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Jonval turbine

Water turbine design

Jonval turbine

Summary

Water turbine design

A Jonval turbine, built in 1885. It was in service for about 100 years in a Geneva pump station, where energy in the form of pressurized water was produced for the local industry. Over pressure in the network was released through the world-famous [[Jet d'Eau]]. In total, 17 such turbines were operating in the pump station.<ref>The explanation table, attached to the Jonval turbine in Schiffbau, Giessereistrasse 5, 8005, Zurich, Switzerland</ref>

The Jonval turbine is a water turbine design invented in France in 1837 and introduced to the United States around 1850 and were widely used. The Jonval turbine is a "mixed-flow" turbine design. Mixed-flow designs were well suited for the low-head applications common in the eastern United States. The smaller size, higher speed, higher power, lower cost, and ability to operate efficiently with variable water levels caused these and other types of hydraulic turbines to replace the vertical waterwheel as the primary source of power in American industries.

The Jonval turbine is a horizontal waterwheel. The water descends through fixed curved guide vanes which direct the flow sideways onto curved vanes on the runner. It is named after Feu Jonval, who invented it. The Jonval incorporated ideas from European mathematicians and engineers, including the use of curved blades. This new turbine failed to satisfy the public interest in seeing the water wheels in action, which was likely accepted as a minor drawback at that time.

This type is efficient at full gate, but at partial gate some Francis turbine designs are more efficient.

N.F. Burnham, an American turbine manufacturer, patented numerous improved designs in the second half of 19th century. His turbines had greater efficiency than the Jonval, especially at partial gate, and fewer maintenance problems.

References

References

  1. The explanation table, attached to the Jonval turbine in Schiffbau, Giessereistrasse 5, 8005, Zurich, Switzerland
  2. (1999-06-19). "The Kinne Collection of Water Turbines". The American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
  3. (1999-06-19). "The Kinne Collection of Water Turbines". The American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
  4. link. (2007-06-23 .)
  5. (January–February 2000). "Rebirth on the River". University of Pennsylvania.
  6. Huge Gears, Silent 94 Years, [http://www.phila.gov/water/pdfs/pr030724.pdf Get New Duties: Telling the Tale of How Humans Affect Nature]
  7. Tuomi Forrest. "Clean, Green, Machine: Philadelphia's Fairmount Water Works, 1800 - 1860".
  8. Charles George Warnford Lock. (1890). "Mining and Ore-Dressing Machinery".
  9. W.H. Burnham. (March 28, 1891). "N.F. Burnham and His Life Work". Scientific American Supplement.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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