Applied Sciences (Apr 2020)

Novel Utility-Scale Photovoltaic Plant Electroluminescence Maintenance Technique by Means of Bidirectional Power Inverter Controller

  • Javier Ballestín-Fuertes,
  • Jesús Muñoz-Cruzado-Alba,
  • José F. Sanz-Osorio,
  • Luis Hernández-Callejo,
  • Victor Alonso-Gómez,
  • José Ignacio Morales-Aragones,
  • Sara Gallardo-Saavedra,
  • Oscar Martínez-Sacristan,
  • Ángel Moretón-Fernández

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app10093084
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 9
p. 3084

Abstract

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Nowadays, photovoltaic (PV) silicon plants dominate the growth in renewable energies generation. Utility-scale photovoltaic plants (USPVPs) have increased exponentially in size and power in the last decade and, therefore, it is crucial to develop optimum maintenance techniques. One of the most promising maintenance techniques is the study of electroluminescence (EL) images as a complement of infrared thermography (IRT) analysis. However, its high cost has prevented its use regularly up to date. This paper proposes a maintenance methodology to perform on-site EL inspections as efficiently as possible. First, current USPVP characteristics and the requirements to apply EL on them are studied. Next, an increase over the automation level by means of adding automatic elements in the current PV plant design is studied. The new elements and their configuration are explained, and a control strategy for applying this technique on large photovoltaic plants is developed. With the aim of getting on-site EL images on a real plant, a PV inverter has been developed to validate the proposed methodology on a small-scale solar plant. Both the electrical parameters measured during the tests and the images taken have been analysed. Finally, the implementation cost of the solution has been calculated and optimised. The results conclude the technical viability to perform on-site EL inspections on PV plants without the need to measure and analyse the panel defects out of the PV installation.

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