Before embarking on any hydro power generation project it is essential to survey the proposed site to calculate the amount of available hydro power. ![]() The two vital factors to consider are the flow and the head of the stream or river. The flow is the volume of water which can be captured and re-directed to turn the turbine generator, and the head is the distance the water will fall on its way to the generator. The larger the flow – i.e. the more water there is, and the higher the head – i.e. the higher the distance the water falls – the more energy is available for conversion to electricity. Double the flow and double the power, double the head and double the power again. A low head site has a head of below 10 metres. In this case you need to have a good volume of water flow if you are to generate much electricity. A high head site has a head of above 20 metres. In this case you can get away with not having a large flow of water, because gravity will give what you have an energy boost. The key equation to remember is the following: Power = Head x Flow x Gravity
where power is measured in Watts, head in metres, flow in litres per second, and acceleration due to gravity in metres per second per second. Therefore it is very simple to calculate how much hydro power you can generate. 12 x 20 x 9.81 = 2,354 Watts
Real World Hydro Power CalculationSo in the example above a 12 metre head with a 20 litres per second flow rate equated to just over 2.3kW of available power. Sadly it is not possible to tap all of that power – nothing is 100% efficient. However, hydro power turbine generators are very efficient when compared to wind turbine generators and solar panels. Efficiencies of around 70% can be expected which is to say that 70% of the hydraulic energy of the flowing water can be turned into mechanical energy spinning the turbine generator. The remaining 30% is lost. Energy is again lost in converting the mechanical energy into electrical energy (electricity) and so at the end of the day you can expect a complete system efficiency of around 50-60%. In our previous example where 2.3kW of power was available – we can therefore expect to generate around 1.1-1.4kW of electricity. |
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来自: trojan2014 > 《计算》