How does Hybrid electricity work?
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The term "Hybrid electricity" makes no sense when applied to the power grid.
Electricity is electricity, no matter where it comes from.
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The grid is a conduit for electric power. The grid does not know or care whether the power comes from solar, wind, hydro, nuclear, etc. generators.
I’m unsure if you mean hybrid, or renewable.
A hybrid method of producing electricity is by combining two different fundamental forms of electrical production (though it’s really more energy conversion) and integrating them into the same system.
As a broad example, a hybrid solar/wind generator could be a windmill with solar panels covering the exterior of it or on the fins. Within a single generating unit, you are using two seperate energy sources to produce the electrical energy required.
A second example:
If you are aware of how a coal-fueled power plant produces power (if not google it!), you’ll know that the coal is burnt in order to heat up a liquid into a high-pressure vapour in order for it to pass through a turbine. Hybridization of this power production, could be to use existing heat from a geothermal site to pre-heat the liquid, before entering the coal-burning stage, therefore requiring less coal to be burnt in order to produce the same high-pressure vapour.
Hope this answered your query.