Pelton Turbine
In a Pelton Turbine or Pelton Wheel water jets impact on the
blades of the turbine making the wheel rotate, producing torque and power.
Learn more about design, analysis, working principle and applications of Pelton
Wheel Turbine.
Hydraulic Turbines are
being used from very ancient times to harness the energy stored in flowing
streams, rivers, and lakes. The oldest and the simplest form of a Hydraulic
Turbine was the Waterwheel used for grinding grains. Different types of
Hydraulic Turbines were developed with the increasing need for power. Three
major types are Pelton Wheel, Francis, and Kaplan Turbine.
Design of Pelton Wheel
Turbine
The Pelton Turbine has a
circular disk mounted on the rotating shaft or rotor. This circular disk has
cup shaped blades, called as buckets, placed at equal spacing around its
circumference. Nozzles are arranged around the wheel such that the water jet
emerging from a nozzle is tangential to the circumference of the wheel of
Pelton Turbine. According to the available water head (pressure of water) and
the operating requirements the shape and number of nozzles placed around the
Pelton Wheel can vary.
Working Principle of Pelton
Turbine
The high speed water jets
emerging form the nozzles strike the buckets at splitters, placed at the middle
of a bucket, from where jets are divided into two equal streams. These stream
flow along the inner curve of the bucket and leave it in the direction opposite
to that of incoming jet. The high speed water jets running the Pelton Wheel
Turbine are obtained by expanding the high pressure water through nozzles to
the atmospheric pressure. The high pressure water can be obtained from any
water body situated at some height or streams of water flowing down the hills.
The change in momentum
(direction as well as speed) of water stream produces an impulse on the blades
of the wheel of Pelton Turbine. This impulse generates the torque and rotation
in the shaft of Pelton Turbine. To obtain the optimum output from the Pelton
Turbine the impulse received by the blades should be maximum for that, change
in momentum of the water stream should be maximum possible. That is obtained
when the water stream is deflected in the direction opposite to which it
strikes the buckets and with the same speed relative to the buckets.
Pelton Turbine
Hydroelectric Setup
A typical setup of a system
generating electricity by using Pelton Turbine will have a water reservoir
situated at a height from the Pelton Wheel. The water from the reservoir flows
through a pressure channel to the penstock head and then through the penstock
or the supply pipeline to the nozzles, from where the water comes out as high
speed jets striking the blades of the Pelton Turbine. The penstock head is
fitted with a surge tank which absorbs and dissipates sudden fluctuations in
pressure.
For a constant water flow
rate from the nozzles the speed of turbine changes with changing loads on it.
For quality hydroelectricity generation the turbine should rotate at a constant
speed. To keep the speed constant despite the changing loads on the turbine
water flow rate through the nozzles is changed. To control the gradual changes
in load servo controlled spear valves are used in the jets to change the flow
rate. And for sudden reduction in load the jets are deflected using deflector
plates so that some of the water from the jets does not strike the blades. This
prevents over speeding of the turbine.
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