Industry and government interest in solar energy has increased in recent years in the Middle East. However, despite high levels of solar irradiance in the Arabian Gulf, harsh climatic conditions adversely affect the electrical performance of solar photovoltaics (PV). The objective of this study is to compare the annual performance characteristics of solar PV modules that utilize either sun-tracking or water cooling to increase electrical power generation relative to that of stationary, passively cooled modules in the Middle East climatic conditions. This is achieved using an electro-thermal model developed and validated against experimental data acquired in this study. The model is used to predict the annual electrical power output of a 140 W PV module in Abu Dhabi (24.43°N, 54.45°E) under four operating conditions: (i) stationary geographical south facing orientation with passive air cooling, (ii) sun-tracked orientation with passive air cooling, (iii) stationary geographical south facing orientation with water cooling at ambient air temperature, and (iv) stationary geographical south facing orientation with water refrigerated at either 10 °C or 20 °C below ambient air temperature. For water cooled modules, annual electrical power output increases by 22% for water at ambient air temperature, and by 28% and 31% for water refrigerated at 10 °C and 20 °C below ambient air temperature, respectively. 80% of the annual output enhancement obtained using water cooling occurs between the months of May and October. Finally, whereas the annual yield enhancement obtained with water cooling at ambient air temperature from May to October is of 18% relative to stationary passive cooling conditions, sun-tracking over the complete year produces an enhancement of only 15% relative to stationary passive cooling conditions.
[1]
Said Farahat,et al.
An improved thermal and electrical model for a solar photovoltaic thermal (PV/T) air collector
,
2010
.
[2]
Ernani Sartori,et al.
Convection coefficient equations for forced air flow over flat surfaces
,
2006
.
[3]
William Gerard Hurley,et al.
A thermal model for photovoltaic panels under varying atmospheric conditions
,
2010
.
[4]
Andreas K. Athienitis,et al.
Convective Heat Transfer Coefficients in a Building-Integrated Photovoltaic/Thermal System
,
2011
.
[5]
Peter Rodgers,et al.
Enhancing the Performance of Photovoltaic Solar Modules by Active Thermal Management
,
2012
.
[6]
Steve Sharples,et al.
Full-scale measurements of wind-induced convective heat transfer from a roof-mounted flat plate solar collector
,
1998
.
[7]
Frank P. Incropera,et al.
Fundamentals of Heat and Mass Transfer
,
1981
.
[8]
P. Rodgers,et al.
An integrated thermal management solution for flat-type solar photovoltaic modules
,
2013,
2013 14th International Conference on Thermal, Mechanical and Multi-Physics Simulation and Experiments in Microelectronics and Microsystems (EuroSimE).
[9]
Graham L. Morrison,et al.
Performance of a building integrated photovoltaic/thermal (BIPVT) solar collector
,
2009
.