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Forum Index : Solar : MPPT voltage vs light intensity

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isochronic
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Joined: 21/01/2012
Location: Australia
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Posted: 06:36pm 12 May 2017
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Does the voltage of a panel at max output alter a lot when the light
intensity alters ?
Eg if a panel is at max output and producing say 20 amp at
15 volts in bright sun.. and the sun dims to approx half intensity and the load
is adjusted to draw about half ie 10 amp .. does the panel voltage stay about the same ? I am wondering if the max-power-voltage can be set-and-forget to some extent.
 
flc1
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Joined: 20/11/2011
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 242
Posted: 12:49am 13 May 2017
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Gday Chronic,
From what I have seen with my setup and inverters there seems to be only a small change in voltage with the change in light intensity, eg a variation from about 61 v to about 57v when useing a 45-90v gti inverter.
The big change is with the current, the voltage seems to stay pretty stable,I guess thats how the cells work. Even with a panel only hooked up to a volt meter and open circut, the voltage never seemed to change much more than say about 4 or 5 volts with the change of light, diffrent when it is morning and evening of coarse.
I know of other bad quality panels that have a larger drop in voltage and really poor perfomance in anything except direct sunlight.
So I sappose you could set and forget to some degree, depending on how your panels perform?
I think with panels hooked up in series that voltage drop will be multiplied per panel.
Fred
 
Madness

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Joined: 08/10/2011
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Posted: 01:25am 13 May 2017
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This graph for some panels I have says volts stay the same at different light levels.




There are only 10 types of people in the world: those who understand binary, and those who don't.
 
isochronic
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Posted: 01:49am 14 May 2017
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thanks for that

I am thinking, if a panel power max is aligned to a reasonable battery charging voltage (and the battery is protected from over-voltage) the panel will automatically be operating close to the optimum point

Edit - I guess that then leads to whether the temperature of the panel needs to be allowed for, as well.. If it gets hot, the voltage drops..maybe too much..hhmm.Edited by chronic 2017-05-15
 
flc1
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Posted: 03:12pm 14 May 2017
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mppt should keep the voltage up,allowing curret to decrease, when panels get hot.
Is'nt that how mppt works?,
Are you programming an mppt ?
The open circut voltage of one of my string of panels is 84v, peak power volts is 60,so I sappose if you have floating battery voltage slightly below the peak power volts ,then all good, aslong as you have dumpload or whatever to control the battery voltage like you say.
sounds good in theory anyway lol.Edited by flc1 2017-05-16
 
Madness

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Posted: 04:39pm 14 May 2017
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MPPT as the name says is tracking maximum power point, the graph below is from one of my Midnite Classic MPPT charge controllers. It operates at a lower voltage earlier in the day and late but during the day with clouds coming over there is little change in the volts.

Top red line is PV volts, other red line is PV amps, violet line is Amps out of the controller.





Edited by Madness 2017-05-16
There are only 10 types of people in the world: those who understand binary, and those who don't.
 
isochronic
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Posted: 05:40pm 14 May 2017
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What is the load (controller out) voltage, I am guessing 24 v ?
[nice chart too..]Edited by chronic 2017-05-16
 
Madness

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Posted: 08:55pm 14 May 2017
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It is 48V, there is a lot more information available but I made it simple for clarity.
There are only 10 types of people in the world: those who understand binary, and those who don't.
 
isochronic
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Posted: 09:40pm 14 May 2017
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Doh ! I was looking (squinting) at wrong scale ! (30 etc on left but that is current not volts, now I see volts scale is on right ).
thanks, I am not building a MPPT just yet , more like incrementing my (slow) learning curve
 
Warpspeed
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Joined: 09/08/2007
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Posted: 06:05pm 15 May 2017
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  chronic said   thanks for that

I am thinking, if a panel power max is aligned to a reasonable battery charging voltage (and the battery is protected from over-voltage) the panel will automatically be operating close to the optimum point

Edit - I guess that then leads to whether the temperature of the panel needs to be allowed for, as well.. If it gets hot, the voltage drops..maybe too much..hhmm.

You are quite right. The voltage hardly changes form weak twilight to full mid day sun, and if you can strike a happy combination between the number of battery cells, and the solar panel max power voltage, you cannot go too far wrong.

The relationship is not constant, the MPPT voltage does move around a bit, but its not worth worrying about.

You will just about always get more by adding one extra panel than trying to chase the last 0.1% with an expensive software driven MPPT tracking gadget. The MPPT "peak" is not really a sharp peak but a rounded "hump". A few volts either way hardly makes any difference to power.



Cheers,  Tony.
 
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