Electricity Generation with Coal
Overview
The earliest conventional method
for generating electricity was by burning lump
coal on a grate in boilers to raise steam. In
modern, highly efficient, versions of this system,
the coal is first milled to a fine powder in a
pulveriser. This increases the surface area of
the coal and hence the rate of combustion. The
powdered coal is blown into the combustion chamber
of a boiler where it is burnt at around 1400°C.
The hot gases and radiant heat energy produced
convert water in tubes lining the boiler into
steam.

The high pressure steam is passed into a turbine
containing thousands of propeller-like blades.
The expanding steam hits these blades causing
the turbine shaft to rotate at high speed. Mounted
at the end of the turbine shaft is the generator,
consisting of carefully wound wire coils. Electricity
is generated when these are rapidly rotated in
a strong magnetic field.
After passing through the turbine chamber, the
steam is condensed and returned to the boiler
to be heated once again.
The electricity is transformed into the higher
voltages used for economic transmission via power
line grids (400,000 volts and above). Near the
point of consumption, the electricity is transformed
down to the safer 100-250 voltage systems used
in the domestic market.
[Source: World Coal Institute]
Coal and Electricity Generation
in Australia
Combined,
black and brown coal accounts for over 85 per
cent of Australia’s electric power, with black
coal accounting for around 60 per cent.
Large base-load black coal-fired power stations
are located in relatively close proximity to the
extensive black coalfields in both New South Wales
and Queensland.
(Pictured: Bayswater Power
Station, New South Wales, Australia)
Brown coal-fired base-load power stations are
located in the Victoria’s Latrobe Valley. South
Australia also relies heavily on sub-bituminous
coal mined at Leigh Creek in the north of the
state.
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Making with Coal
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