How and why electricity is considered as a kind of fuel?

Electricity is a type of energy that gives us heat and light and drives machines. To be useful, electricity must be made to flow in a current. In 1831 the British scientist Michael Faraday used a magnet to produce electricity. He moved a loop of wire over the magnet, causing an electric current to flow through the wire. This principle is used to generate electricity in power stations today. In thermal power stations, coal, oil or gas are burned to boil water, producing steam to drive a generator.

The steam from the boiling water rushes through pipes and turns a bladed wheel called a turbine. The turbine is connected to the generator, which consists of a huge magnet surrounded by copper wire. The turbine makes the magnet spin, thus producing an electric current in the wire.

The water can be heated by other means. The mineral uranium is the fuel used in a nuclear power station. Everything on Earth is made up of very tiny particles called atoms. Splitting the atoms that make up uranium produces a very intense heat for creating steam.

In a nuclear power station, energy is produced by creating a reaction in the nuclei (cores) of uranium atoms. Releasing energy by splitting atomic nuclei is called fission. Each nucleus contains particles called neutrons. Inside the reactor, these hit other nuclei, causing them to split and release more neutrons. This repeated process, called a chain reaction, produces immense amounts of heat energy. Water pumped around the reactor is heated.

Hydro-electric power stations use fast-flowing water to turn turbines. The water from rivers is stored in a reservoir behind a dam. The power station is located in front of the dam. Some of the water is allowed to rush out through pipes to make turbines spin and drive the generator.

SUPPLYING ELECTRICITY

The electricity is sent from the power station along thick wires called cables. They are supported above ground by tall pylons. The electric current is boosted by transformers along the way. The electricity goes to sub-stations from where cables carry it to houses, factories, shops and offices.

The cables from a power station are linked to form a country’s supply network or grid. This allows electricity to be sent to wherever it is needed. Electricity cannot be stored, so a constant supply flows through the cables and wires.

ALTERNATIVE POWER

Coal and oil-fired power stations cause pollution. Fossil fuels, once used up, cannot be replaced. Leaks of radioactivity from nuclear power stations are a potential hazard. So alternative methods for generating electricity are needed. Wind turbines on wind farms, solar power (in which solar panels store sunlight for conversion to electricity), tidal and wave power are all possibilities for the future.

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