重量分析
环境科学
阿格拉
光伏系统
遥感
非晶硅
沉积(地质)
硅
晶体硅
材料科学
地质学
化学
电气工程
光电子学
工程类
有机化学
沉积物
生物
生态学
古生物学
作者
Jim Joseph John,Sonali Warade,GovindaSamy TamizhMani,Anil Kottantharayil
标识
DOI:10.1109/jphotov.2015.2495208
摘要
Evaluation of soiling loss on photovoltaic (PV) modules in a geographical location involves collecting data from a fielded PV system of that location. This is usually a time-consuming and expensive undertaking. Hence, we propose collecting dust samples from various location of interest, preferably from the module surface, and use them as dust samples so that the soiling experiments can be conducted in the laboratory. In this work, a low-cost artificial dust deposition technique is utilized that could be used to deposit dust on a module surface in a controlled manner, which helps in predicting soiling loss associated with various dust properties, including densities, chemical compositions, and particle sizes. The soil samples covering diverse climatic conditions and six different geographic locations covering all of India were collected and investigated. Soiling loss on a silicon solar cell with Mumbai dust (17.1%) is about two times that of Jodhpur dust (9.8%) for the same soil gravimetric density of 3 g/m 2 . The dust collected from Mumbai showed the highest spectral loss, followed by Pondicherry, Agra, Hanle, Jodhpur, and Gurgaon. The worst affected module technology was amorphous silicon (17.7%), followed by cadmium telluride (15.7%), crystalline silicon (15.4%), and CIGS (14.5%) for the same density (1.8 g/m 2 ) of dust from Mumbai.
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