Power Stations: Section One: Reading Comprehension
Power Stations: Section One: Reading Comprehension
Power Stations: Section One: Reading Comprehension
Power Stations
There are five sources of energy which together account for nearly all the
world's electricity. They are coal, oil, natural gas, hydroelectric power and
nuclear energy. Coal, oil and nuclear plants use the steam cycle to turn heat into
electrical energy, in the following way. The steam power station uses very pure
water in a closed cycle. First it is heated in the boilers to produce steam at high
pressure and high temperature, typically 150 atmospheres and 550°C in a
modern station. This high-pressure steam drives the turbines which in turn
drive the electric generators, to which they are directly coupled. The maximum
amount of energy will be transferred from the steam to the turbines only if the
latter are allowed to exhaust at a very low pressure, ideally a vacuum. This can
be achieved by condensing the outlet steam into water. The water is then pumped
back into the boilers and the cycle begins again. At the condensing stage a large
quantity of heat has to be extracted from the system. This heat is removed in the
condenser which is a form of heat exchanger. A much larger quantity of cold
impure water enters one side of the condenser and leaves as warm water,
having extracted enough heat from the exhaust steam to condense it back into
water. At no point must the two water systems mix. At a coastal site the warmed
impure water is simply returned to the sea at a point a short distance away. A
2 GW station needs about 60 tons of sea water each second. This is no problem
on the coast, but inland very few sites could supply so much water all the year
round. The alternative is to recirculate the impure water. Cooling towers are
used to cool the impure water so that it can be returned to the condensers, the
same water being cycled continuously. A cooling tower is the familiar concrete
structure like a very broad chimney and acts in a similar way, in that it induces
a natural draught. A large volume of air is drawn in round the base and leaves
through the open top. The warm, impure water is sprayed into the interior of
the tower from a large number of fine jets, and as it falls it is cooled by the rising
air, finally being collected in a pond under the tower. The cooling tower is really
a second heat exchanger where the heat in the impure water is passed to the
atmospheric air; but unlike the first heat exchanger, the two fluids are
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allowed to come into contact and as a consequence some of the water is lost by
evaporation.
The cooling towers are never able to reduce the impure water tempera-
ture right down to the ambient air temperature, so that the efficiency of the
condenser and hence the efficiency of the whole station is reduced slightly
compared with a coastal site. The construction of the cooling towers also
increases the capital cost of building the power station. The need for cooling
water is an important factor in the choice of sites for coal, oil and nuclear
plants. A site which is suitable for a power station using one type of fuel is
not necessarily suitable for a station using another fuel.
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Hydroelectric Power Stations
Hydroelectric power stations must be sited where the head of water is available,
and as this is often in mountainous areas, they may need long transmission lines to
carry the power to the nearest load center or link up with the grid. All
hydroelectric schemes depend on two fundamental factors: a flow of water and a
difference in level or head. The necessary head may be obtained between a lake and a
nearby valley, or by building a small dam in a river which diverts the flow through
the power station, or by building a high dam across a valley to create an artificial
lake.
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c. to create the vacuum space necessary for the system
d. to create the pressure and temperature needed
3. The heat of the steam is removed by .......... the condenser.
a. the recirculation of cold pure water in
b. the flow of natural air in one side of
c. the recirculation of the steam in
d. the flow of cold water through one side of
4. Prior to recirculation, impure water must be cooled ........... .
a. in broad concrete structures b. in broad metal chimneys
c. at the bottom of the tower d. at the top of the tower
5. The cooling factor in a cooling tower is .......... the tower.
a. the pond under b. the interior of
c. the water inside d. the air passing through
6. Systems recirculating impure water, compared with those on the coast,
……… .
a. decrease the efficiency of the station
b. increase the capital cost of building the station
c. reduce the impure water temperature to the required level
d. both a and b
7. The first paragraph mainly discusses .......... .
a. the structure of a condenser compared with that of a cooling
tower
b. the mechanism of the steam power station
c. the main sources of energy which account for electricity
d. the cooling water as a deciding factor in the choice of sites for coal,
oil, and nuclear plants
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10. Why is the cost of transporting nuclear fuel negligible compared with
coal and oil?
given.
1. Exchange
a. The atomic movements of materials are said to be held in parallel or
antiparallel by exchange forces, thought to be due to the sharing or
.......... of electrons between neighbouring atoms in the crystal
structure of the material.
b. Coupling forces, similar to the .......... forces of the atom, exist
between the molecules of a compound.
c. Cooling towers and condensers are two kinds of heat .......... .
2. Circulate
a. A .......... register retains data by inserting it into a delaying means
and regenerating and reinserting the data into the register.
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b. A constant flow of electrolyte through a cell to facilitate the
maintenance of uniform conditions of electrolysis is known as ..........
of electrolyte.
C. A................magnetic wave is a traverse magnetic wave for which the
lines of magnetic force form concentric circles.
3. Couple
a. Water heated in the boilers of the steam power station produces
steam at high pressure which drives the turbines .......... to generators.
b. Typical oscillators are in practice amplifiers in which power is fed
into the grid circuit from the plate circuit by means of either
electrostatic or electromagnetic .......... between these circuits.
4. Condense
a. Condensed-mercury temperature is the temperature measured on the
outside of the tube envelope in the region where the mercury is .........
in a glass tube or at a designated point on a metal tube.
b. Steam can be .......... into water.
c. A .......... is a form of heat exchanger.
5. Drive
a. A .......... is an electronic circuit that supplies input to another
electronic circuit.
b. Grid .......... power is the average of the product of the instantaneous
values of the alternating components of the grid current and the
grid voltage over a complete cycle .
b. A system consisting of one or several electric motors and of the entire
electric control equipment designed to govern the perfor-
mance of these motors is called the electric .......... .
Any steam power station burning coal or .......... could fairly easily be
converted to burn .......... gas. Such stations must, of course, be .......... near a
large gas main. However, it is .......... felt that natural gas is too high a/an ..........
fuel and too valuable as an industrial ..........stock and home heating fuel, to
be.......... in power stations. The point is that gas burnt to produce electricity
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which might then be used for home heating, would produce .......... at about 33
percent efficiency, whereas the .......... gas burnt in a domestic boiler would
.......... heat at up to 80 percent efficiency.
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