| Generating Electricity
Electricity is a very convenient and widely-used energy source, but it has to be generated using other energy resources in power stations. This is why it is called a secondary energy source.
Most power stations use a fuel to heat water.
Steam is produced that turns turbines.
The turbines then derive generators, which produce electricity.
The energy transfers for a power station that burns fossil fuels would be:
| chemical energy |
.GIF) |
heat energy |
.GIF) |
kinetic energy |
.GIF) |
electrical energy |
| in the fuel |
|
in the boiler |
|
in the steam and turbines |
|
produced by the generators |
A lot of energy is wasted as heat in waste gases, steam and due to friction in the turbines and generators.
In nuclear power stations, the fuel used to release heat to boil the water is usually uranium or plutonium.
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