The effect of photoconductive shunting on HIT modules

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Mark Campanelli

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Jun 4, 2026, 9:57:01 AM (8 days ago) Jun 4
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To whom it may concern,

  I have been updating PVfit, and I have updated the getting started demo for IEC 61853-1 matrix fits to compare the "simple" SDM with the "less simple" SDM that adds a photoconductive shunt as the auxiliary equation for the shunt conductance (the inverse of the shunt resistance).

  For context, some of the nine modules tested, PVfit's simple fitting actually suggests a zero shunt conductance at STC (equiv., an infinite shunt resistance at STC). Interestingly, for these (few) modules, adding a photoconductive shunt doesn't actually change the fitting to zero of this parameter. (I had expected otherwise.) However, it does improve some of the fits that already have a non-zero shunt conductance for the simple model. Importantly, I observe that it significantly  improves the low-light fitting of the one HIT module in the group:

HIT Module Model Comparison.png
  What is also interesting here, is that the "improved" PVfit model does not add any new fitting parameters to describe the photoconductive shunt, which is a simpler approach than PVsyst (which IIRC adds at least two fit parameters here). I also note that fitting to only the spec sheet parameters appears to be much more difficult when there is a significant photoconductive shunt, which makes sense because there is no light-level dependence information being used in PVfit's algorithm for this.

  So, if anyone has any IEC 61853-1 datasets for modules with high photoconductive shunt, then I'd be happy to compare notes, especially with respect to any PVsyst results.

Thanks,,

Mark Campanelli

Anton Driesse

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Jun 4, 2026, 10:19:56 AM (7 days ago) Jun 4
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Hi Mark,

Your photoconductive shunt without additional parameters sounds just like the CEC/De Soto model (conductance proportional to irradiance).  

Is it the same?

Anton


On 2026-06-04 15:57, Mark Campanelli wrote:
To whom it may concern,

  I have been updating PVfit, and I have updated the getting started demo for IEC 61853-1 matrix fits to compare the "simple" SDM with the "less simple" SDM that adds a photoconductive shunt as the auxiliary equation for the shunt conductance (the inverse of the shunt resistance).

  For context, some of the nine modules tested, PVfit's simple fitting actually suggests a zero shunt conductance at STC (equiv., an infinite shunt resistance at STC). Interestingly, for these (few) modules, adding a photoconductive shunt doesn't actually change the fitting to zero of this parameter. (I had expected otherwise.) However, it does improve some of the fits that already have a non-zero shunt conductance for the simple model. Importantly, I observe that it significantly  improves the low-light fitting of the one HIT module in the group:


  What is also interesting here, is that the "improved" PVfit model does not add any new fitting parameters to describe the photoconductive shunt, which is a simpler approach than PVsyst (which IIRC adds at least two fit parameters here). I also note that fitting to only the spec sheet parameters appears to be much more difficult when there is a significant photoconductive shunt, which makes sense because there is no light-level dependence information being used in PVfit's algorithm for this.

  So, if anyone has any IEC 61853-1 datasets for modules with high photoconductive shunt, then I'd be happy to compare notes, especially with respect to any PVsyst results.

Thanks,,

Mark Campanelli
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Mark Campanelli

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Jun 4, 2026, 10:29:35 AM (7 days ago) Jun 4
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Anton:

  Indeed, nothing fancy or really novel here. G is proportional to PVfit's implementation of effective irradiance, F=Isc/Isc0, i.e., G = F * G0.

-Mark

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