HWRE3141 Ch-4
HWRE3141 Ch-4
HWRE3141 Ch-4
A complete understanding of the type requires information under all such categories. All the above
classification basis are not mutually exclusive.
i) Conventional Hydro-plants
Use normally available hydraulic energy of the flow of the river.
Run-of river plant, diversion plant, storage plant
Thus in a grid system, a power station may be distinguished as a base load plant or peak load plant.
Hydropower plants are best suited as peak load plants, because hydropower plants can start relatively
quickly and can thus accept load quickly.
Hydropower
Load (MW)
Nuclear
Thermal
Time (months)
Figure 4.1: Place of hydropower in a power system.
iv) High capacity > 10,000KW iv) Super plant above 1,000 MW
a) Block power plant b) Twin block plant c)Island plant d) pier head plant e)
Submersible plant
Figure 4.2: Run-off-River Plant Arrangement
Preferred in perennial rivers with moderate to high discharge, flat slope, little sediment and stable
reach of a river.
Water enters the power house through an intake structure incorporating some or all of the following.
1.- Entrance flume separated by piers and walls for each machine unit.
2.- Turbine chamber: scroll case with turbine
3.- Concrete or steel draft tube
4.- Power house building
Additional structures are
- deflector or skimmer walls
- forebay
- service bridge
- river training walls
- sediment trap and flushing sluices, where necessary
The power house is provided at suitable location along the stretch of the canal
The water often flowing through the turbine is brought back to the old stream.
Diversion canal plants are generally low head or medium head plants.
They don't have storage.
Pondage requirement is met through a pool called forebay located just u/s of the power house.
i) The flatter slopes of power canal and the absence of meander, by reducing length, helps in providing
head.
Let distance from A to B along main river be 15km
>> average slope of main river be 1 in 500
:. Total head difference b/n A & B = 30m.
Let length of power canal be 8km
>> average slope of power canal be 1 in 800
:. Level difference b/n A & forebay = 10m
:. Difference b/n forebay & B = 30-10 = 20m
ii) If the river has a natural fall, diverting the water from u/s side of the fall & locating the power house
at the d/s side of the fall provide the required head.
iii) In inter-basin diversion, water may be diverted from a higher level river to a lower river through a
diversion canal to the power house located at the lower river.
a) A diversion weir to create pondage ( and no storage). Here like run-off-plant the power production is
governed by the natural flow in the river.
b) Storage may be provided on the main river at the point of diversion. (This second situation is
advantageous since the fluctuation in reservoir level does not materially affect the head and the power
output can be adjusted by the controlled flow release from the reservoir. Eg. Fincha & Melka Wakana
power plants)
This kind of plant generates energy for peak load, & at off peak period water is pumped back for future
use. During off peak periods excess power available from some other plants in the system is used in
pumping back water from the lower reservoir.
Another way of classifying is as pure pumped storage scheme and mixed plant scheme (total
generation>pumping and higher reservoir on a natural system).
The most important basis of pumped storage plant is the relative arrangements of turbines and pumps
- four units -pump, motor, generator, turbine
- three units- pump, generator, turbine
- two units-generator, turbine>reversible pump-turbine installation
Storage is provide to balance seasonal fluctuation by building reservoir dams. Pondage is provided
through balancing reservoir or forebay for short term fluctuations (daily or hourly)
Reservoir capacity is determined by means of mass curve procedure of computing the necessary capacity
corresponding to a given inflow and demand pattern. Reservoir capacity has to be adjusted to account for
the dead storage, evaporation losses and carry over storage.
Storage (1)
Dam (2)
Appurtenant Structure: Intake and Spillage Structures:
Spillage Structure: Spillway (5)
Intake: Service Intake (3) and Bottom Outlet (4)
Surveillance Structure (in Dam, in Foundation as well as Valley Sides)
Diversion (6)
Service Road (7)
Dead storage
This is a storage capacity of the reservoir provided to accommodate the deposition of silt in the reservoir.
It is expected that the dead storage space will eventually fill up with sediment at which time one says the
dam has served its full purpose.The life of a reservoir is dependent on the silting capacity of the
reservoir. Provisions for flushing out silt through deep seated bottom outlets/sluices is made in most
dams. However this has a limited effectiveness.
Evaporation Loss
Provision should be made for evaporation since it is an important loss item actual evaporation rate
depends upon location & meteorological factors. In arid and semi-arid regions at least 2 to 2.5m of depth
should be added as a rule of thumb.
Sometimes it may be required to carry over some of the live storage to the next year as a safety measure.
This carry over storage is determined by analyzing the storage requirement for a sequence of two or
three consecutive dry years.
2) Pondage Capacity
Pondage capacity is determination for varying inflow is similar to storage capacity determination.
If hourly inflows for a typical day are known, one can calculate the average hourly requirement and
determine the total maximum cumulative departures from the average over a 24 hour period. This will
then be the pondage needed to equalize the daily flow fluctuations.