Module Underperformance – Part 2: Soiling, Snow, & Shade
Pure Power Engineering
Solar + storage engineering for commercial, industrial & utility scale projects.
Modules can underperform for a variety of environmental and non-environmental factors.??With good design and operation practices we can mitigate non-environmental factors. However, we cannot control the environment. We can only predict its behavior, and in turn verify or discount its effect on under-performance.
What are the main environmental drivers??There are a variety of unique attributes for each environmental factor.?To simplify things, lets break it down into two categories:
Part 2 – Sun’s Availability due to Snow, Soiling, & Shade
The suns availability is limited by all things that can block the sun from hitting our modules when the sun is shining. We will focus on the 3 most influential things in our system modeling:
2. Soiling (Non-Snow). Leaves, pollen, and a variety of other debris can coat modules and racking, leading to degradation in performance. Depending on the geographic climate, the production effects can vary. For example, southern states see high soiling rates during pollination season. Washing modules may prove cost-effective in areas prone to drought and/or light rain, whereas systems in areas receiving moderate-rain can ‘self-clean’ with a solar resource offset on rainy-days.
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3. Near Shading. Trees, buildings, powerlines and other obstructions not related to the horizon-site are known as near shading obstacles. When placed within reasonable distance of the eastern or western side of a site (e.g. – a water tower to the east of a system), the obstruction can cause morning or afternoon shading on the modules as the sun passes over. The effect of this obstruction varies by sun-elevation and seasonality, with winter typically being the most impactful. Effective project development and validation can mitigate shading issues prior to system build. Upon constructing of a project, specific situations allow for tree removal or obstruction mitigation
4. Far Shading (Horizon).?Obstacles on the north or south side of a system (hemisphere-dependent) can cause production impacts as well . When sun-elevation is low enough, north-south shading can be present during the entirety of a solar day. This type of shading underperformance has similar characteristics of downed-capacity and should be avoided at all costs. Mitigation should occur during the development stage, by improving shade models.
Who conducts these complicated tests?
Pure Power has an Owner's Engineering department that specializes in the running weather assessments, as well as PVSYST and historical assessments. To save time and money on your next project, visit www.PurePower.com or reach out to [email protected].
8.5 GW, 15 years in Solar + BESS Industry | Technical Project Development, Design & Engineering, Technical Advisory, Owners Engineering
7 个月One of the most neglected topic even after knowing the severe impact of these.