scholarly journals Energy yield loss caused by dust deposition on photovoltaic panels

Solar Energy ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 107 ◽  
pp. 576-604 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arash Sayyah ◽  
Mark N. Horenstein ◽  
Malay K. Mazumder
Author(s):  
Malay Mazumder ◽  
Mark Horenstein ◽  
Jeremy Stark ◽  
Daniel Erickson ◽  
Arash Sayyah ◽  
...  

Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) systems used for photothermal conversion of solar energy to electricity are capable of meeting a large fraction of the global energy requirements. CSP plants are inherently robust with respect to the availability of materials, technology, and energy storage. However, dust depositions on solar collectors cause energy yield loss annually, ranging from 10 to 50% depending upon their location in the semi-arid and desert lands. Mitigation of energy loss requires manual cleaning of solar mirrors with water. A brief review of the soiling related losses in energy yield of the CSP plants is presented, which shows that cleaning of the CSP mirrors and receivers using water and detergent is an expensive and time-consuming process at best and is often impractical for large-scale installations where water is scarce. We report here our research effort in developing an electrodynamic dust removal technology that can be used for keeping the solar collectors clean continuously without requiring water and manual labor. Transparent electrodynamic screens (EDS), consisting of rows of transparent parallel electrodes embedded within a transparent dielectric film can be integrated on the front surface of the mirrors and on the receivers for dust removal for their application as self-cleaning solar collectors. When the electrodes are activated, over 90% of the deposited dust is removed. A summary of the current state of prototype development and evaluation of EDS integrated solar mirrors and experimental data on the removal of desert dust samples are presented. A brief analysis of cost-to-benefit ratio of EDS implementation for automated dust removal from large-scale solar collectors is included.


Author(s):  
Jeremy Stark ◽  
Julius Yellowhair ◽  
John N. Hudelson ◽  
Mark Horenstein ◽  
Malay Mazumder

For large scale CSP power plants, vast areas of land are needed in deserts and semi-arid climates where uninterrupted solar irradiance is most abundant. These power facilities use large arrays of mirrors to reflect and concentrate sunlight onto collectors, however, dust deposition on the optical surfaces causes obscuration of sunlight, resulting in large energy-yield losses in solar plants. This problem is compounded by the lack of natural clean water resources for conventional cleaning of solar mirrors, often with reflective surface areas of large installations exceeding a million square meters. To investigate the application of transparent electrodynamic screens (EDS) for efficient and cost effective dust removal from solar mirrors, both optical modeling and experimental verifications were performed. Prototype EDS-integrated mirrors were constructed by depositing a set of parallel transparent electrodes into the sun-facing surface of solar mirrors and coating electrodes with thin transparent dielectric film. Activation of the electrodes with a three-phase voltage creates an electrodynamic field that charges and repels dust electrostatically by Coulomb force and sweeps away particles by a traveling electrodynamic wave. We report here brief discussions on (1) rate of deposition and the properties of dust with respect to their size distribution and chemical composition in semi-arid areas of the southwest US and Mojave Desert and their adhesion to solar mirrors, (2) optical models of: (a) specular reflection losses caused by scattering and absorption by dust particles deposited on the surface based on Mie scattering theory, and (b) reflection loss by the integration of EDS on the mirror surface, computed by FRED ray-tracing model. The objective is to maintain specular reflectivity of 90% or higher by frequent removal of dust by EDS. Our studies show that the incorporation of transparent EDS would cause an initial loss of 3% but would be able to maintain specular reflectivity more than 90% to meet the industrial requirement for CSP plants. Specular reflection measurements taken inside a climate controlled environmental chamber show that EDS integration can restore specular reflectivity and would be able to prevent major degradation of the optical surface caused by the deposition of dust.


2016 ◽  
Vol 92 ◽  
pp. 499-505 ◽  
Author(s):  
Motasem Saidan ◽  
Abdul Ghani Albaali ◽  
Emil Alasis ◽  
John K. Kaldellis

MRS Advances ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 343-350
Author(s):  
Annie Rabi Bernard ◽  
Ryan Eriksen ◽  
Malay Mazumder

ABSTRACTThis study aims at establishing environmentally stable and viable silver nanowire (AgNW) electrodes of an Electrodynamic Screen (EDS) film, by the inclusion of one or more protective layers of zinc oxide (ZnO) produced in lab by combining tetrahydrofuran (THF) and diethylzinc (DEZ). The electrodes can be realized as 1) stacked structure where the AgNW electrode has a layer of ZnO on top for protection or 2) sandwiched structure where the AgNW electrode is covered by ZnO layers, protecting it from the top and bottom. Experiments are done to test the effect of accelerated exposure to ultraviolet light, high temperature and passage of high voltage on the AgNW samples and are compared with the results obtained from the AgNW samples that have the ZnO protective layer which have also been subjected to the aforementioned test conditions. A complete water immersion test is performed in order to ensure functionality and efficiency of the ZnO/AgNW samples that are to be patterned as electrodes of the EDS film. This will demonstrate viability of the structure in the case of rain.


2016 ◽  
Vol 856 ◽  
pp. 309-314
Author(s):  
Ludmil Stoyanov ◽  
Zahari Zarkov ◽  
Gilles Notton ◽  
Vladimir Lazarov

This paper compares thin film photovoltaic technologies’ productivity for different installation sites and surface positions. The aim is to guide architects to increase the energy yield during the design of buildings with integrated photovoltaic panels by providing information on the appropriate inclination and orientation of the panels. Meteorological data from ten sites from the Equator to the Arctic Circle are used. Two types of input solar radiation (extraterrestrial and real) are referenced, from horizontal to an arbitrary oriented surface, and are introduced in Durisch’s model to estimate the energy production for various surface inclinations and orientations. Thus 3D surfaces are obtained which allows the architects to choose an appropriate compromise between the aesthetic and the practical.


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