2018
DOI: 10.1007/s00703-018-0624-3
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Improving the calibration of silicon photodiode pyranometers

Abstract: Reliable measurements of global irradiance are essential for research and practical applications. Silicon photodiode pyranometers (SiPs) offer low-cost sensors to measure direct and diffuse irradiance despite their non-uniform spectral response over the 300-1000 nm spectral range. In this study, non-adjusted linear and adjusted calibrations were applied at different times of the year to determine sources of estimated errors in global irradiance due to the two calibration approaches, calibration time, and senso… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Overall, the performance both under clear and all-sky conditions of the proposed model in terms of bias are in alignment with those from stand-alone silicon photodiode pyranometers for GHI measurements in other studies, where the accuracies are within a ±5% band compared to thermopile pyranometers (King and Myers, 1997;Sengupta et al, 2012;Vignola et al, 2017;Walter-Shea et al, 2019).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 83%
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“…Overall, the performance both under clear and all-sky conditions of the proposed model in terms of bias are in alignment with those from stand-alone silicon photodiode pyranometers for GHI measurements in other studies, where the accuracies are within a ±5% band compared to thermopile pyranometers (King and Myers, 1997;Sengupta et al, 2012;Vignola et al, 2017;Walter-Shea et al, 2019).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 83%
“…There are a number of factors influencing the response of silicon-photodiode devices, such as: (i) angle of incidence, (ii) device temperature, (iii) tilt orientation, (iv) mechanical and optical asymmetries in the instrument, (v) irradiance magnitude, and (vi) spectral response (King and Myers, 1997). The difference in G readings between silicon-photodiode and thermopile pyranometers falls within ±5% when devices are correctly calibrated and maintained, and the data corrected (Al-Rasheedi et al, 2018;King and Myers, 1997;Sengupta et al, 2012;Vignola et al, 2017;Walter-Shea et al, 2019). Without corrections, the differences can reach ±15% (King et al, 1998).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 79%
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