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turbine turbinetop: impulse turbinebottom: reaction turbinetur·bine T0416700 (tûr′bĭn, -bīn′)n. Any of various machines in which the kinetic energy of a moving fluid is converted to mechanical power by the impulse or reaction of the fluid with a series of buckets, paddles, or blades arrayed about the circumference of a wheel or cylinder. [French, from Latin turbō, turbin-, spinning top, perhaps from Greek turbē, turmoil.]turbine (ˈtɜːbɪn; -baɪn) n (Mechanical Engineering) any of various types of machine in which the kinetic energy of a moving fluid is converted into mechanical energy by causing a bladed rotor to rotate. The moving fluid may be water, steam, air, or combustion products of a fuel. See also reaction turbine, impulse turbine, gas turbine[C19: from French, from Latin turbō whirlwind, from turbāre to throw into confusion]tur•bine (ˈtɜr bɪn, -baɪn) n. any of various machines having a rotor, usu. with vanes or blades, driven by the pressure or thrust of a moving fluid, as steam, water, hot gases, or air, either in the form of free jets or as a fluid filling a housing around the rotor. [1815–25; < French < Latin turbin-, s. of turbō top, spindle, whirlwind; akin to turbid] turbineAn impulse turbine (top) rotates when the force of a stream of water hits cup-shaped buckets that are mounted around the perimeter of a rotor. In a reaction turbine (bottom), the pressure of the water being discharged from the nozzle forces the turbine to rotate in the direction opposite to the water's motion.tur·bine (tûr′bĭn, tûr′bīn′) Any of various machines in which the kinetic energy of a moving fluid, such as water, steam, or gas, is converted to rotary motion.turbine - Came from Latin turbo, "whirl, whirling thing."See also related terms for whirl.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | turbine - rotary engine in which the kinetic energy of a moving fluid is converted into mechanical energy by causing a bladed rotor to rotatevane, blade - flat surface that rotates and pushes against air or watergas turbine - turbine that converts the chemical energy of a liquid fuel into mechanical energy by internal combustion; gaseous products of the fuel (which is burned in compressed air) are expanded through a turbinehydroelectric turbine - turbine consisting of a large and efficient version of a water wheel used to drive an electric generatorimpulse turbine - a turbine that is driven by jets direct against the bladesreaction turbine - a turbine with blades arranged to develop torque from gradual decrease of steam pressure from inlet to exhaustrotary engine - an internal-combustion engine in which power is transmitted directly to rotating componentsrotor, rotor coil - the rotating armature of a motor or generatorstator, stator coil - mechanical device consisting of the stationary part of a motor or generator in or around which the rotor revolvessteam turbine - turbine in which steam strikes blades and makes them turnwind turbine - a turbine that is driven by the wind | Translationsturbine (ˈtəːbain) noun a type of motor, operated by the action of water, steam, gas etc. a steam turbine. 葉輪機,渦輪機 汽轮机,涡轮机 turbine
turbine, rotary engine that uses a continuous stream of fluid (gas or liquid) to turn a shaft that can drive machinery. A water, or hydraulic, turbine is used to drive electric generators in hydroelectric power stations. The first such station was built in Wisconsin in 1882. In a hydraulic turbine falling water strikes a series of blades or buckets attached around a shaft, causing the shaft to rotate, this motion in turn being used to drive the rotor of an electric generator. The three most common types of hydraulic turbine are the Pelton wheel, the Francis turbine, and the Kaplan turbine. Toward the end of the 19th cent. two engineers, Sir Charles A. Parsons of Great Britain and Carl G. P. de Laval of Sweden, were pioneers in the building of steam turbines. Continual improvements of their basic machines have caused steam turbines to become the principal power sources used to drive most large electric generators and the propellers of most large ships. A steam turbine typically consists of a roughly conical, steel shell enclosing a central shaft along which a series of bladed disks are spaced like washers. The blades are curved and extend radially outward from the rim of each disk. In some steam turbines the shaft is surrounded by a drum to which the rows of blades are attached. Between each pair of disks is a row of stationary vanes attached to the steel shell and extending radially inward. Each set of stationary vanes and the bladed disk immediately next to it constitutes a stage of the turbine; most steam turbines are multistage engines. At the inlet end of the turbine high-pressure steam enters from a boiler and moves through the turbine parallel to the shaft, first striking a row of stationary vanes that directs the steam against the first bladed disk at an optimum speed and angle. The steam then passes through the remaining stages, forcing the disks and the shaft to rotate. At one end of the turbine the shaft sticks out and can be attached to machinery. A large steam turbine unit may actually be composed of several turbines that are all using the same shaft and steam. Such a unit might consist of a small, high-pressure turbine, connected to a larger, intermediate-pressure turbine, connected to a still larger, low-pressure turbine. After the steam leaves the turbine, it is sent to a condenser where it is converted back into water before being returned to the boiler. Gas turbines are used mainly as aircraft engines. Some are used to drive electric generators, as in a gas turbine–electric locomotive, and high-speed tools. The term gas turbine is usually applied to a unit whose essential components are a compressor, a combustion chamber, and a turbine that resembles a steam turbine. The turbine drives the compressor, which feeds high-pressure air into the combustion chamber; there it is mixed with a fuel and burned, providing high-pressure gases to drive the turbine, the gases expanding until their pressure drops to atmospheric pressure. In a turboprop engine the turbine is used to turn a propeller as well as the compressor. In a turbojet engine only a small pressure drop is used to drive the turbine, the majority of the pressure drop occurring as the gases are expelled directly out of the engine. A variation of the turbojet is known as the turbofan engine. Turbine a prime mover characterized by purely rotational motion of the operating element—rotor—and a continuous process that changes the kinetic energy of a supplied working fluid—for example, steam, gas, or water—into mechanical energy. Industrial steam and gas turbines are used to drive electric power generators (turbine generators), centrifugal compressors and blast blowers (turbocompressors and turboblowers), and feed, fuel, and oil pumps (turbine pumps). Steam and gas turbine engines are used as the main engines on ships. Gas turbines are also used as aircraft engines (turboprop and turbojet engines) and, in certain cases, in locomotives (gas-turbine locomotives) and special automobiles that require especially powerful engines. Hydroturbines are built only as industrial turbines for driving low-speed electric power generators (hydroelectric generators) in hydroelectric power plants. As of 1976, the maximum power of turbines was 1,300 megawatts (MW) for steam turbines, 100 MW for gas turbines, and over 600 MW for hydroturbine units. Because of their economy, compactness, reliability, and possibility of achieving high unit power, turbines have practically replaced piston steam engines in present-day power engineering throughout the world. (See alsoGAS TURBINE, HYDROTURBINE, and STEAM TURBINE.) S. M. LOSEV turbine[′tər·bən] (mechanical engineering) A fluid acceleration machine for generating rotary mechanical power from the energy in a stream of fluid. turbineA rotary wheel fitted with vanes, or buckets, radiating out form its circumference. The rotary wheel is activated by impulse or the reaction of fluid through the vanes, or blades, as the kinetic energy of fluids is converted into mechanical power.turbine any of various types of machine in which the kinetic energy of a moving fluid is converted into mechanical energy by causing a bladed rotor to rotate. The moving fluid may be water, steam, air, or combustion products of a fuel See TURB See TURBturbine Related to turbine: impulse turbine, gas turbine, wind turbine, steam turbine, Pelton turbine, Water turbineWords related to turbinenoun rotary engine in which the kinetic energy of a moving fluid is converted into mechanical energy by causing a bladed rotor to rotateRelated Words- vane
- blade
- gas turbine
- hydroelectric turbine
- impulse turbine
- reaction turbine
- rotary engine
- rotor
- rotor coil
- stator
- stator coil
- steam turbine
- wind turbine
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