Chap 4 HSI
Chap 4 HSI
CHAPTER FOUR
HYDRAULIC STRUCTURES IN HYDROPOWER STATIONS
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Hydraulic Structures I Mastewal T.
4.1 Introduction
4.1 Preliminary
Hydroelectric power (often called hydropower) is considered a renewable energy source.
A renewable energy source is one that is not depleted (used up) in the production of energy.
Through hydropower, the energy in falling water is converted into electricity without “using up”
the water.
Flowing water is directed at a turbine (remember turbines are just advanced waterwheels). The
flowing water causes the turbine to rotate, converting the water’s kinetic energy into
mechanical energy.
The mechanical energy produced by the turbine is converted into electric energy using a
turbine generator. Inside the generator, the shaft of the turbine spins a magnet inside coils of
copper wire. It is a fact of nature that moving a magnet near a conductor causes an electric
current.
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4.1.1 Energy and Hydropower
Work
Def: When a force acts upon an object to cause a displacement of the object, it
is said that work was done upon the object. Three key ingredients to work -
force, displacement, and cause.
In order for a force to qualify as having done work on an object, there must be a
displacement and the force must cause the displacement.
W=Fxd
1 j = 1 N * m = Nm
Energy
Def: Energy is the ability / capacity to do work.
Potential Energy (gravitational PE): Gravitational potential energy is the energy stored in
an object as the result of its vertical position or height. The energy is stored as the result of
the gravitational attraction of the Earth for the object.
Kinetic Energy: It is the energy of motion. An object that has motion - whether it is vertical
or horizontal motion - has kinetic energy.
it has the unit of Joules
Power
Def: the rate at which energy is produced or consumed
it has the unit of Watt (KW, MW)
4.1.2 Sources of Energy
Conventional Unconventional
Tidal power
The above major sources of energy may also be classified as renewable and non-
renewable sources of energy.
Renewable Non-renewable
Hydropower Petroleum
Solar Coal
Wind ETC
ETC
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4.1.3 Power Resources
Resource Sources and efficiency Usage and availability
Fossil-Fuel Steam Coal, natural gas, oil or combination of fuels Base load service partly as intermediate load
30-40% of fuel energy converted to electricity units.
Several hours for start-up
Availability 65-85% of year
Nuclear Nuclear fission as fuel Exclusively base load service
33% of fuel energy converted to electricity Long start-up time
Availability 65-70% of year
Combustion Natural gas or distillate oil Peaking load service and standby reserve
turbines 25-30% of fuel energy converted to electricity Fast-start characteristics – few minutes
10-50% availability
Run-of-river River water used as a function of inflow Base load service with less possibility for
plants Energy conversion efficiency 80-90% intermediate service
Availability 95%
Storage hydro Water stored in reservoir used as a fuel Peak load and standby reserve
Energy conversion efficiency 80-90% Fast-start characteristics – few minutes
Availability 95%
Pumped storage Water stored in reservoir used as a fuel Peak load, standby reserve and grid regulation
Energy conversion efficiency 80-85% Fast-start and change production-pumping
Energy conversion by pumping 65-75% Availability 95%
Only effective electricity storage
Renewable Wind, geothermal steam, solar, bio-fuel, tidal In development and in experimental use
Less significant role in electricity production
4.1.4 Advantages and Disadvantages of Hydropower
Advantages
Hydropower has a ‘perpetual’ source of energy, while thermal power has a depletable
fossil fuel source;
Hydropower does not consume water;
Running cost of hydropower plant is very low compared to thermal and nuclear plants;
Hydropower plants can be brought into operation in few minutes while thermal and
nuclear power plants lack this capability. Thus, hydropower plants are particularly useful in
taking up short period peak loads in a power grid system.
Efficiency of hydropower system is very high (80 – 90%), while thermal power plants have
low efficiency, as low as 40%;
Hydropower development also provides secondary benefits such as recreation, fishing,
flood control, etc, where storage is contemplated.
Disadvantages
It is capital intensive and therefore rate of return is low;
The gestation period (about 10 to 15 years between initial idea and final project inauguration)
is long. This period is low for thermal power plants;
Hydropower is dependent on natural flow of streams. Since this is very variable the
dependable or firm power is considerably low compared to total capacity.
4.2 Types of Hydropower Plants
A. Plant Capacity
Type Capacity
1 Pico < 5 KW
2 Micro 5 to 100 KW
3 Mini 100 KW to 1 MW
4 Small 1 MW to 10 MW
5 Medium 10 to 100 MW
6 Large > 100 MW
7 Super above 1,000 MW
4.2.2 Classification based on Range of Operating Head
While any of the above classifications could be used to describe a power plant the most
popular & convenient classification is based on the head operating on the turbine.
In a grid system, a power station may be distinguished as a base load plant or peak load
plant.
Hydropower plants are best suited as peak load plants, because hydropower plants can
start relatively quickly and can thus accept load quickly
4.2.5 Classification based on hydraulic features
The basic hydraulic principle governs the type of classification in this category.
i. Conventional Hydro-plants
Use normally available hydraulic energy of the flowing water of the rivers.
Use the concept of recycling the same water by using pumping selectively.
It generates energy for peak load, and at off-peak periods water is pumped back for
future use.
A pumped storage plant is an economical addition to a system which increases the load
factor of other systems and also provides additional capacity to meet the peak load.
iii. Unconventional Hydro-plants
a) Tidal power plant
Hydropower generated by diverting an ample source of water (e.g. sea water) in the
natural depression which provides operating head for the plant
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Surge tank
Surge tank (or surge chamber) is a device introduced within a hydropower water conveyance
system having a rather long pressure conduit to absorb the excess pressure rise in case of a
sudden valve closure.
The surge tank is located between the almost horizontal or slightly inclined conduit and steeply
sloping penstock and is designed as a chamber excavated in the mountain.
It also acts as a small storage from which water may be supplied in case of a sudden valve opening
of the turbine.
In case of a sudden closure of turbine valve, there are chances of penstock collapse due to a
pressure rise, if there is no surge tank.
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Penstock
The penstock is the pipe which conveys water under pressure from the forebay tank to the turbine.
The penstock often constitutes a major expense in the total micro hydro budget, as much as 40
% is not uncommon in high head installations, and it is therefore worthwhile optimising the
design.
The trade-off is between head loss and capital cost. Head loss due to friction in the pipe
decrease dramatically with increasing pipe diameter.
Conversely, pipe costs increase steeply with diameter. Therefore a compromise between cost
and performance is required.
The design philosophy is first to identify available pipe options, then to select a target head loss,
5 % of the gross head being a good starting point. The details of the pipes with losses close to
this target are then tabulated and compared for cost effectiveness
. A smaller penstock may save on capital costs, but the extra head loss may account for lost
revenue from generated electricity each year.
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4.4 Hydraulic Turbines and classification
The purpose of a hydraulic turbine is to transform the water potential energy to mechanical rotational
energy / shaft energy.
Hydraulic turbines may be classified on the basis of
Flow regime and energy conversion in the turbine
1. Impulse turbines
2. Reaction turbines
Head
1. Very high head,
2. High head
3. Medium head
4. Low head
Discharge
1. High discharge
2. Medium discharge
3. Low discharge 26
4.4.1 Classification based on flow regime and energy conversion
Based on the way the hydraulic energy is converted in to mechanical energy:
Impulse turbine
Reaction turbine
4.4.1.1 Impulse turbines
The water’s potential energy is converted to kinetic energy before entering the runner.
The kinetic energy is in the form of a high speed jet that strikes the buckets mounted on
the periphery of the runner.
The pressure distribution along the turbine runner is almost atmospheric
E.g.
Pelton turbine
Turgo turbines
Cross-flow turbines 27
A. Pelton Turbine: Patented by Lester Pelton 1880
Bucket
Disc
Turbine
Runner
Shaft
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Pelton Turbine (Impulse Turbine)
Shaft (rotating)
connected to
generator
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Suitable for high head, low discharge plants
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Nozzles
B. Turgo Impulse turbine
The turbine is designed so that the jet of water strikes the buckets at an angle (20o)to
the face of the runner and the water passes over the buckets in an axial direction before
being discharged at the opposite side.
Disadvantages
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4.4.1.2 Reaction Turbine types:
Reaction turbine:
The water potential energy is converted to both pressure energy and kinetic
energy.
The turbine runner is entirely submerged and both the velocity and pressure head
are varying while water flows through the runner.
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The Francis Turbine: Developed by James B. Francisari
Runner
Scroll case
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Francis Turbine (Reaction turbine)
Water enters radial
Water leaves axially 40
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Kaplan Turbine
Propeller Turbine
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Francis Vs. Kaplan turbine
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4.4.2 Classification based on head
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3.3 Turbine selection criteria
We have seen several different types of turbines
Impulse turbines
Pelton
Turgo
Crossflow
Reaction turbines
Francis
Kaplan
Propeller
The type, geometry and dimensions of the turbine will be fundamentally conditioned by the
following criteria:
1. Net head
2. Range of discharges through the turbine
3. Rotational speed
4. Cavitation problems
5. Cost
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A. Net head
• The gross head is the vertical distance, between the water surface level at the intake and at
the tailrace for reaction turbines and the nozzle level for impulse turbines. Once the gross
head is known, the net head can be computed by simply subtracting the losses along its
path.
» Gross head = Headwater – Tailwater (Reaction turbines)
» Gross head = Headwater – Nozzle level (Impulse Turbine)
» Nethead = Grosshead – losses in the conveyance system
• The first criterion to take into account in the turbine selection is the net head. The following
tables specifies for each turbine type its range of operating heads. The table shows some
overlapping, so that for a certain head several types of turbines can be used.
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Reaction Turbines
Gross Head
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Impulse Turbines
Gross Head
B. Discharge
Recall that the temporal variation of discharge in a stream for power development is captured
by Flow Duration Curve. Q100 , Q50, Q30, etc.
Although a turbine can operate on a range of flow, it will operate at the maximum efficiency
for a single flow: rated flow. The corresponding head is the rated head. Often times the Q50
taken as the rated flow (design flow).
Given the rated flow and net head, the set of turbines that are applicable for a given flow
environment are selected from Operational Envelopes .
A point defining a given flow and head will usually plot within several of these envelopes.
e.g Qd 2 m3/s and Hd = 20 m
Francis
Kaplan
Crossflow
All of these turbines are appropriate for the job. Decision will be made once installed
power and energy output are computed against cost.
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C. Specific Speed
In all modern hydro-power plants, turbines are directly coupled to the generator to
reduce transmission losses. This arrangement of coupling limits the range of speed to be
used for the turbines.
Turbine runner speed = Generator rotor speed
e.g., if generator rotor speed is1500 rpm then turbine 1500rpm
Scaled Models
Turbine manufacturers use scaled models to study performance characteristics of
turbines.
The scaled models are developed based on hydraulic similitude (similarity laws). A
model is said to be hydraulically similar to its prototype:
Geometric similarity
Kinematic similarity
Dynamic similarity 51
Given a turbine with a speed n (rpm), operating at head H (m) producing power P (KW),
the speed at which a geometrically similar turbine would rotate if it were so proportioned
that it would develop Power =1 kW when operating under a head of H=1m is known as the
specific speed and is given by
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