Is Hydroelectric power plant a perpetual motion machine?

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A hydroelectric power plant is not a perpetual motion machine (PMM) of any kind, as it relies on the sun as the ultimate energy source. The process involves solar energy causing water evaporation, which eventually leads to rain that fills reservoirs, allowing the plant to generate electricity by converting gravitational potential energy into electrical energy. The discussion clarifies that hydroelectric plants do not spontaneously convert thermal energy into mechanical work, as they require active management to direct water flow through turbines. Furthermore, all energy conversion processes, including those in hydroelectric plants, have inherent inefficiencies and cannot achieve 100% energy conversion. Ultimately, hydroelectric power is an indirect harnessing of solar energy rather than a PMM.
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It's not, ultimately the sun is the source of power, evaporating water and raising it which later condenses (usually rain) to fall into rivers and lakes which in turn drive the hydroelectric dams.
 
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It's not a PMM at all. A hydroelectric plant converts the gravitational potential energy of the water into electrical energy. As rcgldr said, this is replenished by heat from the Sun, which is using up nuclear fusion fuel and will eventually cease to shine.
 
It is definitely not PMM of the first kind.
Why it is not a perpetual motion machine of the second kind, which is a machine which spontaneously converts thermal energy into mechanical work?
eventually It converts solar thermal energy to mechanical work.
 
Zlelik said:
It is definitely not PMM of the first kind.
Why it is not a perpetual motion machine of the second kind, which is a machine which spontaneously converts thermal energy into mechanical work?
eventually It converts solar thermal energy to mechanical work.
What do you mean 'spontaneously'?

The water from the reservoir behind the dam must be directed to flow through the turbines in order for any conversion of thermal energy to work to take place. That means someone has to push a button somewhere inside the power plant. Like all power plants, a hydroelectric plant does not run full blast all the time: portions of it may be shut down because the demand for its electricity is reduced or for maintenance of the generating equipment.
 
'spontaneously' it is copy from wikipedia article https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perpetual_motion#Classification

I mean without Sun's thermal energy water behind the dam will be finished in 1 month or so. How water gets back behind the dam? Because Sun's energy leads to water evaporation from the ocean and this evaporated water goes back to the "behind the dam" from clouds.
 
Zlelik said:
'spontaneously' it is copy from wikipedia article https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perpetual_motion#Classification

I mean without Sun's thermal energy water behind the dam will be finished in 1 month or so. How water gets back behind the dam? Because Sun's energy leads to water evaporation from the ocean and this evaporated water goes back to the "behind the dam" from clouds.
By that definition, any internal combustion engine is a PMM, because it converts the thermal energy stored in the gasoline or diesel fuel into mechanical work 'spontaneously'.

I think you are overlooking some of the subtleties in the definition of the PMM contained within the Wiki article. Note too that all of these machines which we have discussed, i.e. hydroelectric plants and internal combustion engines, each have various thermodynamic inefficiencies built in. None of them is capable of converting 100% of the available thermal energy into its equivalent mechanical work.
 
Zlelik said:
It is definitely not PMM of the first kind.
Why it is not a perpetual motion machine of the second kind, which is a machine which spontaneously converts thermal energy into mechanical work?
eventually It converts solar thermal energy to mechanical work.

Because a hydroelectric dam does not directly convert thermal energy into anything. It converts gravitational potential energy into electrical energy by using pressurized water to turn a turbine.
 
I got a good answer in another place.

It's not a perpetual motion machine at all: it's a machine which converts energy from the Sun to electrical energy, indirectly:
  1. the sun heats water in the sea and elsewhere, which evaporates;
  2. this condenses out as rain and falls on high up bits of land;
  3. and flows down hill to the sea again;
  4. the hydroelectric plant gets in the way of this flow and captures some of the energy from the water.
 
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With that we will close this thread. PMMs are not discussed here.
 
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