photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

67
PHOTOVOLTAICS Second Generation Renewable Energy Technologies Notes from a Designer, Builder and Property Inspector

Upload: jrusmisel

Post on 20-May-2015

1.800 views

Category:

Technology


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Notes on the design and construction of an off grid solar PV system. What to look for in inspecting a PV system.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

PHOTOVOLTAICSSecond Generation Renewable Energy Technologies

Notes from a Designer, Builder

and Property Inspector

Page 2: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Professional Background• RF Regional Manager • Intercontinental Satellite Distribution • North Hollywood , CA 1985-1988• RF Satellite and Cable• Pico Products New Business

Development• Sylmar, CA 1988-1991 & 1996-1998• Optical Fiber• PCO (Joint Venture IBM/Corning

Glass)• Product Manager - Audio/Video

Products• Laser and Pin FET receiver

technologies• Woodland Hills, CA 1992-1995

• CREIA Certified Inspector since 1999

• ASHI Certified Inspector • CLSB General Contractor

#791340• Licensed Property and

Casualty Adjuster (TDI)• FEMA Certified Disaster

Housing Inspector

Page 3: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

“Green” Evolution

• Chatsworth Residence 2002-2007

– 1900 square feet with 2 car garage & pool– Installed Energy Efficient Andersons– Upgraded A/C to 14 SEER– Xeriscaping with native plants– Day lighting – Skylights– Large south facing roof

Page 4: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

AIA & Edison Sponsors

Page 5: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

The living laboratory“Voluntary Simplicity “

• Paso Robles Residence from October 2007

– 1086 square feet. No garage/pool.– 7 Acres on all weather road– Off Grid PV system– Water well and septic system– Garden and compost system

Page 6: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

System Design Considerations

Page 7: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Load Requirements

• Electrical:• 1100 sq. ft. All fluorescent or CFLs• Energy Star 20 cu. ft. bottom freezer/refrigerator• Well pressure pump• Evaporative cooler

• Heating:• Propane thru wall heater• Propane stove and water heater

• Back Up Generator:• Water well (2,500 gal storage tank)

Page 8: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Off Grid PV System

• (8) Sharp 180 watt PV panels• Lorentz azimuth array tracker• Xantech MPPT controller• (8) Rolls-Surette Batteries 450 amp hours each.

10 year warranty.• 20 kVa diesel/bio diesel back up generator

Fixed PV systems are only about 60-65% efficient in the real world. Small scale wind turbines are 20-40% (Location, location, location!)

Page 9: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Sharp modules and Lorentz Tracker

Page 10: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Outback FX Invertors and Xantec MPPT Controller

Page 11: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Battery Banks

Flooded lead acid Batteries Off Gas Hydrogen - NO Smoking!

Needs Lower AND Upper venting at cabinet when enclosed.

Take off jewelry to avoid d/c arcing. Can reach 3,000 degrees F and be sustained.

Don’t drop your flashlight across the terminals.

Page 12: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Key Issues

• Tracker mounted PV Panels minimize overall loss. Insolation is 30-40% better with tracker.

• Sharp panels matched to dual Outback invertors. (8X 185= 1480 watts input)

• Outback invertors rated at 1500 watts each• Xantech controller is MPPT. High efficiency and

smoother charging. Optimizes charge rate and prevents over discharge of batteries. 25% improvement.

• 8 Rolls 6 volt batteries (2 strings of 4 = 24 volts). • Usually fully charged by noon. Provides 2-3 days storage

capacity during no sun periods.• Back up generator seldom used. Equalizes batteries and

pumps water. Necessary for battery maintenance.

Page 13: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Cost Analysis

(8) Sharp panels @ $550 $4,400Lorentz array tracker 1,100 Outback Inverters 2,600Xantech controller 575(8) Rolls-Surette Batteries 3,000 Total Component Cost $11,675Commercial Cost $19k - $21k

Based on $190/mo bill – Pay back is 61 months

Page 14: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Ok. Lets go back some…

• We have very good insolation in California.

• California leads the nation is PV installations. (New Jersey is second!)

• 2/3 of the PV systems in the US are in CA

• 66% of the CA systems are in Northern California

SolarLA seeks to equal the entire CA existing PV output by 2014.

• California seeks to have

1 million systems by 2016• 122,000 systems installed

per year to meet goal• The US has the 3rd

largest number of PV Systems behind Germany and Spain. Japan is 4th.

Page 15: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

What is solar insolation?

What is solar insolation?

The amount of electromagnetic energy (solar radiation) incident on the surface of the earth. Basically that means how much sunlight is shining down on us.

PV systems produce power in proportion to the intensity of sunlight striking the solar array surface.

Solar radiation striking the Earth varies by region, season, time of day, climate, and air pollution, the yearly amount of energy striking almost any part of the Earth is vast.

Why is knowing the insolation level useful?

By knowing the insolation levels of a particular region we can determine the size of the solar photovoltaic panel array that is required. An area with poor insolation levels will need a larger or more panels than an area with high insolation levels. Once you know your region's insolation level you can more accurately calculate array size and energy output.

Page 16: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Solar Insolation Map

Average radiation received on a horizontal surface across the continental United States in the month of June

Units are in kWh/m2/day.

Page 17: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Annual Energy Production by City per kWSTC* array rating*kilowatt hours at Standard Testing Conditions

California Cities (range)• Arcata 1092 - 1365• Shasta 1345 - 1681• San Francisco 1379 - 1724• Sacramento 1455 - 1819• Fresno (Paso Robles) 1505 - 1881• Santa Maria 1422 - 1778• Barstow 1646 - 2058• Los Angeles 1406 - 1758• San Diego 1406 - 1758

Page 18: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

What IS a Solar System?

• Passive Solar• Solar collectors

primarily used to preheat water for water heaters, pools and hydrothermic floors.

• “Trombone Walls” heated air convection

• PV System

• Electricity Producing• Photovoltaic panels

convert photons to dc current that can be up-converted to standard ac current.

Page 19: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

What are the 2 major types of PV Systems?

• Distributed• Located near the end

use location.• Usually <1-50

Megawatts• Can be grid tied.

• Central• Remotely located

near a power transmission grid.

• Can produce gigawatts.

Page 20: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Central PV Systems

Page 21: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

OptiSolar SLO County Project

• 550 Megawatts. Largest in US to be completed 2013

• Uses polished solar collectors to focus energy on pipes filled with liquid sodium that heats water that powers a steam turbine.

• Limited tracking ability.• Uses large amount H2O• Needs plant facility• Noise factor

Page 22: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Austin Texas Energy System

Phase One 2009• 30 megawatts true PV array• Facility spread out over 620 acres• Will supply power to 5,000 homes

100 megawatts by 2020• Will provide 30% of city energy needs• Creates 600 jobs

Page 23: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Distributed PV Systems

Residential2 Major types:

Grid Tied

17,300 Systems

in California

Off Grid

Total Systems Unknown

Commercial/Industrial

(Usually Grid Tied)

Residential or Industrial?

Page 24: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Distributed Systems

Page 25: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

SLO County Installations

Page 26: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

As an Inspector… What am I looking at?

Page 27: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Only seems like this at first…

Page 28: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Functions and Componentsof a PV System

Collect EnergyPhotovoltaic cells, panels and arrays

ConvertInverters using transformer-less circuitry up convert 12/24/48v d/c into useful and safe 120/240v a/c.

Store or DistributeOff Grid storage with batteriesGrid Tied distribution in partnership with utility company. Turns meter “backwards” for “net metering”

Page 29: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Collect Energy

• Collects energy from photons in sunlight. • Photovoltaic Panels generate 12v DC• Modules mfg from silicon based cells grouped

together to form a panel.• Panels combined together to form arrays. Can

be configured 12/24/48v DC • Arrays can be fixed or articulate (Tracking)• Tracking array 30-40% more efficient by

maintaining maximum insolation exposure angle through “solar day”

Page 30: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Major PV Panel Manufacturers

Page 31: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Convert

• Inverters – “up convert” DC input into stabilized AC output.

• Controllers – Regulate and monitor DC input to invertors (and batteries)

• Two types of controllers

• MPPT and PWM

• May also act as battery chargers

Page 32: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Store or Distribute

StoreTypically flooded lead acid battery banks.May be sealed AGM (Absorption Glass Mat) batteries in remote installations.

DistributeOutput of invertors directly connected to “grid” of local utility. Energy created is measured to reduce electrical billing.

Page 33: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Typical Battery Banks

Page 34: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Off Grid System Design

• Small 12 volt d/c Cabin System

• Direct Connected System (Water Pumping)

• Multi Panel Off Grid ( Cell Phone Towers)

• Basic PV System with Generator

Page 35: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Small 12 volt d/c Cabin System

Watch out! Often components are electronics devices for auto!

Page 36: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Direct Connected System

Common on Farms and Ranches

Page 37: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Multi Panel Off Grid

Page 38: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Basic Off Grid PV System with Generator*

*This the System I chose to build.

Page 39: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Grid Tied Utility Interactive

Rooftop Utility-Interactive (Grid Tied) System

Medium Size Residential (Grid Tied) Hybrid a/c and d/c with back up Generator

Utility-Interactive (Grid Tied) Three-Inverter System

Page 40: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Rooftop Utility-Interactive System (Grid Tied)

Page 41: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Medium Size Residential (Grid Tied) Hybrid a/c and d/c with back up Generator*

Page 42: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Utility-Interactive (Grid Tied) Three-Inverter System

Common Commercial/Ranch/Industrial Design

Page 43: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Most Common Systems

What the inspector is likely to see.

Basic Off Grid PV System with Generator

20% of installed systems in 2009

Rooftop Utility-Interactive System (Grid Tied)

80% of systems reaching 98% by 2020

Page 44: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Residential Installations

Page 45: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Various Installations

Page 46: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Growth will be in Grid Tied Utility interactive Systems

• Mandated standards by State legislature• Rebates from various jurisdictions and Utility

providers.• Federal and State Tax credits

• Off Grid systems are not eligible for rebates.• Are eligible for Tax Credits.

Page 47: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Benefits of New Federal Incentives

• 30% direct Tax Credit• State/local/utility credits• Accelerated depreciation• Reduced energy bills for 25 years

• Currently can equal 50% of total system cost.• Adds increased value to residence• Increased acceptance by lenders

Page 48: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Result? Explosive growth

• Retro-fitted existing housing stock

• Look for mandated requirements in new home construction.

• http://www.gosolarcalifornia.ca.gov/builders/index.html

• Increased implementation in commercial and industrial properties to reduce/offset overhead expenses.

Page 49: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Solar Roof Tile Installation

Page 50: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

As Inspectors….

How do we report on these systems?

• Do we note the presence of a PV system and defer to a specialist?

• Or do we handle it like a specialty pool/spa report?

• Expert input will be required to define the parameters of a PV report as it pertains to a home inspection.

• But, as in all our reporting, Life/Safety issues MUST be reported.

• Thus, we will be looking at some portions of these systems…

Page 51: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

All PV Systems have some or all of these components

• Modules/Panels• d/c Disconnect• Inverter• a/c Disconnect• Controller• Battery Bank

• Cables, Connectors, Grounding and Bonding Devices

Page 52: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Governing Authority

Article 690, Solar Photovoltaic Systems of the NEC specifically deals with PV systems, but many other sections of the NEC contain requirements for any electrical system including PV systems [90.2, 720]. When there is a conflict between Article 690 of the NEC and any other article, Article 690 takes precedence [690].

National Electrical Code® and NEC ® are registered trademarks of the National Fire Protection Association, Inc., Quincy, Massachusetts 02269

Check Local Building Departments for other Specific Requirements.

Page 53: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Useful Resources

Photovoltaic Power Systems And the 2005 National Electrical Code: Suggested Practicesby John Wiles Southwest Technology Development Institute, New Mexico State University

This suggested practices manual examines the requirements of the 2005 National Electrical Code (NEC) as they apply to photovoltaic (PV) power systems. The design requirements for the balance-of-systems components in a PV system are addressed, including conductor selection and sizing, overcurrent protection device rating and location and disconnect rating and location. PV array, battery, charge controller, and inverter sizing and selection are not covered, as these items are the responsibility of the system designer, and they in turn determine the items in this manual. Stand-alone, hybrid, and utility-interactive PV systems are all covered. References are made to applicable sections of the NEC.

Available without charge online. 143 pages.

http://store.altestore.com/media/pdfs/photovoltaic_NEC_code_practices2005.pdf

Page 54: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Useful ResourcesCALIFORNIA ENERGY COMMISSION

“A GUIDE TO PHOTOVOLTAIC (PV) SYSTEM DESIGN AND INSTALLATION”Prepared by: Endecon Engineering 2001 Available without charge online. 40 pages.http://www.energy.ca.gov/reports/2001-09-04_500-01-020.PDF

Renewable Energy Technology Analysis Project - Pace University“Inspector Guidelines for PV Systems”Brooks Engineering Vacaville, CA 2006Available without charge online. 31 pages www.brooksolar.com

Background, Implications and Requirementsby John Stevens, Sandia National Laboratories“IEEE-929” (PV Utility Interconnection) The only device that the standard impacts is that device where the utility-interface protection functions are accomplished – the inverter.

http://www.fsec.ucf.edu/en/research/photovoltaics/vieo/resources/documents/FSEC-PV-OS-16-2000-1.pdf

Page 55: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Potential Problem Areas

• Panel array wiring method- Approved cable• Panel bonding- Approved connectors• Disconnects rated for d/c • Grounding and bonding- Approved connectors

• Listed and rated components• Batteries- Non approved welding cables• and corrosion on terminals• Conductors- Suitable for application• Clear labeling of components and function

Page 56: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

PV Module Interconnect Methods

Bus Bar at right = Combiner Box with means of disconnection!

Page 57: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Small System Disconnects

Note: Ability to isolate PV Module Input and Load to Batteries.

Page 58: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Wind Damaged PV System

Page 59: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Site Considerations

Page 60: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Improper Module Grounding

Page 61: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

ILSCO GBL4-DBT LugApproved connector

Page 62: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Destroyed Mechanical Terminal From PV System. Fine Wire!

Page 63: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Installing PV Panels on Roofs

Page 64: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

More SLO County Installations

Page 65: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Cal Fire Concerns

Connected energized systems

Consider applying the requirements of NEC 440.14 for Air-Conditioningand Refrigerating Equipment only requires that the disconnect be “readilyaccessible from the air conditioning or refrigerating equipment.” Followingthis provision would require a clearly marked rooftop disconnect that canbe easily operated by emergency personnel on the roof with anappropriate sign at the service entrance providing (1) a warning of voltage, (2) how to shut down system prior to getting on roof, and (3) location of disconnect on the roof.

Access to roof peak to vent ridge

Page 66: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Wind Turbine Resources

Page 67: Photovoltaics notes from a designer, builder and inspector

Thank you!

[email protected]

Jesse Rusmisel, CCI