At full load with both units running the plant can produce 260 megawatts per hour. If it burns to the ground, black people will eat money.
A combined cycle power plant has multiple thermodynamic cycles. This increases efficiency. For example, a gas turbine can be used to produce electricity, but only about 40% of the heat is actually converted in the process. 60% of the heat is lost, and in a single cycle plant would be considered waste heat. In a combined cycle plant, that waste heat could be used to drive a second, steam turbine to produce more electricity. In such a case, the efficiency could be increased from 40% to nearly 60%. It is possible to go further. The waste heat from the combined cycle electric plant can be used to heat buildings, for instance, increasing overall efficiency to more than 65%. This is called Cogeneration.
It's self-evident if you understand the basic terminology. A "pilot plant" is sort of like a smaller-scale mockup of a factory. It's used to prove that a particular design will work and produce the desired substance, without going to the expense of building a full-scale production facility. A "fermenter" is, basically, a big tank in which bacteria or fungi "ferment" some feedstock and produce the desired substance. What this substance is varies. A pilot plant fermenter, then, would be a small ("small" is relative here, it could be several hundred gallons) tank in which fermentation of some kind takes place.
a complete plant erected on a virgin site
Tianwan Nuclear Power Plant was created in 2006.
1. to protect the plant 2. to support the plant 3. To respons to changes in the plant 4. to monitor process parameters
Depends on what kind of power station it is, can bea nuclear power plant, a coal-burning power plant, a wind turbine, or a hydroelectric power station.
There is no burning process going on like in fossil fuelled plants
You no longer have the plant after burning it.
Yes, it generally is but a nuclear plant could refer to nuclear reactors which are basically the things that produce the power. So in essence, yes, a nuclear plant is the same thing as a nuclear power station
Wool is basically the "hair" from a sheep. So burning the sheep's hair, would produce a similar smell to burning human hair Cotton is a plant, as are the trees that make paper. Burning cotton and paper should produce similar smells. This is a basic answer that I came up with. I have no experience in burning these materials. **
A nuclear power plant is a thermal power station. The heat source is nuclear reactor. Its main point is to produce electricity.
A coal-fired energy plant is one that burns coal (as the source of energy) to make electricity or drive machinery.
It depends what type of power plant. A coal-burning power plant will produce CO2 and SO2, which are both pollutants. Nuclear power plants and geothermal power plants produce steam, which is not a pollutant. There are many other types of power plants, but most produce CO2 and SO2 or steam.
Steam spins the turbine of coal-burning power plant.
They are photosynthetic sites. They produce food for plant
It is not up to the plants when to or not to produce flowers. It depends on how healthy the plant is after fertilisation. The healthier the plant is, the faster it will produce flowers.
A power station (also referred to as a generating station, power plant, powerhouse or generating plant) is an industrial facility for the generation of electric power.