This type of plant is called a hydro power plant.
A hydrolic power plant is a power plant that uses water. The hydrolic power plant uses the evaporation and condensation of water to work. The largest hydrolic power plant is Itaipu power plant.
No, a power plant that uses fossil fuels such as gas or coal, cannot be classified as a thermal power plant. A thermal power plant uses the heat from deep within the earth, combined with water to create steam, which then powers the turbines.
A power plant is designed to produce electricity.
mitochondria, because they make ATP that your body uses as energy
Coal is used in furnaces to heat water in a boiler to superheated (above 100 degrees Celsius) temperatures, and this steam is used to drive a turbine which, in turn, drives an alternator. A hydroelectric plant uses the vertical fall of water to drive a water turbine which drives an alternator.
VC Summer Nuclear Power Station uses a Westinghouse "light water" reactor. "Light water" means that the nuclear reaction is moderated by regular H2O (as opposed to "heavy water" which uses a heavier Hydrogen isotope called "deuterium").
The energy sector for power plant cooling, followed by agriculture.
The turbines or Pelton wheels in a hydroelectric power plant are turned by water pressure.
To produce electricity
For all of you people out there that don't know this, the plant uses water as one of the elements it uses to make its food, glucose or sugar. A plant uses the suns rays, water, and carbon dioxide. In affect to that, that gives us oxygen for us to breath.
No, but virtually every large scale power plant uses water in an industrial fashion. But the little generator I use when camping does not have or use any water.
nuclear power plant