Physics, asked by anujsuryagan946, 6 months ago

explain the working of natural gas power plant​

Answers

Answered by ishwariya76
2

Explanation:

The heat rises into pipes that contain cold water. When hot air combines with cold water, they create steam. The steam is directed into a device called a turbine, causing it to spin and generate energy. The energy from the turbine goes into a generator that converts the energy to electricity.

Answered by chiragkhandelwal03
2

Explanation:

natural-gas-fueled power plants are complex machines, but they basically involve three main sections:

The compressor, which draws air into the engine, pressurizes it, and feeds it to the combustion chamber at speeds of hundreds of miles per hour.

The combustion system, typically made up of a ring of fuel injectors that inject a steady stream of fuel into combustion chambers where it mixes with the air. The mixture is burned at temperatures of more than 2000 degrees F. The combustion produces a high temperature, high pressure gas stream that enters and expands through the turbine section.

The turbine is an intricate array of alternate stationary and rotating aerofoil-section blades. As hot combustion gas expands through the turbine, it spins the rotating blades. The rotating blades perform a dual function: they drive the compressor to draw more pressurized air into the combustion section, and they spin a generator to produce electricity

hope this helps you.........

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