22 min

Boosting Norwegian Hydropower using Executable Digital Twin Engineer Innovation: Conversations about Industry 4.0, Engineering AI/ML, Digital Twin, & Computer Aided Engineering.

    • Technology

In the battle to decarbonize our electricity supply hydropower is a key weapon (in those places where geography permits). It can be either a source of green energy (as rain fills up mountain reservoirs) or, in the case of pumped hydro, a partially “self-recharging battery”, storing excessive green energy for later use. 
Dialing hydro power up and down in response to demand has its own challenges though, due to the massive scale of these plants and the consequence of forces generated by millions of liters of water cascading from a great height. 
In the latest episode of the Engineer Innovation podcast, I talk to Flow Design Bureau’s Morten Kjeldsen about using engineering simulation to create “virtual sensors” that allow operators to understand how a hydro power station is performing in real time. 
“We have tens of kilometers of piping and tunnels filled with water running through a penstock which takes water for a high level to the turbine - it can be anything from 200 to 1200 meter's of head. You have all this inertia when you change your operating conditions, which can generate massive oscillations. If you’re not very careful, bad things can happen…” 
Morten Kjeldsen, Flow Design Bureau 

The challenges of running a demand responsive hydro power plant 

The consequences of getting your flow control one 

Building virtual sensors using simulation an edge computing 

The digital twin from the plant operators perspective 

Using legacy equipment outside of its original design parameters 


This episode of the Engineer Innovation podcast is brought to you by Siemens Digital Industries Software — bringing electronics, engineering and manufacturing together to build a better digital future. 
If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a 5-star review to help get the word out about the show. 
For more unique insights on all kinds of cutting-edge topics, tune into siemens.com/simcenter-podcast. 

In the battle to decarbonize our electricity supply hydropower is a key weapon (in those places where geography permits). It can be either a source of green energy (as rain fills up mountain reservoirs) or, in the case of pumped hydro, a partially “self-recharging battery”, storing excessive green energy for later use. 
Dialing hydro power up and down in response to demand has its own challenges though, due to the massive scale of these plants and the consequence of forces generated by millions of liters of water cascading from a great height. 
In the latest episode of the Engineer Innovation podcast, I talk to Flow Design Bureau’s Morten Kjeldsen about using engineering simulation to create “virtual sensors” that allow operators to understand how a hydro power station is performing in real time. 
“We have tens of kilometers of piping and tunnels filled with water running through a penstock which takes water for a high level to the turbine - it can be anything from 200 to 1200 meter's of head. You have all this inertia when you change your operating conditions, which can generate massive oscillations. If you’re not very careful, bad things can happen…” 
Morten Kjeldsen, Flow Design Bureau 

The challenges of running a demand responsive hydro power plant 

The consequences of getting your flow control one 

Building virtual sensors using simulation an edge computing 

The digital twin from the plant operators perspective 

Using legacy equipment outside of its original design parameters 


This episode of the Engineer Innovation podcast is brought to you by Siemens Digital Industries Software — bringing electronics, engineering and manufacturing together to build a better digital future. 
If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a 5-star review to help get the word out about the show. 
For more unique insights on all kinds of cutting-edge topics, tune into siemens.com/simcenter-podcast. 

22 min

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