generally for a condensing turbine the quantity for generating one MW electricity the steam quantity remains 8.5 t/h.
it will depend on the design of Turbine
in Our project it is 5.5 t/MW
Probably 1.5 to 2 Kw, depending on efficiency.
That depends how fast the energy is used. Kilocalories are a measure of energy and KW is a measure of power. Power is the rate at which energy is transferred from one form to another.
yes in the generators to produce electricity.
Using a geothermal transformer
They produce electricity be burning coal and then the coal is used to heat, light and do lots of other things.
It can be burned as fuel once all the water is squeezed out of it first. It can also be put through a fermentation process which releases lots of methane gas which is what helps produce electricity.
A 300 grams of water takes about 90 seconds to boil in a 2 kW kettle, so that is 2000 watts x 90 seconds which is 180,000 Joules of energy. But to convert that water completely into steam requires an extra 300x550x4.2 Joules, which is nearly 700,000 Joules. So converting it to steam takes 4-5 times as much energy as boiling it. That is why it takes a while for a kettle to boil dry.
They can all be used to spin turbines that will generate electricity.
By spinning turbines witch generates electricity
true
I think it can be with various water turbines and water current transformers.
The different forms of energy:solar , wind, tide, water . These can be used to produce electricity.
The Space Shuttle uses fuel cells to produce electricity. The hydrogen (H2) is burned with the oxygen (O2) to produce clean water (H2O). The heat is used to produce the electricity. The fresh water is then used by the crew or transfered to the International Space Station for drinking and showering. The Apollo Service Modules used a similar system for power and water.
when metal reacts with an acid, or when electricity is used to separate water into hydrogen and water.
Yes, that is how they are used to generate electricity.
If you mean nuclear fission, then this does not generate electricity directly. The energy released is essentially light/heat energy and this is used to heat water to produce steam. The steam is then used to drive turbines/generators to produce the electricity.
fossil fuels used gor heating water to produce steam which further runs turbine to generate electricity
Wind and water force can be used to turn turbines which in turn produce electricity. I'm not entirely sure how turbines work but I believe that the turning motion produces kinetic energy which can be harnessed as electricity.
Yes, they can. If a dam is placed across the river, falling water over the dam can drive turbines which produce electricity.