Solar PV system with pulsating heat pipe cooling

Malaysia is blessed with high irradiance, making it suitable for solar photovoltaic installation for electricity generation. However, due to the broad wavelength of the solar irradiance, not all wavelength can be converted to electricity due to the limitation of the materials used for the photovolta...

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Main Authors: Roslan, M.E.B.M., Hassim, I.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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spelling my.uniten.dspace-130732020-07-07T01:31:37Z Solar PV system with pulsating heat pipe cooling Roslan, M.E.B.M. Hassim, I. Malaysia is blessed with high irradiance, making it suitable for solar photovoltaic installation for electricity generation. However, due to the broad wavelength of the solar irradiance, not all wavelength can be converted to electricity due to the limitation of the materials used for the photovoltaic. The infrared radiation absorbed produces heat, and coupled with high surrounding temperature, increases the temperature of the photovoltaic panel thus decreasing it efficiency. This paper presents the study of the effect of attaching pulsating heat pipe at the back of solar panel as a means of passive cooling. Pulsating heat pipe is a recent discovery in the heat pipe industry, introduced in 1996 by Akachi but has not been used for the purpose of cooling solar panels. This study shows the maximum difference between 5 Celsius between the pulsating heat pipe cooled panel and the reference panel without any cooling, resulting in 0.77% increase in electrical output efficiency. © 2019 Institute of Advanced Engineering and Science. All rights reserved. 2020-02-03T03:30:13Z 2020-02-03T03:30:13Z 2019 Article 10.11591/ijeecs.v14.i1.pp311-318 en
institution Universiti Tenaga Nasional
building UNITEN Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Tenaga Nasional
content_source UNITEN Institutional Repository
url_provider http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/
language English
description Malaysia is blessed with high irradiance, making it suitable for solar photovoltaic installation for electricity generation. However, due to the broad wavelength of the solar irradiance, not all wavelength can be converted to electricity due to the limitation of the materials used for the photovoltaic. The infrared radiation absorbed produces heat, and coupled with high surrounding temperature, increases the temperature of the photovoltaic panel thus decreasing it efficiency. This paper presents the study of the effect of attaching pulsating heat pipe at the back of solar panel as a means of passive cooling. Pulsating heat pipe is a recent discovery in the heat pipe industry, introduced in 1996 by Akachi but has not been used for the purpose of cooling solar panels. This study shows the maximum difference between 5 Celsius between the pulsating heat pipe cooled panel and the reference panel without any cooling, resulting in 0.77% increase in electrical output efficiency. © 2019 Institute of Advanced Engineering and Science. All rights reserved.
format Article
author Roslan, M.E.B.M.
Hassim, I.
spellingShingle Roslan, M.E.B.M.
Hassim, I.
Solar PV system with pulsating heat pipe cooling
author_facet Roslan, M.E.B.M.
Hassim, I.
author_sort Roslan, M.E.B.M.
title Solar PV system with pulsating heat pipe cooling
title_short Solar PV system with pulsating heat pipe cooling
title_full Solar PV system with pulsating heat pipe cooling
title_fullStr Solar PV system with pulsating heat pipe cooling
title_full_unstemmed Solar PV system with pulsating heat pipe cooling
title_sort solar pv system with pulsating heat pipe cooling
publishDate 2020
_version_ 1672614203911831552
score 13.222552