A novel ground-based irradiance mapping and prediction instrument for short-term proactive management of solar energy generation.
About
Power output from photovoltaics (PV) is directly related to the amount of sunlight, or irradiance, striking the panel. Irradiance is modulated by the solar position and the level of atmospheric attenuation, which is the absorption and scattering of sunlight due to water and ice particles in clouds, fog and haze, as well as other particulates such as dust, ash, and smog. Complex, nonlinear, and dynamic atmospheric processes affect these particles, and create large uncertainty and variability in solar power generation. At high PV penetration levels, the range of variability and uncertainty in power production complicates electric grid operations and can lead to inefficiencies. Solar forecasting systems (SFS) provide information to reduce the uncertainty in solar power generation and enable grid operators and management systems to address the variability, improving operational reliability and economic efficiency. In the short-term, transient clouds are the primary driver of PV power fluctuations. As a cloud passes between the sun and panel, PV power output can drop by 60-80% within seconds. High resolution (time and space) cloud monitoring is required to predict these large, quickly occurring fluctuations (ramps). Currently, total sky imager (TSI) systems are the best option for high-resolution sky monitoring, however, they typically cost over $20K per instrument. Additionally, to be used as a SFS, the TSI requires additional instrumentation to determine cloud position and attenuation. This limits the TSI as a cost effective option for solar forecasting, particularly for distributed PV, which requires widespread deployment. Researchers at the University of Hawaii’s Hawaii Natural Energy Institute have developed a novel ground-based irradiance mapping and prediction instrument for short-term proactive management of solar energy generation. The Affordable High-Resolution Irradiance Prediction System (AHRIPS) monitors sky conditions with an omnidirectional camera and thermopile-based pyranometer and uses stereographic pattern tracking techniques, solar geometry and clear-sky irradiance models, and a cloud advection/diffusion algorithm to forecast future cloud and irradiance conditions. Low production cost - Off-the-shelf components - Open-source hardware - Flexible deployment Fully wireless operation - Self-powered - Compact weather-proof housing - Autonomous operations in an edge-computing framework Standard operational deployment is a cluster 3-5 AHRIPS instruments - Onboard high-performance, single-board computer processes imagery and generates forecasts at the instrument - Generates 3D cloud maps and 4D cloud surface trajectories using stereographic tracking methods - Requires no additional instruments to generate irradiance and power forecasts - Contains additional environmental sensors necessary for accurate PV power modeling - AHRIPS instruments directly exchange information: upwind conditions to increase forecasting horizons, irradiance observations for improved estimation of cloud attenuation, and operational communication and status metrics - Self monitoring and calibrating A single-board microcontroller monitors the state of the instrument and onboard computer - Irradiance observations (and PV power output in self-powered version) allow for realtime calibration and validation of forecasts - External calibration coe.
Key Benefits
Higher penetration of PV systems Reduced PV generation uncertainty Tighter operation reserve management Gain insight into windflow in the urban environment Improved management of building thermal loads Improved management of grid-tied battery storage
Applications
Proactive management of solar energy generation