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When to use a pyranometer vs a reference cell

Ruud Ringoir, Kipp & Zonen
February 14, 2011  |  0 Comments

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Ruud Ringoir, Kipp & Zonen, gives the reasons to use a pyranometer and the benefits of a pyranometer over a reference cell. Pyranometers can help determine the location for solar cell installations, and monitor panel performance, among other uses.

February 14, 2011 -- Ruud Ringoir, Kipp & Zonen, gives the reasons to use a pyranometer and the benefits of a pyranometer over a reference cell. Pyranometers can help determine the location for solar cell installations, and monitor panel performance, among other uses.

Reference cells have similar properties to photovoltaics (PV) panels, but even when properly calibrated, will have the same shortcomings in temperature, spectrum and degradation. Therefore they will not be able to give an accurate measurement of the available solar radiation under all conditions. Depending on the application and the type of energy calculation several differences can be noted.

Advantages of a pyranometer over a reference cell

The pyranometer gives an independent, accurate reading of the total available solar radiation. Depending on the technology (amorphous silicon, thin film CdTe or triple-junction cells, etc) and the cell/panel 'window' material PV cells have different spectral responses. Due to the changing position of the sun (Air Mass), pollution, humidity, clouds, etc, the solar spectrum at ground level varies considerably. Pyranometers measure the total solar spectrum from 0.3 to 3 micrometers wavelength and give an integrated measurement of the total short-wave solar energy available under all conditions.

The pyranometer are classified and calibrated to ISO standards. Pyranometers have been used to measure solar radiation for over 80 years. The world-wide solar radiation database is founded on pyranometer measurements. Also the pyranometer calibration factor is very stable over time. Performance classifications are defined by ISO 9060 and the calibration methods by ISO 9847.

The response time of the pyranometer is longer than a PV cell. The advantage here is that the pyranometer integrates over time, typically between 5 and 20 seconds. This means that sudden changes such as passing small clouds, birds and planes will not give transient spikes or dips in the data. A pyranometer will give a correct integrated values over a day when using sample intervals of 20 seconds or more.

The pyranometer is PV-cell-type independent. When different PV cell types are used in one plant, a separate reference cell for each type should be used, but only one pyranometer is required for monitoring all types.

A pyranometer can have a very small temperature coefficient. The temperature dependency of pyranometers can be as low as 1% over a 70°C temperature range (depending on type). This is much lower than that of PV panels and reference cells.

PV cells are specified at standard test conditions (STC). Most panels and reference cells have performance are specified under Standard Test Conditions. These are conditions of +25°C ambient temperature, 1000W/m2 global solar irradiance, air mass 1.5 and no wind. The global radiation when under test is measured with a pyranometer. These conditions are far from realistic in the real world and an accurate measurement with a pyranometer shows the real performance.

Reference cells (and PV panels) suffer more from pollution than pyranometers. There is a conception that pyranometers need to be cleaned very frequently, and this is advised for optimum performance. However, reference cells with a flat surface suffer more from deposits than the hemi-spherical dome of a pyranometer.

Performance Ratio or Performance Index calculations are more accurate using a pyranometer. Performance Ratio (PR) or Performance Index (PI) calculations when based on accurate independent data from a pyranometer are more relevant than when based on a reference cell with lower accuracy and the same inherent flaws as the panel itself. A pyranometer (depending on the type) can measure with 1% accuracy.

Reasons for measuring solar radiation

Solar radition is measured in order to select the most appropriate PV system, cell technology and fixed or tracking type; to find optimal locations (solar prospecting); and to help investment decisions. These exercises determine the optimal system and location of the power plant. Even relatively small changes in location of a few tens of kilometers can affect the annual energy available by several hundred kWh. Micro-climate and geographical effects due to mountains and valleys or shore-lines (for example cloud forming) can cause this. The calculated output based on accurate measurements and a selected PV technology can be used to facilitate project financing.

Solar radiation is also measured to monitor system performance, schedule maintenance, maximize operating efficiency, and calculate performance. This allows you to monitor efficiency and other performance parameters during operation of the installed system. Many inverters for PV systems have an input for pyranometers as well as reference cells.

The most important points that affect the (expected) total system output are a mismatch between STC specifications and actual installed output of PV cells, efficiency loss at low radiation values, shading, temperature, inverter efficiency, cable losses, and dirt and precipitation on the panels.

Other meteorological parameters such as wind, rain and temperature are often recorded for further analysis of the plant performance:

  • Temperature of the PV panels gives an indication of their change in efficiency
  • Wind and rain (cleaning of panel windows) together with radiation (change in efficiency) data can be used to schedule maintenance
  • Wind speed is also used to prevent damage to moving panels by lowering or turning them when the wind load is too high.

More information can be found on the Kipp & Zonen website at www.kippzonen.com, This article was originally published by Photovoltaics World's partner publication, www.RenewableEnergyWorld.com, under its Total Access Program, and is republished here with permission.

To learn about situations where reference cells are advantageous, view the on-demand free webcast, Solar Simulator Spectrum Measurement and Calibration with Konica Minolta

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