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Why do power stations have cooling towers?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Of course, you're correct to say that it would be possible to use excess heat from power stations for domestic or industrial purposes but this can only be energy-efficient if the factories or houses are immediately adjacent to the power station. Are you volunteering to live on a housing estate, surrounded by electricity pylons, next to a power station?
Chris
Chris
http://www.draxpower.com/
Chris
After the high pressure steam has passed through the turbine-generator unit, it needs to be cooled to reduce the pressure and thus maintain the pressure gradient across the turbine. Cooling the steam greatly reduces the pressure, ensuring more high pressure rushes in to replace it, turning the turbine as it goes.
So, after passing through the turbine, the steam passes through a heat exchanger, where a large volume of cold water from an abundant and nearby source (river, lake or sea) cools the steam rapidly, but only sufficiently to condense it, which reduces the pressure considerably. In doing so, the cold river water (the coolant) is heated up slightly, so to maintain the thermal gradient, (ie cold river water against hot steam pipe), the flow rate of the coolant water is high, and therefore large volumes are required. The two flows (high pressure steam and coolant) are separate systems and do not mix.
The waste coolant water is then returned to its source, (eg river, lake etc). However, before this can be done, it needs to be cooled, since it is a good few degrees above its original abstraction temperature. This is done by percolating it through cooling towers, which are designed to create an updraught of air from their open bases to assist the process.
IT IS THIS 'WASTE' COOLANT WATER THAT IS BEING COOLED IN COOLING TOWERS, NOT THE HIGH PRESSURE STEAM FROM THE TURBINE SYSTEM.
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