Phil Pascoe
Established Member
:!: :!: You could have a rainwater harvesting system - channel all your household roof water, and roof water from your 'shop, greenhouse, garage into one channel to feed it, and put a waterwheel on it!
graduate_owner":3iqijt2l said:Hi Rogerm,
BUT - how is it that we can generate say 3.8kW during a break in the clouds, but about 2.8 kW when the sky is totally cloudless (similar times of the day)? I find that strange. Also there seems to be higher generation when the panels are cooler. I'm wondering whether to install a sprinkler system to keep the panels cooler !! (powered by solar energy of course)
K
Their internal resistance rises with temperature, I believe.RogerM":39deyek2 said:I don't think panels are any different to other electronic devices in this respect in that they are more sensitive when kept cool.
That's to reduce thermal noise induced in the CCD arrays that are the sensors. It's been done that way for decades, and you can buy bolt-on Peltier heat pumps for the sensors on amateur telescopes to do the same thing. In fact you usually can't get very good (astronomic) results without them (but there are simple ways of removing *some* noise via software).... the sensitive collectors on space telescopes are cooled with liquid helium that keep them at maximum sensitivity.
It's a very sensible idea, but another way of looking at it is that the conversion efficiency of photovoltaic solar collectors is poor, so you can improve the efficiency by heating water in the same panel simultaneously.I believe that there is a new generation of panels that are water cooled to improve efficiency, and that the power consumption of circulating the water is more than made up by the greater efficiency caused by the cooling.
Start temp = 15deg
Cutoff = 65 degC
.: delta = 50degC
Tank capacity: 300 litres
.: Energy input by lunchtime = 15,000 kcal
or = 62.76 MJ
or = 17.43 kWh
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