Physics, asked by daksh7180, 6 months ago

which plant uses the heat energy to generate electricity​

Answers

Answered by rakshitha1219
1

Answer:

solar thermal power plant

Explanation:

Most steam turbines have a boiler in which a fuel is burned to produce hot water and steam in a heat exchanger, and the steam powers a turbine that drives a generator. Nuclear power reactors use nuclear fuel rods to produce steam. Solar thermal power plants use solar energy to produce steam.

Answered by Nathalie14
0

Answer:

Traditional thermal power plants: also called combustion power plants, they operate with energy produced by a steam boiler fueled by coal, natural gas, heating oil, as well as by biomass.

The steam activates a turbine which, in turn, drives an alternator to produce electricity.

Explanation:

electricity is produced in plants capable of drawing electrical energy from primary energy sources. These primary energies may be renewable (wind, solar power, tidal power, etc.) or non-renewable (coal, natural gas, oil, etc.).

There are various methods of electricity generation dependent on types of energy. Among resource energies, coal and natural gas are used to generate electricity by combustion (thermal power), Uranium by nuclear fission (nuclear power), to utilize their heat for boiling water and rotating steam turbine.

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