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Hi Will,
There is some discussion about such models in this report:
https://doi.org/10.2172/1615179. Two of the models have separate
temperature equations and some parameter values are given in the
appendix.
I think the bigger problem is that PV modules have significantly different low-light characteristics, so any model--simple or complex--is going be of limited use without some parameter fitting (which is of course hard if the manufacturer doesn't supply the data you would need for fitting).
Anton
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Hi Will,
I think what you are after (tell me if I am wrong) is not just a
model, but a combination of a model and parameters that produces a
curve that is more typical of actual modules than PVWatts and/or
the Marion variations.
If you had such a curve at 25C, it would be trivial to translate it to different temperatures using your favourite gamma_pdc value, and subsequently relatively easy to fit the original and translated curves using of the models from [8].
Going the other way, if you had any model from [8] with parameters that produce a curve you like at 25C (e.g. Jinko MotherPV), but you want to change gamma_pdc, you can just feed 25C into the model and follow up with a separate temperature correction.
With "limited use" I was thinking of a single set of parameters being suitable to a limited range of modules, but if the starting point for the "correction" is PVWatts, then I agree that any of the curves is probably better than none!
Hopefully some of this is useful!
Anton
Thanks, Anton.
I've attached a chart with the relative efficiencies from the nine test matrices here [5] (direct link to xlsx download: [6]), plus a manually entered FSLR module eye-balled from Fig. 1 here [7] (it's the line in my chart with the highest value at 400 W/m^2), all at 25 deg C.
I also added two of the MotherPV fits from [8] and two corrections from Marion 2008 [3] with arbitrary k values.
Anton - you noted that any model is going to be of limited use without parameter fitting. It seems to me that, assuming the test matrices from CFV are reasonably representative of what could be installed (big assumption), I would be better off at least using something like the MotherPV LG fit correction than doing no correction at all.
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-- PV Performance Labs Emmy-Noether-Str. 2 79110 Freiburg Germany
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Hi Will,
I think what you are after (tell me if I am wrong) is not just a
model, but a combination of a model and parameters that produces a
curve that is more typical of actual modules than PVWatts and/or
the Marion variations.
If you had such a curve at 25C, it would be trivial to translate it to different temperatures using your favourite gamma_pdc value, and subsequently relatively easy to fit the original and translated curves using of the models from [8].
Going the other way, if you had any model from [8] with parameters that produce a curve you like at 25C (e.g. Jinko MotherPV), but you want to change gamma_pdc, you can just feed 25C into the model and follow up with a separate temperature correction.
With "limited use" I was thinking of a single set of parameters being suitable to a limited range of modules, but if the starting point for the "correction" is PVWatts, then I agree that any of the curves is probably better than none!
Hopefully some of this is useful!
Anton
Thanks, Anton.
I've attached a chart with the relative efficiencies from the nine test matrices here [5] (direct link to xlsx download: [6]), plus a manually entered FSLR module eye-balled from Fig. 1 here [7] (it's the line in my chart with the highest value at 400 W/m^2), all at 25 deg C.
I also added two of the MotherPV fits from [8] and two corrections from Marion 2008 [3] with arbitrary k values.
Anton - you noted that any model is going to be of limited use without parameter fitting. It seems to me that, assuming the test matrices from CFV are reasonably representative of what could be installed (big assumption), I would be better off at least using something like the MotherPV LG fit correction than doing no correction at all.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/pvlib-python/19f04fea-8400-42c1-a03e-d99f133ab7c9n%40googlegroups.com.
-- PV Performance Labs Emmy-Noether-Str. 2 79110 Freiburg Germany
+49-761-8973-5603 (Office) +49-174-532-7677 (Mobile) www.pvperformancelabs.com
Hi Will,
Since you mention the ADR model: it has a temperature coefficient that doesn't have the same value as gamma_pdc, but you can set it to zero or scale it up or down as you would for gamma_pdc.
Cheers,
Anton
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