Solar Energy II

Basics of Solar Energy

The Sun Always there; lots of Energy

How many photons (energy) reach the surface of the Earth on Average?

The energy balance in the atmosphere is qualitatively shown here:

The main components in this diagram are the following:

What Happens to the 69% of the incoming radiation that doesn't get reflected back:

How much energy from the sun reaches the surface of the Earth on Average?

Note that we measure energy in units of Watt-hours. A watt is not a unit of energy, it is a measure of power.

ENERGY = POWER x TIME

1 Kilowatt Hour = 1KWH = 1000 watts used in one hour = 10 100 watt light bulbs left on for an hour

Incident Solar Energy on the ground:

So over this 8 hour day one receives:

But to go from energy received to energy generated requires conversion of solar energy into other forms (heat, electricity) at some reduced level of efficiency.




We will talk more about PV cells in detail later. For now the only point to retain is that they are quite low in efficieny!

Collection of Solar Energy

Amount of captured solar energy depends critically on orientation of collector with respect to the angle of the Sun.

A typical household Winter energy use, with electrical heating, is around 2000-3000 KWHs per month or roughly 70-100 KWH per day.

Assume our roof top area is 100 square meters (about 1100 square feet).

In the winter on a sunny day at this latitude (40o) the roof will receive about 6 hours of illumination.

So the incident solar energy over this 6 hour period is:

300 watts per square meter x 100 square meters x 6 hours

= 180 KWH (per day) more than you need.

But remember the efficiency problem. We have to build a device to convert incident solar power into deliverable power. For now, again we don't care what the device is, only that is efficiency lies somewhere in the range below:

At best, this represents 1/3 of the typical daily Winter energy usage and it assumes the sun shines on the rooftop for 6 hours that day.

With sensible energy conservation and insulation and south facing windows, its possible to lower your daily use of energy by about a factor of 2. In this case, if solar shingles become 20% efficient, then they can provide 50-75 % of your energy needs







These considerations suggestd that Solar PV rooftops (e.g. solar shingles) are likely a generically good idea.

What about the prospect of "solar farms" and remote power delivery?

The relative inefficiency can be compensated for with collecting area.

Examples:

A site in Eastern Oregon receives 1200 watts per square meter of solar radiation in July. Asuume that the solar panels are 10% efficient and that the are illuminated for 10 hours.

How many square meters would be required power Eugene at 300 Megawatts?

each square meter gives you 1200 x.1 = 120 watts

Remember, we want 300,000,000 Watts, not just 120.

There are one million square meters in one square km.

so, each square km gives your 120 x 1,000,000 = 120 MW.

Therefore 2.5 square kilometers would be enough to Power Eugene

Ten square kilometers would give you about 1200 MW keep this as a figure of merit reference under optimum conditions.

Now, of course, you wouldn't have continuous coverage, the individual collectors would have to be spaced out

And so, in practice, the actual land use is about twice as great per MW generated. In addition, 1200 Watts per square meter is July is about 2.5 times larger than the annual average. These considerations then produce the following rubric:

10,000 Megawatts of Average Annual Solar Power (when the sun is shining) requires 500 square kilometers of collecting area. (at 10% efficiency)

This is why any gain in efficiency is incredibly important.