The study of the effect of soiling on photovoltaic (PV) system performance is a crucial issue judging from numerous research publications. The reduction in the PV system performance is because of soiling that differs from one climatic region to another. In this research, the power losses due to soiling of the PV systems in Malaysia based on the calculation of a dirt derating factor (f dirt) were determined. A new mathematical model to correlate f dirt and the PV module area was developed based on the regression analysis from a site data location. The findings indicate that the effect of soiling reduces the PV systems output power at an average of 26.22% at Setiu over a period of 12 months. From this study also, a new mathematical model was created for f dirt forecasting in the research site. Uniquely, this mathematical model can do the prediction by only known PV module area or size as the independent variable, much simpler than using the multivariables equation.
Soiling refers to the accumulation of dust on PV modules which plays a small but significant role in degrading solar photovoltaics system efficiency. Its effect cannot be generalized because the severity is location and environment dependent. Currently, there are limited studies available on the soiling effect in the hot and humid Malaysian tropical climate. This paper presents an experimental-based approach to investigate the effect of soiling on PV module performance in a tropical climate. The experiment involved a full day exposure of a polycrystalline PV module in the outdoors with accelerated artificial dust loading and an indoor experiment for testing variable dust dimensions. The findings show that for the worst case, the module’s output can be reduced by as much as 20%.
Soiling refers to the accumulation of dust on PV modules which plays a small but significant role in degrading solar photovoltaics system efficiency. Its effect cannot be generalized because the severity is location and environment dependent. Currently, there are limited studies available on the soiling effect in the hot and humid Malaysian tropical climate. This paper presents an experimental-based approach to investigate the effect of soiling on PV module performance in a tropical climate. The experiment involved a full day exposure of a polycrystalline PV module in the outdoors with accelerated artificial dust loading and an indoor experiment for testing variable dust dimensions. The findings show that for the worst case, the module’s output can be reduced by as much as 20%.
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