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Electricity
is carried around the country by the National Grid. Pylons carry the electrical
energy in wires from the power station to the towns.
Electricity transmission
lines provide the 'transport highways' that move electricity from the
generation sources (power stations) to concentrated areas of customers
(towns and cities). From there, the distribution system moves the electricity
to where the customer uses it at a business or home. Transmission systems
are unique because they are designed to move this energy at the speed
of light from the generator to the consumer since there is no long-term
storage capability for electricity. Electricity, when transmitted, flows
over all available paths to reach the customer and it cannot be easily
directed in one particular way. Therefore, the buying and selling of electricity
requires careful coordination and monitoring of the electrical systems.
If a problem develops somewhere, the impact affects other operations elsewhere.
After electricity
is produced at power plants it has to get to the customers that use the
electricity to make life easier. The country is criss-crossed with power
lines that "carry" the electricity. Large generators spin producing
electricity with a voltage of about 25kV. The electricity goes to a transformer
at the power plant that boosts the voltage up. Power is the product of
current and voltage. The same power can be transmitted at high voltage
and low current as at low voltage and high current. However, power loss
due to heat energy in the wires is I2R so by keeping
current low heat produced in the wires is reduced. As there is less energy
loss to the atmosphere as heat energy at high voltages, the electricity
is therefore sent across the country at 275kV and 400kV.The long thick
cables of transmission lines are made of copper or aluminum because they
have a low resistance. This also cuts down on loss of energy as heat.
The power lines go
into substations near businesses, factories and homes. Transformers are
also used at the this end of the journey to bring the voltage down to
230V for domestic use.
When electricity enters
your home, it must pass through a meter. A utility company worker reads
the meter so the company will know how much electricity you used and can
bill you for the cost. Click here
for details. After being metered, the electricity goes through a fuse
box into your home. The fuse
box protects the house in case of problems. When a fuse (or a circuit
breaker) "blows" or "trips" something is wrong with
an appliance or something was short-
circuited.
Electricity
production summary:
1. Water is turned
into steam in the boilers by the heat energy from the fuel (burning fossil
fuels or biomass or splitting atoms!).
2. The steam pressure
drives the turbines.
3. The turbines
spin the generators, which produce the electricity (by electromagnetic
induction).
4. The electricity
goes via the transformers to the National Grid - stepped up for transmission
and then stepped down for use.
5. It is transmitted
at high voltages to cut down energy losses as heat - high voltage means
low current if energy transmission is steady - and heat loss depends on
current squared for a given resistance of wire.
Click here
for a link to a School Science page on this.
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