4.7 Article

Experimental analysis on the impacts of soil deposition and bird droppings on the thermal performance of photovoltaic panels

Journal

CASE STUDIES IN THERMAL ENGINEERING
Volume 48, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.csite.2023.103128

Keywords

PV panels; Power production efficiency; Soil deposition; Tilt angle; PV simulator

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This study evaluated the performance of solar PV panels under different tilt angles and dust deposition. Bird droppings were found to have the greatest impact on efficiency, while coal dust had the least effect. The considered tilt angles had a minor influence on the overall performance of the PV panels.
Photovoltaic (PV) systems are capable of meeting the urgent demand for power production for both domestic and commercial purposes. PV systems possess serious drawbacks as their perfor-mance is heavily influenced by environmental variables like wind, radiation, shadow, dust, and soil accumulation. The current work examines the performance of solar PV panels in the presence of soil and dust at various tilt angles. A solar PV simulator was used, and experiments were conducted for a hot-dry climate location (Vellore, Tamil Nadu, India, 12.91 degrees N, 79.1325 degrees E), to evaluate the performance of solar PV panels under varying dust deposition. A total of seven different samples, such as black soil, desert soil, red soil, alluvial soil, laterite soil, coal dust, and bird droppings, were selected and dispersed over the surface of the PV panel at various weights of 10, 20, 30, 40, and 50 g. The physical characteristics of the dust samples have been emphasized as being essential in determining how effectively the PV panel functioned. Bird droppings were shown to have the greatest influence on PV panel efficiency because of their tendency to stick to the panel surface due to moisture content, but coal dust, independent of tilt angle, was found to have the least effect. Coal dust was determined to have the least impact of all soil types since it is quickly blown away and does not stick to the surface. Bird droppings accounted for about 46.42 %-89.18% of the efficiency loss, which was determined to be high, whereas coal dust accounted for less than 13% of the efficiency loss. Furthermore, it was revealed that considered tilt angles (0O and 12.91O) have a minor influence on the PV's overall performance.

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