Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Electricity Infrastructure: Overview and Issues (1) H. Scott Matthews February 13, 2003
2
Recap of Last Lecture Current trans. system a 50-year project with significant govt funding Generally paid for with gas (user) taxes System of highways is ubiquitous, with most mileage and jurisdiction at the local level But most use/miles traveled arterial
3
Energy Use in the US Fuelwood dominant energy source from founding of colonies to late 19 th cent. (farms) Total work from all types of engines did not exceed animals until mid-late 19 th century. Coal (early 19 th century) surpassed fuelwood as dominant energy source 1885. Petroleum and natural gas surpassed coal as dominant (total) energy source around 1947. Consumption of these resources quadrupled in a single generation (urbanization too)
4
More Energy in US Hydro & nuclear appeared around 1890 and 1957 respectively, yet have never gained dominance. Recent developments include solar, geothermal, wind, ocean wave power For much of history, US self-sufficient in energy for the most part (small coal imports from Britain during colonial times) Production / consumption rates essentially balanced in US until ~ late 1950s, at which time production fell behind consumption. During 1970s the gap widened greatly
5
History of Electricity/Grid Electricity ‘system’ created in US 1881 Purpose was electricity for lights Edison had first central generation plant with small local distribution system (DC only) 1881 cost: 24 cents/kWh! (now ~10 cents) Early 1900’s - intercity transmission lines As utilities crossed state lines, had state PUCs, federal oversight, regulation 1930s-1950s: rural electrification, federally- run electric generating plants (hydro) 1950s- now: nuclear power, environ. Controls, fuel costs, Three Mile Island
6
What is Electric Power Grid? System of: Generators (power plants) Transmission Lines (wires) Substations Distribution Lines Transformers Control Devices Users
7
Energy Used for Generation Predominantly fossil fuels in US Requires transport of fuel from source to power plant (recall transmission versus rail example last week) Separate infrastructure problem
8
Generators Generally something spinning an electrical generator (usually steam turbine) creating 3- phase AC power Everyone knows what DC (direct current) is - e.g. batteries, fixed sources Houses use single-phase AC (alternating current), 60 cycles/second (Hz), max 170V, min -170V, root-mean-square = 120V Why AC grids? Generators making AC! Converting AC->DC easier than DC->AC Transformers need AC (coming next)
9
Power Systems - Transmission Instead of a ‘ground wire’, power systems use the ground (literally) From generator, to substation to ‘step up’ voltage for trans. lines 155 to 765 kV! Can be sent hundreds (thous?) of miles Trans. Lines : 3 wires (one per phase)
10
Power Systems - Distribution From trans. Line to power substation Steps voltage down (resid: 7200V) Splits power into a bus to feed off Has circuit breakers for protection Then to distribution bus(es) Each distribution bus carries 3-phase lines closer to users Users only need 1 phase, so the distribution bus keeps getting split until only 1 phase carried on poles And another (small) transformer used on pole outside of house to step down to 240V
11
Other Issues Its generally easy to site the distribution part of the grid If you want electricity, you need to allow it Its much harder to get power plants and transmission lines sited Local/affected population may or may not be ‘served’ by them - no incentive Transmission is probably most critical ‘systems engineering problem’ in grid Electrification also led to ‘sprawl’ as it allowed firms to locate away from energy sources
12
Blackout of November 9, 1965 By 1965, electricity part of everyday life Most of NE US (and Canada!) dark Sign that we were not managing well Six days to realize source of problem 1 relay failed at station in Canada (Niagara Falls) Caused transmission line to go ‘open’ Caused series of cascading failures all the way back to New York City Took only 15 minutes to blackout NE US Caused people to rethink dependence Until then, power systems design geared around ‘isolation’ to prevent damage
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.