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How Electricity Is Made

Have you ever wondered where electricity comes from? You might be surprised to learn that it comes from magnets!

In the early 1800s, Michael Faraday discovered “electromagnetic induction” – the scientific way of saying that if he moved a magnet through a loop of wire, the wire would become electrified.

In 1882, Thomas Edison opened the first full-scale power plant in New York City. Edison’s electric generator was a bigger version of Faraday’s basic experiment – a big magnet rotates around a wire to produce an electric current.

Today’s power plants are bigger and controlled by computers, but the basic process is still the same as it was nearly 120 years ago.

Here’s how power plants make electricity:

Coal car

 

Power plant

 

Steam

 

Generator

Coal is dug up
and sent on
trains and
boats.

 

The trains and
boats deliver
the coal to the
power plant
.

 

The coal is
burned to heat
water to make
steam
.

 

Inside the
generator
, the
steam spins a
big fan called
a turbine.

The spinning turbine rotates a big magnet around a length of wire, creating a magnetic field that electrifies the wire. The electric current flows through the wire and is pushed out through high-voltage transformers.

Learn how electricity gets to your home

More ways to make electricity:

Instead of using coal, some power plants use other ways to make electricity:

Natural gas

 

Atom

 

Wind turbines

 

Hydro power dam

Some power
plants burn
natural gas

instead of coal
to make
steam.

 

A nuclear
power
plant
splits apart
uranium to
release heat
energy.

 

A wind farm
uses the wind
to spin the
blades of
the turbine.

 

A hydro power
plant uses
running or
falling water
to spin the
turbine.


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Want to learn more?

If you’d like to learn more about the electrical power system, visit this Web page:

What Is Electricity? By the U.S. Energy Information Administration


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Links for teachers and parents:

How Stuff Works: Electricity and How Stuff Works: Power Grids
[Warning: this site contains multiple pop-up and animated ads]

Edison Electric Institute: Energy Infrastructure

More resources for teachers and parents

 

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