in Lowell, Massachusetts; site of the first Francis turbine
Water wheels of different types have been used for more than 1,000 years to power mills of all types, but they were relatively inefficient. Nineteenth-century efficiency improvements of
water turbines allowed them to replace nearly all water wheel applications and compete with
steam engines wherever water power was available. After
electric generators were developed in the late 1800s, turbines were a natural source of generator power where potential hydropower sources existed. In 1826 the French engineer
Benoit Fourneyron developed a high-efficiency (80%) outward-flow water turbine. Water was directed tangentially through the turbine runner, causing it to spin. Another French engineer,
Jean-Victor Poncelet, designed an inward-flow turbine in about 1820 that used the same principles. S. B. Howd obtained a US patent in 1838 for a similar design. In 1848
James B. Francis, while working as head engineer of the
Locks and Canals company in the water wheel-powered
textile factory city of
Lowell, Massachusetts, improved on these designs to create more efficient turbines. He applied scientific principles and testing methods to produce a very efficient turbine design. More importantly, his mathematical and graphical calculation methods improved turbine design and engineering. His analytical methods allowed the design of high-efficiency turbines to precisely match a site's water flow and pressure (
water head). ==Components==