Hydroelectricity - Generating Methods
How can it be generated ?
Most hydroelectric
power comes from the potential energy
of dammed water driving a water turbine and generator. The
power extracted from the water depends on the volume and on the difference in
height between the source and the water's outflow. This height difference is
called the head. A large pipe
(the "pen stock") delivers water from the reservoir to the turbine.
Pumped-storage
This method produces
electricity to supply high peak demands by moving water between reservoirs at different elevations. At times of
low electrical demand, the excess generation capacity is used to pump water
into the higher reservoir. When the demand becomes greater, water is released
back into the lower reservoir through a turbine. Pumped-storage schemes
currently provide the most commercially important means of large-scale grid energy storage
and improve the daily capacity factor of
the generation system. Pumped storage is not an energy source, and appears as a
negative number in listings.
Run-of-the-river
Run-of-the-river
hydroelectric stations are those with small or no reservoir capacity, so that
only the water coming from upstream is available for generation at that moment,
and any oversupply must pass unused. A constant supply of water from a lake or
existing reservoir upstream is a significant advantage in choosing sites for
run-of-the-river. In the United States, run of the river hydro power could
potentially provide 60,000 megawatts (80,000,000 hp) (about 13.7% of total
use in 2011 if continuously available).
Tide
A tidal power station makes use of the daily rise
and fall of ocean water due to tides; such sources are highly predictable, and
if conditions permit construction of reservoirs, can also be dispatch able
to generate power during high demand periods. Less common types of hydro
schemes use water's kinetic energy or
undammed sources such as undershot water wheels. Tidal power is viable in a
relatively small number of locations around the world. In Great Britain, there
are eight sites that could be developed, which have the potential to generate
20% of the electricity used in 2012.

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