Concept Of Electric Generator & Types - SKengineers
CONCEPT OF ELECTRIC GENERATORS -
In electricity generation, a generator is a device that
converts motive power (mechanical energy) into electrical power for use in an
external circuit. Sources of mechanical energy include steam turbines, gas
turbines, water turbines, internal combustion engines, wind turbines and even
hand cranks. The first electromagnetic generator, the Faraday disk, was
invented in 1831 by British scientist Michael Faraday. Generators provide
nearly all of the power for electric power grids.
The reverse conversion of electrical energy into mechanical
energy is done by an electric motor, and motors and generators have many
similarities. Many motors can be mechanically driven to generate electricity;
frequently they make acceptable manual generators.
electric generator, also called dynamo, any machine that converts mechanical energy to electricity for transmission and distribution over power lines to domestic, commercial, and industrial customers. Generators also produce the electrical power required for automobiles, aircraft, ships, and trains.
The mechanical power for an electric generator is usually obtained from a rotating shaft and is equal to the shaft torque multiplied by the rotational, or angular, velocity. The mechanical power may come from a number of sources: hydraulic turbines at dams or waterfalls; wind turbines; steam turbines using steam produced with heat from the combustion of fossil fuels or from nuclear fission; gas turbines burning gas directly in the turbine; or gasoline and diesel engines. The construction and the speed of the generator may vary considerably depending on the characteristics of the mechanical prime mover.
Nearly all generators used to supply electric power networks
generate alternating current, which reverses polarity at a fixed frequency
(usually 50 or 60 cycles, or double reversals, per second). Since a number of
generators are connected into a power network, they must operate at the same
frequency for simultaneous generation. They are therefore known as synchronous
generators or, in some contexts, alternators.
Synchronous generators -
A major reason for selecting alternating current for power
networks is that its continual variation with time allows the use of
transformers. These devices convert electrical power at whatever voltage and
current it is generated to high voltage and low current for long-distance
transmission and then transform it down to a low voltage suitable for each
individual consumer (typically 120 or 240 volts for domestic service). The
particular form of alternating current used is a sine wave, which has the shape
shown in Figure 1. This has been chosen because it is the only repetitive shape
for which two waves displaced from each other in time can be added or
subtracted and have the same shape occur as the result. The ideal is then to
have all voltages and currents of sine shape. The synchronous generator is
designed to produce this shape as accurately as is practical. This will become
apparent as the major components and characteristics of such a generator are
described below.
Rotor -
An elementary synchronous generator is shown in cross
section in Figure 2. The central shaft of the rotor is coupled to the
mechanical prime mover. The magnetic field is produced by conductors, or coils,
wound into slots cut in the surface of the cylindrical iron rotor. This set of
coils, connected in series, is thus known as the field winding. The position of
the field coils is such that the outwardly directed or radial component of the
magnetic field produced in the air gap to the stator is approximately
sinusoidally distributed around the periphery of the rotor. In Figure 2, the
field density in the air gap is maximum outward at the top, maximum inward at
the bottom, and zero at the two sides, approximating a sinusoidal distribution.
Stator -
The stator of the elementary generator consists of a
cylindrical ring made of iron to provide an easy path for the magnetic flux. In
this case, the stator contains only one coil, the two sides being accommodated
in slots in the iron and the ends being connected together by curved conductors
around the stator periphery. The coil normally consists of a number of turns.
When the rotor is rotated, a voltage is induced in the
stator coil. At any instant, the magnitude of the voltage is proportional to
the rate at which the magnetic field encircled by the coil is changing with
time—i.e. the rate at which the magnetic field is passing the two sides of the
coil. The voltage will therefore be maximum in one direction when the rotor has
turned 90° from the position shown in Figure and will be maximum in the opposite direction
180° later. The waveform of the voltage will be approximately of the sine form
shown in Figure.
Frequency
-
The rotor structure of the generator in Figure 2 has two
poles, one for magnetic flux directed outward and a corresponding one for flux
directed inward. One complete sine wave is induced in the stator coil for each
revolution of the rotor. The frequency of the electrical output, measured in
hertz (cycles per second) is therefore equal to the rotor speed in revolutions
per second. To provide a supply of electricity at 60 hertz, for example, the
prime mover and rotor speed must be 60 revolutions per second, or 3,600
revolutions per minute. This is a convenient speed for many steam and gas
turbines. For very large turbines, such a speed may be excessive for reasons of
mechanical stress. In this case, the generator rotor is designed with four
poles spaced at intervals of 90°. The voltage induced in a stator coil, which
spans a similar angle of 90°, will consist of two complete sine waves per
revolution. The required rotor speed for a frequency of 60 hertz is then 1,800
revolutions per minute. For lower speeds, such as are employed by most water
turbines, a larger number of pole pairs can be used. The possible values of
rotor speed, in revolutions per minute, are equal to 120 f/p, where f is the
frequency and p the number of poles.
Stator
windings -
The maximum value of flux density in the air gap is limited
by magnetic saturation in the stator and rotor iron, and is typically about one
tesla (weber per square metre). The effective, or root-mean-square (rms),
voltage induced in one turn of a stator coil in a 2-pole, 60-hertz generator is
about 170 volts for each metre squared of area encompassed by the turn. Large
synchronous generators are usually designed for a terminal voltage of several
thousand volts. Each stator coil may therefore contain a number of insulated
turns of conductor, and each stator winding usually consists of a number of
similar coils placed in sequential slots in the stator surface and connected in
series as shown for the winding a-a′ in Figure.
Phases -
The voltages induced in individual coils in the distributed
winding of Figure 3 are somewhat displaced in time from each other. As a
result, the maximum winding voltage is somewhat less than the voltage per coil
multiplied by the number of coils. The waveform is, however, still of
approximately sine form. In the figure the winding a-a′ spans two arcs, each of
60°. In order to make use of the whole periphery of the stator surface, two
other similar windings are inserted. The voltage induced in winding b-b′ will
be equal in peak magnitude to that of a-a′ but will be delayed in time by
one-third of a cycle. The voltage in winding c-c′ will be delayed by an
additional third of a cycle. This is known as a three-phase system of windings.
The waveforms for the three windings, or phases, are shown in Figure.
Waveforms
of a three-phase system -
The three-phase arrangement has a number of advantages. A
single winding, or phase, requires two conductors for transmission of its
electrical power to a load. At first glance, it might appear that six
conductors would be required for the system in Figure. If, however, the
waveforms of Figure are considered to be those of the currents flowing in the
three-phase windings, it will be seen that the sum of the three currents is
zero at every instant in time. Thus, as long as the three phases are loaded
equally, the terminals a′, b′, and c′ of Figure 3 can be connected together to
form a neutral point that may either be connected to ground or in some cases left
open. The power of all three phases can be transmitted on three conductors.
This connection is called a star, or wye, connection. Alternatively, since the
three winding voltages also sum to zero at every instant, the three windings
can be connected in series—a′ to b, b′ to c, and c′ to a—to form a delta
connection. The output can then be transmitted using only three conductors
connected to the three junction points. Other advantages of the three-phase
system will become evident in the discussion of electric motors below.
Field
excitation -
A source of direct current is required for the field
winding, as sketched in Figure. In very small synchronous generators, this
current may be supplied from an external source by fitting the generator shaft
with two insulated copper (or slip) rings, connecting the field coil ends to
the rings and providing a connection to the external source through fixed
carbon brushes bearing on the rings.
Generator
rating -
The capacity of a synchronous generator is equal to the
product of the voltage per phase, the current per phase, and the number of
phases. It is normally stated in megavolt-amperes (MVA) for large generators or
kilovolt-amperes (kVA) for small generators. Both the voltage and the current
are the effective, or rms, values (equal to the peak value divided by Square
root of√2).
The voltage rating of the generator is normally stated as
the operating voltage between two of its three terminals—i.e., the
phase-to-phase voltage. For a winding connected in delta, this is equal to the
phase-winding voltage. For a winding connected in wye, it is equal to Square
root of√3 times the phase-winding voltage.
The capacity rating of the machine differs from its shaft
power because of two factors—namely, the power factor and the efficiency. The
power factor is the ratio of the real power delivered to the electrical load
divided by the total voltage–current product for all phases. The efficiency is
the ratio of the electrical power output to the mechanical power input. The
difference between these two power values is the power loss consisting of
losses in the magnetic iron due to the changing flux, losses in the resistance
of the stator and rotor conductors, and losses from the windage and bearing
friction. In large synchronous generators, these losses are generally less than
5 percent of the capacity rating. These losses must be removed from the
generator by a cooling system to maintain the temperature within the limit
imposed by the insulation of the windings.
High-speed
synchronous generators -
Generators driven by high-speed steam turbines are almost
always constructed with horizontal shafts. The rotor diameter is usually
limited to a maximum of about one metre because of the high centrifugal forces
produced. The length of the rotor may be several metres. The rotor shaft and
the field structure are made of a solid alloy steel forging in which slots are
machined to accept the field coils, as shown in Figure. These coils are
insulated typically with mica and glass laminate. The coils are held in place
by nonmagnetic wedges in the tops of the slots.
The stator provides a path for the continuously varying
magnetic flux. The stator core is therefore constructed of thin sheets, or
laminations, of magnetic steel. The steel, being an electrical conductor, would
tend to short-circuit the voltage induced in it if it were solid. Lamination
breaks up the conducting path along the stator length and keeps the power
losses in the stator steel at an acceptable value. Slots are punched around the
inside periphery of the laminations to accommodate the stator coils. In large
generators, each stator coil normally contains only one turn.
High-speed generators are enclosed within a closed
cylindrical stator housing that extends between the bearings at the two ends.
They are cooled by hydrogen gas circulating within the housing and also
frequently through ducts within the stator conductors. Very large generators
are cooled by circulating water through the stator and rotor conductors.
The ratings of synchronous generators for large power
systems extend up to about 2,000 megavolt-amperes. Smaller power systems use
generators of lower rating (e.g., 50 megavolt-amperes and up) since it is
usually not desirable to have more than 10 percent of the total required system
generation in one machine.
Waterwheel
generators -
Hydraulic turbines are of various types, the choice
depending largely on the height of water fall and on the power rating. The
range of speed for which hydraulic turbines give acceptable efficiency is much
lower than for steam turbines. The rotational speed is generally in the range
of 60 to 720 revolutions per minute. The construction of low-speed synchronous
generators is substantially different from that of high-speed units. To produce
power at 60 hertz, the number of rotor poles is in the range of 10 to 120 for
the above speed range. For these machines the rotor poles are of the
projecting, or salient, type. Figure shows two poles of a 12-pole generator. Each
pole, made of laminated magnetic steel, is encircled by a field coil. The pole
is shaped so as to make the air-gap magnetic field distribution approximately
sinusoidal.
A
two-pole cross section of a 12-pole, low-speed synchronous generator -
Large hydraulic generators may have individual ratings in
excess of 200 megavolt-amperes. They are mounted with a vertical shaft directly
coupled to the turbine. The combination is usually supported on a single
bearing, either above or below. The diameter is made relatively large to obtain
a high peripheral velocity at low rotational speeds. The axial length of the
generator is relatively short. The windings are frequently water-cooled. The
rotor has to be designed to withstand a considerable overspeed condition that
may arise if the generator loses its electrical load and there is a significant
time delay in cutting off the water flow to the turbine.
Generators
for motor vehicles -
Vehicles such as automobiles, buses, and trucks require a
direct-voltage supply for ignition, lights, fans, and so forth. In modern
vehicles the electric power is generated by an alternator mechanically coupled
to the engine. The alternator normally has a rotor field coil supplied with
current through slip rings. The stator is fitted with a three-phase winding. A
rectifier is used to convert the power from alternating to direct form. A
regulator is used to control the field current so that the output voltage of
the alternator-rectifier is properly matched to the battery voltage as the
speed of the engine varies.
Permanent-magnet
generators -
For some applications, the magnetic field of the generator
may be provided by permanent magnets. The rotor structure can consist of a ring
of magnetic iron with magnets mounted on its surface. A magnet material such as
neodymium-boron-iron or samarium-cobalt can provide a magnetic flux density in
the air gap comparable to that produced with field windings, using a radial depth
of magnet of less than 10 millimetres. Other magnet materials such as ferrite
can be used, but with a considerable reduction in air-gap flux density and a
corresponding increase in generator dimensions.
Permanent-magnet generators are simple in that they require
no system for the provision of field current. They are highly reliable. They do
not, however, contain any means for controlling the output voltage. A typical
example of use is with a wind turbine where the generator output of variable
voltage and frequency is supplied to a power system through an electronic
frequency converter.
Induction
generators -
An induction machine can operate as a generator if it is
connected to an electric supply network operating at a substantially constant
voltage and frequency. If torque is applied to the induction machine by a prime
mover, it will tend to rotate somewhat faster than its synchronous speed, which
is equal to 120 f/p revolutions per minute, where f is the supply frequency and
p is the number of poles in the machine. The rotor conductors, moving faster
than the air-gap field, will have induced currents that interact with the
magnetic field to produce a torque with which to balance that applied by the
prime mover. A stator current will then flow into the supply network delivering
electrical power. The amount of power delivered is approximately proportional
to the difference between the rotor speed and the field speed. This difference
is typically of the order of 0.5 to 2 percent of rated speed at rated load.
An induction generator cannot normally provide an
independent electrical power source because it does not contain a source of its
own magnetic field. Stand-alone induction generators can, however, operate with
the aid of appropriate loading capacitors.
Induction generators are frequently preferred over
synchronous generators for small hydroelectric sites because they are not
subject to loss of synchronism following transient changes in the power system.
Inductor
alternators -
An inductor alternator is a special kind of synchronous
generator in which both the field and the output winding are on the stator. In
the homopolar type of machine, the magnetic flux is produced by direct current
in a stationary field coil concentric with the shaft. In the heteropolar type,
the field coils are in slots in the stator.
Voltage is generated in the output windings by pulsations in
the flux in individual stator teeth. These pulsations are produced by use of a
toothed rotor, which causes the reluctance of the air path from the rotor to
each stator tooth to vary periodically with rotation.
Inductor alternators are useful as high-frequency
generators. They also are useful in situations requiring high reliability, a
feature achieved by their having no electrical connections to the rotor.
Direct-current
generators -
A direct-current (DC) generator is a rotating machine that
supplies an electrical output with unidirectional voltage and current. The
basic principles of operation are the same as those for synchronous generators.
Voltage is induced in coils by the rate of change of the magnetic field through
the coils as the machine rotates. This induced voltage is inherently
alternating in form since the coil flux increases and then decreases, with a
zero average value.
The field is produced by direct current in field coils or by
permanent magnets on the stator. The output, or armature, windings are placed
in slots in the cylindrical iron rotor. A simplified machine with only one
rotor coil is shown in Figure 6. The rotor is fitted with a mechanical rotating
switch, or commutator, that connects the rotor coil to the stationary output
terminals through carbon brushes. This commutator reverses the connections at
the two instants in each rotation when the rate of change of flux in the coil
is zero—i.e., when the enclosed flux is maximum (positive) or minimum
(negative). The output voltage is then unidirectional but is pulsating for the
simple case of one rotor coil. In practical 2-pole machines, the rotor contains
many coils symmetrically arranged in slots around the periphery and all
connected in series. Each coil is connected to a segment on a multi-bar
commutator. In this way, the output voltage consists of the sum of the induced
voltages in a number of individual coils displaced around half the periphery.
The magnitude of the output voltage is then approximately constant, containing
only a small ripple. The voltage magnitude is proportional to the rotor speed
and the magnetic flux. Control of output voltage is normally provided by control
of the direct current in the field.
For convenience in design, direct-current generators are
usually constructed with four to eight field poles, partly to shorten the end
connections on the rotor coils and partly to reduce the amount of magnetic iron
needed in the stator. The number of stationary brushes bearing on the rotating
commutator is usually equal to the number of poles but may be only two in some
designs.
The field current for the generator may be obtained from an
external source, such as a battery or a rectifier, as shown in Figure 7A. In
this case, the generator is classed as separately excited. Alternatively, it
may be noted that the output of the DC generator is unidirectional and
therefore may be used as a source to supply its own field current, as shown in
Figure. In this case, the generator is referred to as shunt-excited. It has the
advantage of requiring no independent electrical supply. Residual magnetic flux
in the iron poles produces a small generated voltage as the machine is brought
up to speed. This causes a field current that increases the flux and in turn
the generated voltage. The voltage builds up until saturation in the iron
limits the voltage produced. The stable value of generated voltage can be
adjusted over a limited range by adjusting the value of a resistor placed in
series with the field coil.
Direct-current generators were widely used prior to the
availability of economical rectifier systems supplied by alternators. For
example, they were commonly employed for charging batteries and for
electrolytic systems. In some applications, the direct-current generator
retains an advantage over the alternator-rectifier in that it can operate as a
motor as well, reversing the direction of power flow. An alternator, by
contrast, must be fitted with a more complex rectifier-inverter system to
accomplish power reversal.
Types of
generator -
Direct
current (DC) -
A dynamo uses commutators to produce direct current. It is
self-excited, i.e. its field electromagnets are powered by the machine's own
output. Other types of DC generators use a separate source of direct current to
energize their field magnets.
Homopolar
generator -
A homopolar generator is a DC electrical generator
comprising an electrically conductive disc or cylinder rotating in a plane
perpendicular to a uniform static magnetic field. A potential difference is
created between the centre of the disc and the rim (or ends of the cylinder),
the electrical polarity depending on the direction of rotation and the
orientation of the field.
It is also known as a unipolar generator, acyclic generator,
disk dynamo, or Faraday disc. The voltage is typically low, on the order of a
few volts in the case of small demonstration models, but large research
generators can produce hundreds of volts, and some systems have multiple
generators in series to produce an even larger voltage. They are unusual in
that they can produce tremendous electric current, some more than a million
amperes, because the homopolar generator can be made to have very low internal
resistance.
Magnetohydrodynamic
(MHD) generator -
A magnetohydrodynamic generator directly extracts electric
power from moving hot gases through a magnetic field, without the use of
rotating electromagnetic machinery. MHD generators were originally developed
because the output of a plasma MHD generator is a flame, well able to heat the
boilers of a steam power plant. The first practical design was the AVCO Mk. 25,
developed in 1965. The U.S. government funded substantial development,
culminating in a 25 MW demonstration plant in 1987. In the Soviet Union from
1972 until the late 1980s, the MHD plant U 25 was in regular utility operation
on the Moscow power system with a rating of 25 MW, the largest MHD plant rating
in the world at that time. MHD generators operated as a topping cycle are
currently (2007) less efficient than combined cycle gas turbines.
Alternating
current (AC)
Induction
generator -
Induction AC motors may be used as generators, turning
mechanical energy into electric current. Induction generators operate by
mechanically turning their rotor faster than the synchronous speed, giving
negative slip. A regular AC asynchronous motor usually can be used as a
generator, without any internal modifications. Induction generators are useful
in applications such as mini hydro power plants, wind turbines, or in reducing
high-pressure gas streams to lower pressure, because they can recover energy with
relatively simple controls. They do not require an exciter circuit because the
rotating magnetic field is provided by induction from the stator circuit. They
also do not require speed governor equipment as they inherently operate at the
connected grid frequency.
Linear
electric generator -
In the simplest form of linear electric generator, a sliding
magnet moves back and forth through a solenoid - a spool of copper wire. An
alternating current is induced in the loops of wire by Faraday's law of
induction each time the magnet slides through. This type of generator is used
in the Faraday flashlight. Larger linear electricity generators are used in
wave power schemes.
Variable-speed
constant-frequency generators -
Many renewable energy efforts attempt to harvest natural
sources of mechanical energy (wind, tides, etc.) to produce electricity.
Because these sources fluctuate in power applied, standard generators using
permanent magnets and fixed windings would deliver unregulated voltage and frequency.
The overhead of regulation (whether before the generator via gear reduction or
after generation by electrical means) is high in proportion to the
naturally-derived energy available.
New generator designs such as the asynchronous or induction
singly-fed generator, the doubly-fed generator, or the brushless wound-rotor
doubly-fed generator are seeing success in variable speed constant frequency
applications, such as wind turbines or other renewable energy technologies.
These systems thus offer cost, reliability and efficiency benefits in certain
use cases.
Uses –
A power station, also referred to as a power plant or
powerhouse and sometimes generating station or generating plant, is an
industrial facility for the generation of electric power. Most power stations
contain one or more generators, a rotating machine that converts mechanical
power into three-phase electric power. The relative motion between a magnetic
field and a conductor creates an electrical current. The energy source
harnessed to turn the generator varies widely. Most power stations in the world
burn fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and natural gas to generate electricity.
Cleaner sources include nuclear power, and an increasing use of renewables such
as solar, wind, wave and hydroelectric.
Vehicular
generators -
Motor vehicles require electrical energy to power their
instrumentation, keep the engine itself operating, and recharge their batteries.
Until about the 1960s motor vehicles tended to use DC generators (dynamos) with
electromechanical regulators. Following the historical trend above and for many
of the same reasons, these have now been replaced by alternators with built-in
rectifier circuits.
Bicycles
-
Bicycles require energy to power running lights and other
equipment. There are two common kinds of generator in use on bicycles: bottle
dynamos which engage the bicycle's tire on an as-needed basis, and hub dynamos
which are directly attached to the bicycle's drive train. The name is
conventional as these they are small permanent-magnet alternators, not
self-excited DC machines as are dynamos. Some electric bicycles are capable of
regenerative braking, where the drive motor is used as a generator to recover
some energy during braking.
Sailboats
-
Sailing boats may use a water- or wind-powered generator to
trickle-charge the batteries. A small propeller, wind turbine or impeller is
connected to a low-power generator to supply currents at typical wind or
cruising speeds.
Electric
scooters -
Electric scooters with regenerative braking have become
popular all over the world. Engineers use kinetic energy recovery systems on
the scooter to reduce energy consumption and increase its range up to 40-60% by
simply recovering energy using the magnetic brake, which generates electric
energy for further use. Modern vehicles reach speed up to 25–30 km/h and can
run up to 35–40 km.
Genset -
An engine-generator is the combination of an electrical
generator and an engine (prime mover) mounted together to form a single piece
of self-contained equipment. The engines used are usually piston engines, but
gas turbines can also be used, and there are even hybrid diesel-gas units,
called dual-fuel units. Many different versions of engine-generators are
available - ranging from very small portable petrol- powered sets to large
turbine installations. The primary advantage of engine-generators is the ability
to independently supply electricity, allowing the units to serve as backup
power solutions.
Human
powered electrical generators -
A generator can also be driven by human muscle power (for
instance, in field radio station equipment).
Protesters at Occupy Wall Street using bicycles connected to
a motor and one-way diode to charge batteries for their electronics.
Human powered electric generators are commercially
available, and have been the project of some DIY enthusiasts. Typically
operated by means of pedal power, a converted bicycle trainer, or a foot pump,
such generators can be practically used to charge batteries, and in some cases
are designed with an integral inverter. An average "healthy human"
can produce a steady 75 watts (0.1 horsepower) for a full eight- hour period,
while a "first class athlete" can produce approximately 298 watts
(0.4 horsepower) for a similar period. At the end of which an undetermined
period of rest and recovery will be required. At 298 watts the average
"healthy human" becomes exhausted within 10 minutes.[21] The net
electrical power that can be produced will be less, due to the efficiency of
the generator. Portable radio receivers with a crank are made to reduce battery
purchase requirements, see clockwork radio. During the mid -20th century, pedal
powered radios were used throughout the Australian outback, to provide
schooling (School of the Air), medical and other needs in remote stations and
towns.
Mechanical
measurement -
A tacho-generator is an electromechanical device which
produces an output voltage proportional to its shaft speed. It may be used for
a speed indicator or in a feedback speed control system. Tacho-generators are
frequently used to power tachometers to measure the speeds of electric motors,
engines, and the equipment they power. Generators generate voltage roughly
proportional to shaft speed. With precise construction and design, generators
can be built to produce very precise voltages for certain ranges of shaft speeds.




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