4.6 Article

Is hydrophobic coating on glass equally efficient in reducing % soiling loss of solar PVs in clean and polluted environments?

Journal

SOLAR ENERGY
Volume 265, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.solener.2023.112120

Keywords

Hydrophobic coating; Soiling loss; Field study; Dust composition; Preferential accumulation; Particle size-resolved soiling

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This study examines the effect of hydrophobic-coated glass on particle accumulation on photovoltaic surfaces. The findings indicate that under polluted environments, the hydrophobic coating reduces the percentage of soiling loss compared to uncoated glass.
Hydrophobic-coated glass (CS) on PV surfaces is known to reduce particulate matter (PM) accumulation. However, there is no comparative study on the % reduction in soiling loss (% RSL) on CS with respect to uncoated glass (UCS) for clean and polluted environments (higher atmospheric PM). The present field study (-210 km2 in Gujarat, Western India) focuses on the evaluation of particle-size distribution of PM on CS and UCS, quantification of size-resolved soiling due to PM accumulation on CS and UCS, and comparison of % RSL of CS in cleaner and polluted environments. The findings show that 3 to 10 mu m particles contribute to-21 % and-12 % of the total mass accumulated on CS and UCS, respectively. The observations are also validated using the theoretical adhesion model and critical rebounding velocity. Moreover, this particle-size fraction contributes to-50 % of the total soiling loss for CS against only-27 % soiling loss for UCS. Therefore, CS surfaces under polluted environments are expected to have a higher % of finer particle-size fraction in accumulated PM, which contributes significantly to the total soiling loss of CS and reduces the difference in % soiling loss between CS and UCS. Although CS reduces PM accumulation in both clean and polluted regions, the % RSL using CS is comparatively less in a polluted environment. The observations from the present study provide greater insight into the soiling aspect of solar PVs and have significant economic implications in deploying PV surfaces with hydrophobic coated glass.

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