Most of the electricity consumed in North America is generated using coal,
oil, natural gas, nuclear energy or hydropower. Some production is done
with alternative fuels like geothermal energy, wind power, biomass, solar
energy, or fuel cells.
The electricity you buy may be generated using one or
more of these methods. No matter what fuels produce the electricity you
use, your lights shine, your radio plays, and your computer runs in the
same way.
Hydropower
Hydroelectric plants use the power of falling water
to turn the turbines that help generate electricity. Water stored behind
a dam is released and directed through special tubes to flow against
the blades of turbines and make them turn.
Fossil Fuels
The majority of electricity used in North America is generated
from power plants that burn fossil fuels (coal, oil, and natural gas)
to heat water and make steam. The highly pressurized steam is directed
at the blades of turbines to make them spin.
Coal,
oil, and natural gas are known as fossil fuels because they were formed
from the fossilized remains of animals or plants that lived long ago.
Long ago, even before the dinosaurs, these plants and animals died and
settled to the bottom of lakes and oceans to be covered over by sand
and mud. Over millions of years, the earth's pressure and heat converted
their remains into coal, oil, and natural gas.
Coal is extracted from the ground at large mines. Coal
is used to generate about half of the electricity used in the North America.
Natural gas and oil are obtained through wells drilled
deep in the earth.
Nuclear Power
Nuclear
power plants use the heat from splitting atoms to convert water into
the steam that turns turbines. These plants rely on uranium, a type
of metal that must be mined from the ground and specially processed.
Fuel rods containing uranium are placed next to each other in a machine
called a nuclear reactor. The reactor causes the uranium atoms to split
and in so doing, they release a tremendous amount of heat.
Geothermal
Energy
Steam (or hot water converted to steam) from under
the ground is used to turn turbines.
Wind
Power
The force of the wind is used to spin many small turbines.
Most wind power is produced from wind farms-large groups of turbines
located in consistently windy locations.
Biomass
Biomass is organic matter, such as agricultural wastes
and wood chips and bark left over when lumber is produced. Biomass can
be burned in an incinerator to heat water to make steam, which turns
a turbine to make electricity. It can also be converted into a gas which
can be burned to do the same thing.
Solar
Energy
Solar energy is generated without a turbine or electromagnet.
Special panels of photovoltaic cells capture light from the sun and
convert it directly into electricity. The electricity is stored in a
battery.
Fuel Cells
Fuel cells produce electricity through a chemical
reaction.
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Pioneers of Electricity
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Electricity Basics
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