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natural draught cooling towers: proceedings of the 2. international symposium, ruhr-universitat bochum, germany, september 5 7, 1984 (in English)
P. L. Gould
(Illustrated by)
·
W. B. Krätzig
(Illustrated by)
·
I. Mungan
(Illustrated by)
·
Springer
· Paperback
natural draught cooling towers: proceedings of the 2. international symposium, ruhr-universitat bochum, germany, september 5 7, 1984 (in English) - Gould, P. L. ; Krätzig, W. B. ; Mungan, I.
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Synopsis "natural draught cooling towers: proceedings of the 2. international symposium, ruhr-universitat bochum, germany, september 5 7, 1984 (in English)"
Natural draught cooling towers are inevitable for the economic generation of electricity under environmental aspects: In any thermal power plant heated stearn drives a turbogenerator, which produces the electric energy. In order to create an effective heat sink behind the turbine, the stearn is condensed and recyc- led into the boiler. This requires a large amount of cooling water which is heated by running through the condensor. Even in the most efficient fossil fuel thermal (nuclear) power plants, only about 40 (30)% of the generated heat is turned in- to electric energy. The rest of heat of 60 (70)% is discharged into the environment through the smokestack and the cooling wa- ter circuit. To avoid thermal pollution of natural water resources the heated cooling water should be recooled artificially in a cooling sys- tem and reused. Among all technical solutions natural draught cooling towers are effective, economic and widely spread cor- rective measures. In large power plants only natural draught cooling towers are able to recover the immense quantities of water required for cooling. Thus only these engineering struc- tures are able to balance environmental factors, economic in- vestment and operating costs of the power station with the de- mands of a reliable electric energy supply.