Newswise — Shade, dirt, or aging considerably reduce the yield of large photovoltaic facilities. Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) and partners from science and industry have now launched the Solar Park 2.0 project to reduce these losses. Innovative circuits, novel power electronics, and AI-supported optimization are expected to increase the yield and service life of facilities and to reduce their operation costs. The Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action (BMWK) funds the just started project with around EUR 2.5 million.

To achieve climate neutrality, use of renewable energy sources must be increased massively. “Large solar parks are very important in this connection,” says Nina Munzke. The researcher at KIT’s Institute of Electrical Engineering (ETI) initiated the Solar Park 2.0 project at KIT’s Battery Technical Center. “However, it is a problem to find larger areas for such facilities in the densely populated regions of the world. To nevertheless reach our climate goals, available areas must be used far more efficiently.” Within the Solar Park 2.0 project, researchers develop electronic components and methods for this purpose. “We want to increase the power output of photovoltaic facilities under unfavorable conditions, such as shade, dirt, or aging, and to optimize the efficiency and power yield,” Munzke says.

Increased Yields by Novel Power Electronics

To use a photovoltaic module with maximum efficiency, it has to work close to its maximum power point (MPP). “The output of the module results from the current multiplied by the voltage level. At the MPP, output is highest, meaning that the maximum possible yield is reached,” says Lukas Stefanski, ETI. However, the MPP changes with temperature, position of the sun, and other factors. Hence, optimum operation requires the voltage to be adjusted continuously. Specialized power optimizers are applied for this purpose. Still, maximum power point tracking (MPPT) in conventional circuits mainly takes place in the central inverter. “When several photovoltaic modules are connected in series or strings and several strings are connected in parallel, shading and failures of single modules reduce the power produced by the whole facility,” Stefanski says. “It is more advantageous to control single modules and to optimize the voltage applied to the strings depending on the specific circuitry.”

For this purpose, the HiLEM (stands for High Efficiency Low Effort MPPT) circuit patented by KIT is applied in the Solar Park 2.0 project. This circuit replaces combiner boxes that are usually applied for the parallel connection of strings and enables an efficient MPPT on the string level. Combination of a HiLEM circuit with novel power optimizers developed jointly by Karlsruhe University of Applied Sciences and the companies of BRC and PREMA then allows for simultaneous MPPT on both the string and module levels. “This does not only increase the yield of the photovoltaic facility, but also the service life. At the same time, operation costs are reduced,” Stefanski says.

Planned Test Facility on Campus North

The new optimization components are planned to be evaluated in two photovoltaic test facilities of 30 kilowatt-peak (kWp) each. One plant will be used to run test scenarios for the new power optimizers. The second plant will serve as a reference. Both plants will be set up next to each other on a free area of the existing solar park of KIT’s Energy Lab 2.0. Work will also be aimed at developing an AI-supported method to predict power production of photovoltaic facilities based on operation data. This method will then be used to identify possibly shaded, damaged, or dirty modules. “This will help us find out at which point of solar parks installation of power optimizers would be worthwhile,” says Markus Becker from ETI. The AI is trained with long-term data from the existing solar park of Energy Lab 2.0 and data collected by the wireless monitoring system (WSN) developed by the Institute for Photovoltaics (ipv) of the University of Stuttgart.

About Solar Park 2.0

The KIT-coordinated collaboration project Solar Park 2.0 started in July 2022 and is scheduled for a duration of three years. Among the partners are Karlsruhe University of Applied Sciences and the companies BRC-Solar and PREMA Semiconductor that jointly developed the power electronics for MPPT based on application-specific integrated circuits (ASIC). ipv of the University of Stuttgart contributes its WSN system and optimizes it. The Solarwatt company helps integrate power optimizers directly in the photovoltaic modules. Solar Park 2.0 has a project volume of about EUR 3.4 million. The project is funded by the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action with approximately EUR 2.5 million.

Further Information: https://www.batterietechnikum.kit.edu/english/170_1227.php

More about the KIT Energy Center: https://www.energy.kit.edu/

Being “The Research University in the Helmholtz Association”, KIT creates and imparts knowledge for the society and the environment. It is the objective to make significant contributions to the global challenges in the fields of energy, mobility, and information. For this, about 9,800 employees cooperate in a broad range of disciplines in natural sciences, engineering sciences, economics, and the humanities and social sciences. KIT prepares its 22,300 students for responsible tasks in society, industry, and science by offering research-based study programs. Innovation efforts at KIT build a bridge between important scientific findings and their application for the benefit of society, economic prosperity, and the preservation of our natural basis of life. KIT is one of the German universities of excellence.