Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A typical evaporative, forced draft open-loop cooling tower rejecting heat from the condenser water loop of an industrial chiller unit Natural draft wet cooling hyperboloid towers at Didcot Power Station (UK) Forced draft wet cooling towers (height: 34 meters) and natural draft wet cooling tower (height: 122 meters) in Westphalia, Germany Natural draft wet cooling tower in Dresden (Germany)
The water, held under high pressure to keep it from boiling, produces steam by transferring heat to a secondary source of water. The steam is used to generate electricity. Cooling water from the river condenses the steam back into water. The river water is either discharged directly back to the river or cooled in the towers and reused in the plant.
Under normal conditions, nuclear power plants receive power from generator. However, during an accident a plant may lose access to this power supply and thus may be required to generate its own power to supply its emergency systems. These electrical systems usually consist of diesel generators and batteries.
Piping and instrumentation diagram of pump with storage tank. Symbols according to EN ISO 10628 and EN 62424. A more complex example of a P&ID. A piping and instrumentation diagram (P&ID) is defined as follows: A diagram which shows the interconnection of process equipment and the instrumentation used to control the process.
The waste heat produces a temperature rise in the atmosphere, which is small compared to that produced by greenhouse-gas emissions from the same power plant. Natural draft wet cooling towers at many nuclear power plants and large fossil-fuel-fired power plants use large hyperboloid chimney-like structures (as seen in the image at the right ...
Westphalia Power Plant, Unit D cooling tower [17] Coal power station Germany: Hamm: 546 ft (166 m) 2009 Westphalia Power Plant, Unit E cooling tower [18] Coal power station Germany: Hamm: 546 ft (166 m) 2009 Nine Mile Point Nuclear Generating Station [19] Nuclear power plant United States: Scriba, NY: 543 ft (166 m) 1988
Nuclear Power Plant Company Bangladesh Limited: Nuclear power station ; Reactor type: PWR: Reactor supplier: Atomstroyexport: Cooling towers: 4 × Natural Draft: Cooling source: Padma River: Thermal capacity: 2 × 3,200 MW th: Power generation; Make and model: VVER-1200/523: Units under const. 2 × 1,200 MW (gross) Nameplate capacity: 2,160 MW ...
The first purely commercial nuclear power plant at Shippingport Atomic Power Station was originally designed as a pressurized water reactor (although the first power plant connected to the grid was at Obninsk, USSR), [2] on insistence from Admiral Hyman G. Rickover that a viable commercial plant would include none of the "crazy thermodynamic ...