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<lesson xmlns="http://www.teachengineering.org" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.teachengineering.org C:\PROGRA~1\Altova\AUTHENTIC\sps\template\teachengineering\lesson.xsd" xml:lang="en-US" version="1.0">
	<title>Clean Energy: Hydropower</title>
	<header>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><image url="cub_dams_lesson04_image1web.jpg" description="Two photo: (left) Aerial view of long, straight concrete dam and adjoining power plant across a curving blue river. (right) Closer view of foamy white water cascading over a concrete wall of the same dam." horizontal_alignment="center" rights=" Bonneville Power Administration http://www.bpa.gov/corporate/BPANews/Library/images/Dams/Coulee.jpg" caption="Grand Coulee Dam, Washington."/></text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</header>
	<grade realm="k12" target="5" lowerbound="3" upperbound="5"/>
	<lesson_number rank="4" total="8"/>
	<time total="15" unit="minutes"/>
	<summary>Hydropower generation is introduced to students as a common purpose and benefit of constructing dams. Through an introduction to kinetic and potential energy, students come to understand how a dam creates electricity. They also learn the difference between renewable and non-renewable energy.</summary>
	<engineering_connection>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Civil, environmental, mechanical and electrical engineers all cooperate to design dams. They consider an array of variables that range from environmental impact to maximum amount of energy generation. After considering the complex interaction of these variables, they optimize their design for the greatest societal benefit.</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</engineering_connection>
	<keywords>
		<keyword>dam</keyword>
		<keyword>electricity</keyword>
		<keyword>electricity generation</keyword>
		<keyword>energy</keyword>
		<keyword>hydroelectricity</keyword>
		<keyword>hydropower</keyword>
		<keyword>power</keyword>
		<keyword>turbine</keyword>
		<keyword>water</keyword>
		<keyword>waterwheel</keyword>
		<keyword>water supply</keyword>
	</keywords>
	<edu_standards>
		<edu_standard identifier="S11417D6"/>
		<edu_standard identifier="S11424F6"/>
		<edu_standard identifier="S1142567"/>
	</edu_standards>
	<prerequisite_knowledge>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>A basic understanding of what dams are and why people build them.</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</prerequisite_knowledge>
	<learning_objectives>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>After this lesson, students should be able to:</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="unordered">
				<text_element>Describe how a dam produces electricity.</text_element>
				<text_element>Differentiate between renewable and non-renewable energy.</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</learning_objectives>
	<introduction>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>From where do we get the energy to cook our food, drive our cars, and turn on lights? Think about this for a few minutes, and then I&apos;ll ask for your ideas. </text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>(Write student answers on the board in two columns: one for renewable energy sources and one for non-renewable, but do not put headers on the columns yet. After students have exhausted their ideas, ask them what the entries in each column have in common. Answer: One column is types of renewable energy, the other is types of non-renewable energy. Examples of non-renewable energies include: oil, gasoline, diesel, coal and natural gas. Examples of renewable energy include: wind power, solar power, solar thermal [for space and water heating], and hydroelectric.)</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>What are the benefits of renewable energy? (Answer: Renewable energies do not significantly contribute to global warming and have an inexhaustible supply.)</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Where are hydroelectric power plants located? (Answer: At points in rivers, at dams.) Does anyone know how they work? Let&apos;s think it through.</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="">
				<text_element></text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Has anyone stood underneath a waterfall? What does it feel like? (Answer: The water pounds down on you with a lot of force.) By the time that water reaches the ground, it has a lot of power. Does water falling from tall waterfalls have more or less power than the water from shorter waterfalls? (Answer: More power.) We can say that the water about to fall from a tall waterfall has more <bold>potential energy </bold>than the water at the top of a shorter waterfall. When the water falls, or moves through the air, the potential energy decreases as the water gets closer to the ground. The moving water has <bold>kinetic energy</bold>, or the energy of movement. As the water falls through the air, its kinetic energy grows as its potential energy decreases. So when it finally strikes you at the bottom, all of its potential energy has been turned into kinetic energy. This is in accordance with the idea that energy is never created or destroyed, it just changes form. That&apos;s the scientific and engineering way to understand why a waterfall has so much power. </text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>With this in mind, we can understand how a hydropower plant works. Imagine a dam on a river. A hydropower plant located at the dam takes the (potential) energy of water located high up in a reservoir and captures its energy as it drops to the bottom of the dam. In other words, a hydroelectric power plant is designed to take that power of falling water and use it to create electricity. How is this done?</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>The water in a reservoir behind a dam is very deep. The water at the bottom of the reservoir feels the weight of all the water that is on top of it &#x2014; which creates water pressure. The deeper you go in the water, the higher the pressure. Have you ever swam down deep in a swimming pool and felt your ears start to hurt? That is because of the pressure of the water on your eardrums! You are probably only swimming down about six feet in a swimming pool; imagine if you went down 50 or 100 feet. That is a lot of water pressure! The pressurized water is directed through large turbines (shaped like fans, with blades) that spin when the water hits them. When a turbine spins, it turns a shaft in the generator that generates electricity. You know how a house fan requires electricity to spin? These generators work in just the opposite way: when they spin, they create electricity. We&apos;d need to do a unit on electricity and magnetism to understand how this works&#x2014;but maybe some of you already know!</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</introduction>
	<lesson_background>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><bold>What makes hydropower an attractive energy source? </bold>Hydropower is an attractive energy source because it is renewable and clean. Renewable energy is commonly understood to come from the wind, sun and movement of water. Clean energy commonly refers to energy sources that do not significantly emit toxins and greenhouse gases.</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Renewable sources of energy are considered infinite in supply. Societal disturbance (such as the 1970s oil crisis) and worse can be triggered by shortages in the production and distribution of non-renewable energies such as oil, coal and natural gas. Hydropower and other renewable energies are not as subject to these vulnerabilities because as long as we have the necessary technology, we can capture the renewable energy indefinitely.</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Clean energy sources include the renewable energies as well as nuclear energy. Burning sources of energy that are not considered &quot;clean&quot; releases harmful emissions into our environment. These emissions pollute our land and water and contribute to global warming, which appears to have potentially catastrophic societal consequences.</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="">
				<text_element></text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><bold>How does hydropower work? </bold>Hydropower plants harness water&apos;s energy and use simple mechanics to convert that energy into electricity. The basic components of a hydropower plant are a dam, water intake, turbine, generator, transformer, power lines and water outflow (see Figure 1). </text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><image url="cub_dams_lesson04_figure1web.jpg" description="Cross-section drawing shows a river blocked by a dam, and the locations of the hydropower facility, turbines, generators, penstock and electricity transmission lines." horizontal_alignment="center" rights=" US Department of Energy, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy http://www1.eere.energy.gov/windandhydro/hydro_plant_types.html" caption="Figure 1. How a hydropower plant works."/></text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Most hydropower plants rely on a dam that holds back water, creating a large reservoir. Gates on the dam open, and gravity pulls the intake water through the penstock, a pipeline that leads to the turbine(s). Water builds up pressure as it flows through this pipe. The water strikes and turns the large blades of turbines that are attached by shafts to generators above (see Figure 3). As the turbine blades turn, so do a series of magnets inside the generators. Giant magnets rotate past copper coils, producing alternating current (AC). A transformer inside the powerhouse converts the AC to higher-voltage current that is carried on high-tension power lines. The &quot;used&quot; water is carried through pipelines, called tailraces, and re-enters the river downstream.</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><image url="cub_dams_lesson04_figure2web.jpg" description="Line drawing shows parts of a generator and turbine, including turbine generator shaft, rotor, stator, wicket gate and turbine blades." horizontal_alignment="left" rights=" US Army Corps of Engineers c/o Wikipedia Commons http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Water_turbine.jpg" caption="Figure 2: Cutaway view of a water turbine and electrical generator. Note the location of entering water flow to spin the blades, the shaft connecting the turbine to the generator, and how big it is (see the shape of a man at the bottom, for scale)!"/></text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>The amount of energy generated by a hydropower project depends on two things: volume of water flow and hydraulic head. The head refers to the vertical distance between the water surface and the turbines. As the head and flow increase, so does the electricity generated. The head depends on the height of the dam and the amount of water in the reservoir. </text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Some hydropower plants are of a special design called pumped-storage plants because they store energy until it is needed. In our homes, schools and workplaces, we tend to use much more electricity during the day than late at night. To provide for this peak usage time, power can be produced at night and stored for the next day. The plant pumps water up from a lower reservoir into a high reservoir so during peak demand hours water can flow back down through the turbines and generate electricity just like a conventional hydropower plant.</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><bold>What is the history of hydropower? </bold>While the use of hydropower peaked in the mid-twentieth century, humans have been using water to generate power for a long time. More than 2,000 years ago, farmers used waterwheels to grind grains into flour. Waterwheels spin around as a stream of water hits their blades. The gears of the wheel mash the wheat kernels into flour.</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Most people are familiar with large-scale hydropower (such as the Hoover Dam), but the energy of moving water can be captured on a much smaller scale, called micro-hydropower (see Figure 3). In micro-hydropower applications, small to mid-size generators are placed in rivers and streams to provide electricity for a few buildings or other smaller users.</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><image url="cub_dams_lesson04_figure3web.jpg" description="Photo shows a metal waterwheel spinning in a ditch stream as moving water catches in its six curved blades." horizontal_alignment="right" rights="2009 Charles M. Carlson. Used with permission." caption="Figure 2. A simple waterwheel in an irrigation ditch uses the movement of flowing water to turn the blades and create electricity to pump water for field irrigation. Positioning a waterwheel (or hydroelectric turbine) to take advantage of the potential energy from a stream of water that falls results in even more energy capture."/></text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Worldwide, hydroelectric power plants produce about 24% of the world&apos;s electricity and supply more than one billion people with power. U.S. utilities operate about 2,000 hydropower plants, making hydropower the nation&apos;s largest renewable energy source. </text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Engineers are involved in many aspects of hydropower. Engineers design, build and operate dams and their hydropower units. Engineers also work on improving design and maximizing energy generation. For example, the size and shape of a hydropower turbine, which resembles a propeller blade, helps determine how much energy can be generated. Engineers experiment with different shapes to maximize power generation. They also develop strategies to mitigate the surrounding environmental impacts of constructing and operating hydropower plants.</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</lesson_background>
	<vocabulary>
		<definition word="electricity generation">The creation of electricity.</definition>
		<definition word="engineers">People who apply their understanding of science, mathematics and society to create technology for the benefit of humanity and our world.</definition>
		<definition word="hydropower">A form of energy (electric power) derived from the conversion of free-falling (and moving) water. Also called hydroelectric power or hydroelectricity.</definition>
		<definition word="kinetic energy">An object&apos;s energy due to its motion.</definition>
		<definition word="mechanical energy">Energy used to create motion.</definition>
		<definition word="potential energy">The energy stored in an object based on its position. </definition>
		<definition word="turbine">A machine that converts the kinetic energy of falling water (or any moving fluid, including steam, gases or air) into mechanical energy by use of a rotating shaft connected to spinning blades.</definition>
	</vocabulary>
	<child_documents>
		<link url="../../activities/cub_energy2/cub_energy2_lesson08_activity2.xml" type="activity" description="Students explore kinetic energy by creating their own experimental waterwheels from two-liter plastic bottles. They investigate the transformations of energy involved in turning the blades of a hydro-turbine, and experiment with how weight affects the rotational rate of the waterwheel. They learn the history of the waterwheel, common uses for water turbines today, and the characteristics of hydroelectric plants.">Waterwheel Work</link>
		<link url="../../activities/cub_environ/cub_environ_lesson09_activity3.xml" type="activity" description="Students observe a model waterwheel to investigate the transformations of energy involved in turning the blades of a hydro-turbine. They create models for new waterwheels while considering resources, such as time and materials, in their designs. Students also learn about the characteristics of hydropower plants">Water Power</link>
	</child_documents>
	<lesson_closure>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Today we learned that hydroelectric power plants are common features of dams. What is the type of power that is produced? (Answer: Renewable and clean electrical energy.) We also know how these power plants work. Could anyone explain for the class? (Answer: Water falls from the top of the reservoir onto a turbine at the base of the dam. The power of the falling water spins the turbine, which generates electricity.)</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</lesson_closure>
	<summary_assessment>
		<text_section name="Pre-Lesson Assessment">
			<text_block format="">
				<text_element></text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><italic>Brainstorming: </italic>As a class, have students engage in open discussion. Remind them that in brainstorming, no idea or suggestion is &quot;silly.&quot; All ideas should be respectfully heard. Take an uncritical position, encourage wild ideas and discourage criticism of ideas. Have them raise their hands to respond. Write their ideas on the board. Ask the students:</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="unordered">
				<text_element>How could engineers use the water stored in a reservoir to create electricity? </text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
		<text_section name="Post-Introduction Assessment">
			<text_block format="">
				<text_element></text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><italic>Voting: </italic>Read aloud true-or-false statements and have students vote by holding thumbs up for true and thumbs down for false. Tally the votes and write the totals on the board. Give the right answer.</text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="unordered">
				<text_element>True or False: Hydropower is a renewable source of energy. (Answer: True)</text_element>
				<text_element>True or False: The kinetic energy from moving water can be used to make mechanical energy when the water hits a turbine. (Answer: True)</text_element>
				<text_element>True or False: Everything else being equal, water that falls from a lower height has more energy than water that falls from a greater height. (Answer: False. The opposite is true.)</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
		<text_section name="Lesson Summary Assessment">
			<text_block format="">
				<text_element></text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element><italic>Vocabulary:</italic> Ask students to write the vocabulary words and definitions on a sheet of paper or in their science journals.</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</summary_assessment>
	<extensions>
		<text_section name="">
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>Determine how water pressure and the angle at which water falls affect how water flows using the activities at the Foundation for Water Energy and Education&apos;s &quot;Nature of Water Power&quot; website: <link url="http://www.fwee.org/TG/curriculum.html" type="internet">http://www.fwee.org/TG/curriculum.html</link></text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</extensions>
	<multimedia_support>
		<text_section>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>See information and images of the federal dams on the Bonneville Power Administration transmission grid in Oregon at <link url="http://www.bpa.gov/corporate/BPANews/Library/images/Dams/" type="internet">http://www.bpa.gov/corporate/BPANews/Library/images/Dams/</link></text_element>
			</text_block>
			<text_block format="text">
				<text_element>See the attached short <link url="cub_dams_lesson04_video1_cmc.avi" type="other">video clip </link>of a simple water wheel in an irrigation ditch.</text_element>
			</text_block>
		</text_section>
	</multimedia_support>
	<references>
		<reference>
			<reference_biblio>Building Big: All About Dams. WGBH Educational Foundation. Accessed December 8, 2007. </reference_biblio>
			<link url="http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/buildingbig/dam/index.html" type="internet">http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/buildingbig/dam/index.html</link>
		</reference>
		<reference>
			<reference_biblio>Types of Hydropower Plants, Wind and Hydropower Technologies Program. US Department of Energy, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy. Accessed July 14, 2009. </reference_biblio>
			<link url="http://www1.eere.energy.gov/windandhydro/hydro_plant_types.html" type="internet">http://www1.eere.energy.gov/windandhydro/hydro_plant_types.html</link>
		</reference>
	</references>
	<attachments>
		<link url="cub_dams_lesson04_video1_cmc.avi" type="other">Ditch Waterwheel (7-second video clip) (avi)</link>
	</attachments>
	<owner name="Integrated Teaching and Learning Program" organization="College of Engineering, University of Colorado at Boulder"/>
	<contributors>
		<contributor name="Sara Born"/>
		<contributor name="Kristin Field"/>
		<contributor name="Michael Bendewald"/>
		<contributor name="Denise W. Carlson"/>
	</contributors>
	<copyright owner="Regents of the University of Colorado. The contents of these digital library curricula were developed by the Integrated Teaching and Learning Laboratory under National Science Foundation GK-12 grant no. 0338326. However, these contents do not necessarily represent the policies of the National Science Foundation, and you should not assume endorsement by the federal government." year="2008"/>
</lesson>

