A screw turbine is water turbine that converts the potential energy of water on an upstream level into work. This hydropower converter is driven by the weight of water, similar to water wheels, and can be considered as a quasi-static pressure machine. Archimedes screw generators operate in a wide range of flows and heads, including low heads and moderate flow rates that are not ideal for traditional turbines and not occupied by high performance technologies.
Two parallel screw turbines capable of producing 75 kW each, in Monmouth, Wales
A screw turbine at a small hydro power plant in Goryn, Poland
12 kW screw turbine at the Cragside estate
A water turbine is a rotary machine that converts kinetic energy and potential energy of water into mechanical work.
The runner of the small water turbine
The construction of a Ganz water Turbo Generator in Budapest in 1886
Roman turbine mill at Chemtou, Tunisia. The tangential water inflow of the mill race made the submerged horizontal wheel in the shaft turn like a true turbine.
A Francis turbine runner, rated at nearly one million hp (750 MW), being installed at the Grand Coulee Dam, United States.