
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