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2007-02-12 22:31:17 · 7 answers · asked by rajesh kumar 1 in Science & Mathematics Engineering

7 answers

yes and no.many times thermal and steam power plants are the same in the cases that there is installed a steam generator which run the turbines and this is due to the steam.thermal energy may be abstracteed from sun,coal,methane gase,lpg,cng,and so on. in this sense they are different but unto the steam they are the same.
ok?

2007-02-12 22:58:10 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

All powerplants work basically the same way. There are five main types: solar, wind, hydro, geo-thermal, and fuel plants. The one your concerned with are the geo-thermal and fuel consuming powerplants... Here is your explaination:

When generating power, a device called a generator is used. In a very simple explaination, generators no different than and electric motor, just reversed, when you turn the axle electricity flows through the wire.

Now, there needs to be a way to turn the generator, this is where the steam comes in. No matter if it is a Nuclear Power Plant, or a Coal buring plant, the same basic principle is used: the fuel gets hot, heats up water to its boiling point, the heated water turns to steam, the steam creates and huge ammount of pressure, the pressure turns a turbine, which in turn rotates the axle of the generator sending electricity trough the wire.

In the case of a geothermal plant, nothing is different, accept the heat source is some form of geothermal spring, lava flow, or hot vent from the earth, used to produce steam and turn the turbine.

So, as you can see any fuel consuming powerplant (whether the fuel is uranium, plutonium, oil, or coal) uses the thermal energy of water to produce electricity.

2007-02-12 22:42:03 · answer #2 · answered by swivels7 2 · 0 1

All current thermal generation schemes use the heat to generate steam to turn a turbine. To generate electricity you need to generate mechanical motion inside a generator from the heat and the safest and simplest form is to use steam.

2007-02-13 00:13:37 · answer #3 · answered by Brian K² 6 · 0 0

won't be able to provide you with any reference books on the problem yet can in trouble-free words attempt to describe what we use to do in order to relax the turbine as quickly because it become off load to enable upkeep artwork to be finished on the turbine faster. The properly cooling become through throttling the steam stepping into the turbine even as on load and subsequently decreasing the turbine metallic temperatures. once off load, a small 415v pushed fan become linked to the reheat provide pipe close to to the turbine, generally through a non go back flap conceal. through adjusting the hollow the turbine steam valves, cooling would nicely be directed through the turbine. This had to be monitored heavily to verify no intense cooling expenditures occurred and the different parameters - differential boom etc - were no longer exceeded.

2016-11-27 19:49:53 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No. Not necessarily. Nuclear power plans are thermal too.

2007-02-12 22:36:34 · answer #5 · answered by Phillip 4 · 0 1

Geothermal.... NO Thermal might be considered the same....... but doubtful.

2007-02-12 22:37:11 · answer #6 · answered by mdlbldrmatt135 4 · 0 1

Yes, both are same.

2007-02-12 22:48:14 · answer #7 · answered by MuAn 1 · 1 0

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