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The El Cajón Dam, officially known as Central Hidroeléctrica Francisco Morazán, is a hydroelectric power plant located in Western Honduras.[2] The dam impounds the Comayagua River, which derives its large volume from two large tributaries, the Humuya River and the Sulaco River. El Cajón is a double arch dam, which uses parabolic geometry in horizontal and vertical axises to spread the weight of the impounded water to canyon walls which act as buttresses. Overall, the dam is the fifth highest dam in the Americas and the 15 th highest in the world, as well as the highest arch dam in the western hemisphere, and the sixth highest worldwide.

El Cajón Dam
Location of El Cajón Dam in Honduras
Official nameCentral Hidroeléctrica Francisco Morazán
LocationCortés, Honduras
Coordinates15°04′47″N 87°33′32″W
Construction began1980
Opening date1985
Construction costUS$775 million[1]
Operator(s)ENEE
Dam and spillways
ImpoundsComayagua River
Height226 m (741 ft)
Length282 m (925 ft)
Width (base)48 m (157 ft)
Reservoir
Total capacity5,700,000,000 m3 (2.0×1011 cu ft)
Surface area94 km2 (36 sq mi)
Power Station
Commission date1986
Turbines4 × 75 MW Francis-type
Installed capacity300 MW

Location


El Cajón Dam is located 180 km (112 mi) from Tegucigalpa, the country's capital, and 80 km (50 mi) from San Pedro Sula, the main Honduran industrial city.


Construction


Harza Engineering of Chicago, Illinois, United States, began site investigation in the 1960s with initial construction beginning June 15, 1980. A multinational team of designers, builders and engineers included members from Italy, Germany, and Switzerland. Engineering design was developed by Motor Columbus [now Colenco] of Switzerland. Italian companies were responsible for the construction of the underground machine room, while Italian and German companies were responsible for dam construction and ancillary works. Upon completion the dam became the largest piece of infrastructure in Honduras, requiring over half a million cubic meters of concrete to construct. Due to its double-curved arch design, this dam is relatively thin compared to say, Hoover Dam (gravity dam design) that spans a similar valley profile yet required roughly four times as much concrete.


Design


Finite element design was used for the structural components of the dam. The dam is 282 metres long, and 48 meters thick at bottom.[3] The top is 7 meters thick which is wide enough for the small service road that crosses the dam. Around 170 meters from the base of the dam, three 14.5m2 discharge tubes expel water that has passed through the machine room's turbines.[3] Near the top of the dam is a spillway composed of four large square tubes each 14 metres wide that are opened when flow through the dam cannot be handled by the lower discharge tubes.


Reservoir


El Cajón Dam bridge
Coordinates15°02′N 87°45′W
Characteristics
Width7 m (23 ft)
Location

The reservoir created by El Cajón spans 94 km2 with a maximum capacity of around 5,700 million m³.[3] The reservoir displaced approximately 4,700 people.[4] While the main purpose of the reservoir is for powering El Cajón's turbines, flood control is another major benefit. Before completion of the dam, yearly flooding in the Sula valley seriously disrupted commerce for the people of Honduras. Now during the rainy season the reservoir has the ability to retain a layer of water ten meters high, and then discharge it slowly to prevent disastrous flooding. Agriculture has also benefited. Historically, during the dry season the Comayagua's flow dropped significantly to around 20 m3/s, the dam now provides year-round flow of approximately 100 m3/s, which has had a significant economic impact for the region.[3]


Power output


Eight large vertical axis turbines are located in a subterranean housing stationed in the left side of the limestone valley. Construction was done in two stages. Initially, four turbines were installed in the room; which at the time was already fairly large: 110 m long, 30 m wide, and 49 m high. The second stage of construction extended the length another 65 meters to house the remaining four turbines. Each turbine rotates at 300 R.P.M, powering its own generator capable of producing 75 megawatts. The completion of the second stage brought the total power output to 600 megawatts.[citation needed] The power produced there is then transmitted to a central station at 230 kV.


Instrumentation


Initially, electrical monitoring devices commonly used in modern dams were installed, but due to high sulphur content in the surrounding rock and water, all of the devices corroded and failed. With the exception of portable monitoring equipment, El Cajón now relies entirely on mechanical devices to check its performance.

The important role these devices play came into focus after a 7.1 magnitude earthquake, originating 200 miles north of Tegucigalpa, caused massive damage to many pieces of infrastructure May 28, 2009. These devices were critical to determining the internal deformation of the structure.


Notes


  1. American Society of Civil Engineers. Hydropower Task Committee (2007). Civil works for hydroelectric facilities. ASCE Publications. pp. 129–130. ISBN 978-0-7844-0923-7.
  2. "El Cajon Power Project". Worldbank. Archived from the original on 2011-06-12. Retrieved 2009-10-05.
  3. "Represa Hidroeléctrica Francisco Morazán "El Cajón"". ENEE. Archived from the original on 2009-09-16. Retrieved 2009-10-05.
  4. McCully, 1996: 324-325

References



На других языках


[de] El-Cajón-Talsperre (Honduras)

Die El-Cajon-Talsperre ist die größte Talsperre in Honduras. Sie ist auch unter dem Namen "Represa Hidroeléctrica Francisco Morazán" bekannt.
- [en] El Cajón Dam (Honduras)

[es] Central hidroeléctrica Francisco Morazán

La Central Hidroeléctrica Francisco Morazán (también conocida como "El Cajón") está situada en el curso del río Comayagua, en el departamento de Cortés, Honduras.[1] La represa de El cajón es del tipo de arco doble, la cual distribuye parabólicamente el agua hacia las paredes de las montañas que actúan como contrafuertes. Es la planta hidroeléctrica y de control de inundaciones más grande de Honduras. También es la quinta represa más alta de América, la decimosexta más alta en el mundo. Además es la represa en arco más alta del hemisferio occidental y la sexta en el mundo. A través de esta represa se obtiene gran parte de la energía del país en ella hay más de 50 mil galones de agua.

[fr] Barrage d'El Cajón

Le barrage d'El Cajón est un barrage en Honduras. Il est associé à une centrale hydroélectrique de 300 MW.



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