Electrical energy is natural and can be seen as strikes of lightning during thunder storms. Humans have been fascinated with electricity for hundreds of years, and have slowly gained more and more understanding of this bright and powerful energy.
History
The first power station in UK began generating electricity for mass consumption in London, in 1882. This invention accelerated the Industrial Revolution and the powered-up way we live today.
How is this electricity generated?
Small amounts of electrical energy can be generated by spinning a magnet within a coil of wire. But to generate enough electricity for a whole city giant machines called ‘generators’ at power stations need to be used. Over the years we have found many different ways to ‘fuel’ these generators.
In many power stations, non-renewable fossil fuels such as oil, coal and gas are burnt to create heat. Others burn recently living organisms - known as biomass. Some use heat that occurs on its own underground, this is called geothermal energy. Let’s look at the processes which turn these fuels into electricity!
- First the fuel is burnt to provide heat
- This heat is used to boil water
- Steam from the boiling water rises upwards into turbines
- The pressure of the steam provides enough kinetic energy to turn the blades of the turbines
- The movement of the turbines turns the magnet in the generator producing electricity
Wind, tidal and hydro-electric power supplies also have generators and spinning blades but they do not require heat to turn the turbines. Can you guess how each of them turn their turbines?
Here is a list of fuels used for their chemical energies to produce electricity, some are renewable, some aren’t-
Oil (also known as crude oil or petroleum)
Coal
Gas
Peat
Uranium (nuclear)
Biomass
Biofuels
Watch this video on how electricity is made
Energies used in producing electricity -
Geothermal (thermal energy)
Solar power (radiant energy)
Wind (kinetic energy)
Tidal (Kinetic and gravitational energy)
Hydroelectric (kinetic energy)
Fossil fuels or non-renewable energies?
Fossil fuels are so-called because they formed underground over millions and millions of years. Because these fuels take so long to form, once we use up all the fossil fuels we won’t be able to replace them! That is why they are known as non-renewable. The amount of these fuels that we use has increased dramatically across the world and sooner or later they will run out. This is why renewable energy is a big part of the planet’s future.