The basics of solar power:
Photovoltaic Principles are used to produce electricity. A solar panel
(PV panel) is made of the natural element, silicon,
which becomes charged electrically when subjected to sun Light.
Solar panels are directed at solar south in the northern hemisphere
and solar north in the southern hemisphere (these are slightly different
than magnetic compass north-south directions) at an angle dictated by the
geographic location and latitude of where they are to be installed.
Typically, the angle of the solar array is set within a range of
between site-latitude-plus 15 degrees and site-latitude-minus 15
degrees, depending on whether a slight winter or summer bias is
desirable in the system. Many solar arrays are placed at an angle
equal to the site latitude with no bias for seasonal periods.
This electrical charge is consolidated
in the PV panel and directed to the output
terminals to produce low voltage
(Direct Current) - usually 6 to 24 volts.
The most common output is intended for nominal 12 volts,
with an effective output usually up to 17 volts. A 12 volt nominal output is the reference voltage,
but the operating voltage can be 17 volts or higher much like your
car alternator charges your 12 volt battery at well over 12 volts.
So there's a difference between the reference voltage and the actual operating voltage.
The intensity of the Sun's radiation changes with the hour of the day,
time of the year and weather conditions. To be able to make calculations
in planning a system, the total amount of solar radiation energy
is expressed in hours of full sunlight per m², or Peak Sun Hours.
This term, Peak Sun Hours, represents the average amount of sun
available per day throughout the year. It is presumed that at "peak sun", 1000 W/m² of power
reaches the surface of the earth. One hour of full sun provides 1000 Wh per m² = 1 kWh/m² - representing
the solar energy received in one hour on a cloudless summer day on a one-square meter surface
directed towards the sun.
Components used to provide solar power:
The four primary components for producing electricity using solar power, which provides common 220-230 volt AC power for daily use are: Solar panels, charge Controller, battery and inverter. Solar panels charge the battery, and the charge Regulator insures proper charging of the battery. The battery provides DC voltage to The inverter and the inverter converts the DC voltage to normal AC voltage.
Solar Panels:
The output of a solar panel is usually stated in watts, and the wattage is determined by multiplying the rated voltage by the rated amperage. The formula for wattage is VOLTS times AMPS equals WATTS. So for example, a 12 volt 60 watt solar panel Measuring about 20 X 44 inches has a rated voltage of 17.1 and a rated 3.5 Amperage.
V x A = W
17.1 volts times 3.5 amps equals 60 watts If an average
of 5 hours of peak sun per day is available in an area,
then the above Solar panel can produce an average 300
watt hours of power per day; 60w times 5 hrs. = 300 watt-hours.
Since the intensity of sunlight contacting the solar panel
varies throughout the day, we use the term "peak sun hours"
as a method to smooth out the variations into a daily average.
Early morning and late-in-the-day sunlight produces less power
than the mid-day sun. Naturally, cloudy days will produce less
Power than bright sunny days as well. When planning a
system your geographical Area is rated in average peak sun
hours per day based on yearly sun data. Average Peak sun hours
for various geographical areas are listed in the above section. Solar
panels can be wired in series or in parallel to increase voltage or amperage respectively,
and they can be wired both in series and in parallel to increase both volts and amps.
Series wiring refers to connecting the positive terminal of one panel to the negative terminal of another.
The resulting outer positive and negative terminals will produce voltage the sum of the two panels,
but the amperage stays the same as one panel. So two 12 volt/3.5 amp panels wired in series
produces 24 volts at 3.5 amps.
Four of these wired in series would produce 48 volts at 3.5 amps.
Parallel wiring refers to connecting positive terminals to positive terminals and negative to negative.
The result is that voltage stays the same, but amperage becomes the sum of the number of panels.
So two 12 volt/3.5 amp panels wired in parallel would produce 12 volts at 7 amps.
Four panels would produce 12 volts at 14 amps.
Series/parallel wiring refers to doing both of the above - increasing volts and amps to achieve the
desired voltage as in 24 or 48 volt systems. The following diagram reflects this. In addition,
the four panels below can then be wired in parallel to another four and so on to make a larger array.
Charge Controller:
A charge controller monitors the battery's state-of-charge to insure that when the battery needs
charge-current it gets it, and also insures the battery isn't overcharged. Connecting a solar
panel to a battery without a regulator seriously risks damaging the battery and potentially causing a
safety concern. Charge controllers (or often called charge regulator) are rated based on the amount of
amperage they can process from a solar array. If a controller is rated at 20 amps it means that you can
connect up to 20 amps of solar panel output current to this one controller. The most advanced charge
controllers utilize a charging principal referred to as Pulse-Width-Modulation (PWM) - which insures
the most efficient battery charging and extends the life of the battery. Even more advanced
controllers also include Maximum Power Point Tracking (MPPT) which maximizes the amount of current
going into the battery from the solar array by lowering the panel's output voltage, which increases
the charging amps to the battery - because if a panel can produce 60 watts with 17.2 volts and 3.5 amps,
then if the voltage is lowered to say 14 volts then the amperage increases to 4.28 (14v X 4.28 amps = 60 watts) resulting in a 19% increase in charging amps for this example.
Many charge controllers also offer Low Voltage Disconnect (LVD) and Battery Temperature
Compensation (BTC) as an optional feature. The LVD feature permits connecting loads to the LVD terminals
which are then voltage sensitive. If the battery voltage drops too far the loads are
disconnected - preventing potential damage to both the battery and the loads.
BTC adjusts the charge rate based on the temperature of the battery since batteries are sensitive to
temperature variations above and below about 75 F degrees.
Battery:
The Deep Cycle batteries used are designed to be discharged and then re-charged hundreds or thousands of times.
These batteries are rated in Amp Hours (Ah) - usually at 20 hours and 100 hours. Simply stated, amp hours refers
to the amount of current - in amps - which can be supplied by the battery over the period of hours. For example,
a 350ah battery could supply 17.5 continuous amps over 20 hours or 35 continuous amps for 10 hours. To quickly
express the total watts potentially available in a 6 volt 360ah battery; 360ah times the nominal 6 volts equals
2160 watts or 2.16kWh (kilowatt-hours). Like solar panels, batteries are wired in series and/or parallel to
increase voltage to the desired level and increase amp hours. The battery should have sufficient amp hour
capacity to supply needed power during the longest expected period "no sun" or extremely cloudy conditions.
A lead-acid battery should be sized at least 20% larger than this amount.
If there is a source of back-up power, such as a standby generator along with a battery charger,
the battery bank does not have to be sized for worst case weather conditions.
The size of the battery bank required will depend on the storage capacity required, the maximum discharge rate,
the maximum charge rate, and the minimum temperature at which the batteries will be used. During planning,
all of these factors are looked at, and the one requiring the largest capacity will dictate the battery size.
One of the biggest mistakes made by those just starting out does not understand the relationship
between amps and amp-hour requirements of 220 volt AC items versus the effects on their DC low
voltage batteries. For example, say you have a 24 volt nominal system and an inverter powering a load of 3
amps, 220VAC, which has a duty cycle of 4 hours per day. You would have a 12 amp hour load (3A X 4 hrs=12 ah).
However, in order to determine the true drain on your batteries you have to divide your nominal battery voltage
(24v) into the voltage of the load (220v), which is 9, and then multiply this times your 220vac amp hours (9.1 x 12 ah).
So in this case the calculation would be 110 amp hours drained from your batteries - not the 12 ah.
Another simple way is to take the total watt-hours of your 220VAC device and divide by nominal system voltage.
Using the above example; 3 amps x 220 volts x 4 hours = 2640 watt-hours divided by 24 DC volts = 110 amp hours.
Lead-acid batteries are the most common in PV systems because their initial cost is lower and because they are
readily available nearly everywhere in the world. There are many different sizes and designs of
lead-acid batteries, but the most important designation is that they are deep cycle batteries.
Lead-acid batteries are available in both wet-cell (requires maintenance) and sealed no-maintenance versions.
AGM and Gel-cell deep-cycle batteries are also popular because they are maintenance free and they last a lot
longer.
Using an Inverter:
An inverter is a device which changes DC power stored in a battery to standard 220 VAC electricity.
Most solar power systems generate DC current which is stored in batteries. Nearly all lighting, appliances,
motors, etc., are designed to use ac power, so it takes an inverter to make the switch from battery-stored
DC to standard power (220 VAC, 50 Hz). In an inverter, direct current (DC) is switched back and forth to
produce alternating current (AC). Then it is transformed, filtered, stepped, etc. to get it to an acceptable
output waveform. The more processing, the cleaner and quieter the output, but the lower the efficiency of
the conversion. The goal becomes to produce a waveform that is acceptable to all loads without sacrificing
too much power into the conversion process.
Inverters come in two basic output designs - sine wave and modified sine wave.
Most 220VAC devices can use the modified sine wave, but there are some notable exceptions.
Devices such as laser printers which use triacs and/or silicon controlled rectifiers are damaged when provided mod-sine wave power.
Motors and power supplies usually run warmer and less efficiently on mod-sine wave power. Some things, like fans, amplifiers, and cheap fluorescent lights,
give off an audible buzz on modified sine wave power. However, modified sine wave inverters make the conversion from DC to AC very efficiently.
They are relatively inexpensive, and many of the electrical devices we use every day work fine on them. Pure sine wave inverters can virtually operate anything.
Your utility company provides sine wave power, so a sine wave inverter is equal to or even better than utility supplied power.
A sine wave inverter can "clean up" utility or generator supplied power because of its internal processing.
Inverters are made with various internal features and many permit external equipment interface.
Common internal features are internal battery chargers which can rapidly charge batteries when an
AC source such as a generator or utility power is connected to the inverter's INPUT terminals.
Auto-transfer switching is also a common internal feature which enables switching from either one
AC source to another and/or from utility power to inverter power for designated loads.
Battery temperature compensation, internal relays to control loads, automatic remote generator
starting/stopping and many other programmable features are available. Most inverters produce 220VAC,
but can be equipped with a step-up transformer to produce 220VAC.
Efficiency Losses:
In all systems there are losses due to such things as voltage losses as the electricity is carried across the wires, batteries and inverters not being 100 percent efficient, and other factors. These efficiency losses vary from component to component