessing water to perform work for thousands of years. The Greeks used
water wheels for grinding wheat into flour more than 2,000 years ago. Besides grinding flour, the
power of the water was used to saw wood and power textile mills and manufacturing plants.
For more than a century, the technology for using falling water to create hydroelectricity has
existed. The evolution of the modern hydropower turbine began in the mid-1700s when a
French hydraulic and military engineer, Bernard Forest de Bélidor wrote Architecture
Hydraulique. In this four volume work, he described using a vertical-axis versus a horizontal-
axis machine.
During the 1700s and 1800s, water turbine development continued. In 1880, a brush arc light
dynamo driven by a water turbine was used to provide theatre and storefront lighting in Grand
Rapids, Michigan; and in 1881, a brush dynamo connected to a turbine in a flour mill provided
street lighting at Niagara Falls, New York. These two projects used direct-current technology.
Alternating current is used today. That breakthrough came when the electric generator was
coupled to the turbine, which resulted in the world's, and the United States', first hydroelectric
plant located in Appleton, Wisconsin, in 1882.