
NREL data set shows clouds' effects
on solar power
Sept. 1, 2011 - uk.ibtimes.com
The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) National
Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)has produced and
made available a rich data set showing what happens,
second-by-second, when clouds pass over a solar power
installation.
Seventeen measurement stations near Hawaii’s
Honolulu International Airport on the island of Oahu
collected data at 1-second intervals over the course
of a year.
The data set is of great interest to utilities,
developers of large-scale photovoltaic (PV) systems,
forecasters, system operators, laboratories and universities.
By understanding the characteristics of cloud shadows
that pass across a large PV system, utility officials
can devise strategies to better manage those fluctuations
so the grid isn’t adversely impacted.
The sun reliably beams down on the Earth every day,
and just as reliably clouds pass by each day, shading
flora and fauna, buildings and mountains, for better
or worse.
What happens when those clouds pass between the
sun and a large solar energy installation? How much
is lost in the effort to convert the sun’s
photons into electrons for electricity?
Those questions went largely unanswered until recently.
The DOE-funded study by NREL supports the Hawaii
Clean Energy Initiative (HCEI), a multifaceted program
to substantially increase the use of renewable energy
in Hawaii. The study also includes General Electric,
the Hawaiian Electric Company and the Hawaiian National
Energy Institute.
The information then can be used to predict what
PV outputs might be at 1-second intervals for medium-sized
and large PV systems.
The collected data “allows us to set up a
solar-monitoring network that simulates exactly how
clouds would impact a large photovoltaic system,” said
NREL Senior Scientist David Renne. “The time-synch
data is unique. All 17 stations make a 1-second measurement
at exactly the same time. This allows the array to “see” clouds
moving through and simulates how a PV system might
behave.”
“Each of the 17 measurement stations measure
the solar energy in the sun’s visible spectrum
that reaches a horizontal surface at ground level,” Renne
said. Researchers from NREL’s Solar Radiation
Research Laboratory designed the equipment so that
a global positioning satellite system can be used
to provide concurrent 1-second measurements for each
of the 17 stations.
“The data has to be collected every second
because PV systems respond very quickly to shadows,” Renne
said. “We have to make sure we really capture
the detailed ramp characteristics,” which are
dips and jumps in PV output based on factors such
as clouds.
The data set can model utility-scale systems up
to 30 megawatts, Renne noted. “Clouds can cause
pretty significant jumps or ramps over a very short
period of time.” Renne said that as solar power
becomes a greater part of the energy mix, those jumps
can cause fluctuations in the grid, which if unmitigated
can cause surges, fluctuations, and headaches for
the utility operator.
Storage of the electricity generated by the sun
is one way to handle those fluctuations. Another
is to stabilize the grid via infrastructure and software
packages.
“If they have good statistical information
about cloud patterns, they can design systems and
wire them together along certain orientations to
minimize the impact of cloud passage, and dampen
those fluctuations,” Renne said.
One new insight is that with very large arrays of
solar panels, there is a smoothing of the fluctuation,
compared to the sharp spikes and plunges that can
happen when a cloud passes by a single panel or small
rooftop array.
Solar power is particularly useful during hot summer
days, when the demand for air conditioning is the
highest. That’s also when the sun is blaring
and when solar panels are producing at their peak.
The data collected for the Oahu Solar Energy Study
belongs to the partners working on the HCEI, but
NREL can share the knowledge about building a data
set based on one-second intervals with others around
the nation and the world. One year’s worth
of the data can be found on NREL’s Measurement
and Instrumentation Data Center (MIDC) website at
www.nrel.gov/midc.
NREL is the U.S. Department of Energy's primary
national laboratory for renewable energy and energy
efficiency research and development. NREL is operated
for DOE by The Alliance for Sustainable Energy, LLC.
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