Classification of Daily Irradiance Profiles and the Behaviour of Photovoltaic Plant Elements: The Effects of Cloud Enhancement
Clasificación de los perfiles de irradiación diaria y el comportamiento de los elementos de las plantas fotovoltaicas: los efectos del aumento de la nubosidad

View/ Open
Author
Santiago Chiquero, Isabel
Esquivel-Martin, Jorge Luis
Trillo Montero, David
Real Calvo, Rafael Jesús
Pallarés López, Víctor
Publisher
MDPIDate
2021Subject
Irradiance daily profilesUnsupervised machine learning
Clustering algorithm
Performance ratio
Photovoltaic module efficiency
Inverter efficiency
Cloud enhancement
Irradiance enhancement
METS:
Mostrar el registro METSPREMIS:
Mostrar el registro PREMISMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In this work, the automatic classification of daily irradiance profiles registered in a photovoltaic installation located in the south of Spain was carried out for a period of nine years, with a sampling frequency of 5 min, and the subsequent analysis of the operation of the elements of the installation on each type of day was also performed. The classification was based on the total daily irradiance values and the fluctuations of this parameter throughout the day. The irradiance profiles were grouped into nine different categories using unsupervised machine learning algorithms for clustering, implemented in Python. It was found that the behaviour of the modules and the inverter of the installation was influenced by the type of day obtained, such that the latter worked with a better average efficiency on days with higher irradiance and lower fluctuations. However, the modules worked with better average efficiency on days with irradiance fluctuations than on clear sky days. This behaviour of the modules may be due to the presence, on days with passing clouds, of the phenomenon known as cloud enhancement, in which, due to reflections of radiation on the edges of the clouds, irradiance values can be higher at certain moments than those that occur on clear sky days, without passing clouds. This is due to the higher energy generated during these irradiance peaks and to the lower temperatures that the module reaches due to the shaded areas created by the clouds, resulting in a reduction in its temperature losses.
