Steam turbine: Difference between revisions
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The '''steam turbine''' consumes [[steam]] to create electric energy. It is usually used together with [[heat exchanger]]s and a [[nuclear reactor]]. | The '''steam turbine''' consumes [[steam]] to create electric energy. It is usually used together with [[heat exchanger]]s and a [[nuclear reactor]]. | ||
While designed for the 500°C steam of a nuclear reactor, turbines can still be connected to [[boiler]]s for use in conventional 165°C steam power, but the actual power production is based on the temperature of the steam, not the building itself. Unfortunately, this means that using a steam turbine is no more fuel-efficient than using a steam engine, so it's generally not recommended to use the much more expensive turbines with boiler steam. To its credit, the turbine does have double the throughput of a steam engine (it | While designed for the 500°C steam of a nuclear reactor, turbines can still be connected to [[boiler]]s for use in conventional 165°C steam power, but the actual power production is based on the temperature of the steam, not the building itself. Unfortunately, this means that using a steam turbine is no more fuel-efficient than using a steam engine, so it's generally not recommended to use the much more expensive turbines with boiler steam. To its credit, the turbine does have double the throughput of a steam engine (it can use 60 units of 165°C steam per second to output 1.8MW of power) so it can still be useful to save space, especially in large power systems. | ||
== Power output == | == Power output == |
Revision as of 10:05, 7 February 2018
Steam turbine |
Recipe |
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Total raw |
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Recipe |
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Total raw |
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Map color |
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Fluid storage volume |
200 |
Health |
300 |
Resistances |
Fire: 0/70% |
Stack size |
10 |
Dimensions |
3×5 |
Power output |
5.82 MW |
Maximum temperature |
500 °C |
Fluid consumption |
60/s |
Mining time |
0.3 |
Prototype type |
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Internal name |
steam-turbine |
Required technologies |
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Produced by |
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The steam turbine consumes steam to create electric energy. It is usually used together with heat exchangers and a nuclear reactor.
While designed for the 500°C steam of a nuclear reactor, turbines can still be connected to boilers for use in conventional 165°C steam power, but the actual power production is based on the temperature of the steam, not the building itself. Unfortunately, this means that using a steam turbine is no more fuel-efficient than using a steam engine, so it's generally not recommended to use the much more expensive turbines with boiler steam. To its credit, the turbine does have double the throughput of a steam engine (it can use 60 units of 165°C steam per second to output 1.8MW of power) so it can still be useful to save space, especially in large power systems.
Power output
Each Steam turbine takes a maximum input of 60 units of 500°C steam per second and outputs 5.82MW of electricity; the 5.8MW listed on the tooltip is rounded.
- Heat exchanger heats 15°C water to 500°C steam;
- It takes 0.2kJ of burner energy to raise 1 water 1°C;
- Steam is consumed by steam turbines at a rate of 60 water/s;
- (500 - 15) × 0.2 × 60 = 5820kW, or 5.82MW.
History
- 0.15.0:
- Introduced