Thermal power plants primarily use steam turbines powered by the combustion of fossil fuels, such as coal, natural gas, or oil, to generate electricity. While some thermal plants may use diesel engines for specific applications, such as peaking power plants or backup generation, they are not the mainstay of thermal power generation. Diesel engines are more commonly associated with smaller-scale power generation or emergency backup systems rather than large thermal power facilities.
Cars, airplanes, diesel locomotives, peaker plants, emergency generators, etc.
it is more economical than diesel power generator but like diesel it is using fossilized fuel and creates pollution in the air
Geothermal power plants and Stirling engines are examples of machines that operate using thermal energy. Geothermal power plants harness heat from beneath the Earth's surface to generate electricity, while Stirling engines use temperature differentials to drive a piston and produce mechanical work.
Thermal power plant,Hydro power plant,Nuclear power plant,Diesel power plant.
thermal power plants are located in Orissa and Kerala.
Electronics are used in thermal power plants when the power from the thermal power plants are transferred to a storage source. There, electronics comes in.
Electronics are used in thermal power plants when the power from the thermal power plants are transferred to a storage source. There, electronics comes in.
Yes.
Only if it is bio-diesel, aka from plants. Most diesel is a product of crude oil though.
The thermal energy from many sources can be converted into various forms of energy, including mechanical energy for power generation in engines or turbines, electrical energy in power plants, or chemical energy in certain industrial processes.
Typically the force here is friction. As the object moves through some medium friction is generated between the particles of the object and the particles of the medium, converting kinetic energy into thermal energy.
Do you mean nuclear plants? See link below