Title :
Recent advances on AC PV-modules for grid-connected Photovoltaic plants
Author :
Carbone, R. ; Tomaselli, A.
Author_Institution :
Dept. I.M.E.T., Univ. degli Studi Mediterranea, Reggio Calabria, Italy
Abstract :
The paper provides an overview on Photovoltaic (PV) AC-modules, among typical PV-modules which only produce DC output. A novel approach for designing of a new AC PV-module is also presented and discussed, being an other goal of the paper that of introducing an innovative AC PV-module simply based on a conventional DC PV-module and on a micro and distributed energy storage system. PV-plants endowed by AC PV-modules have several advantages over conventional PV-plants: lower generation losses caused by unequal PV-module generation, higher degree of flexibility in the planning and installation of PV-modules, lower price due to the economy of mass production of AC PV-modules, lower minimum system size (and hence lower barrier to the PV market entry), superior ability to site individual modules without concerning for partial shading and other kinds of mismatching conditions; furthermore, installation is safer because there are no high-voltage DC-bus connections. Based on previous researches on distributed energy storage for grid-connected photovoltaic plants, the basic idea for introducing a new AC PV-module is that of connecting a certain number of rechargeable batteries in parallel to a specifically designed number of PV-cells, according to a criterion of maximizing the PV-module generated energy and the number of voltage levels that we want to physically get as input for a multilevel inverter that is proposed to be mounted on the backside of the new AC PV-module. The use of a multilevel inverter technology introduce many advantages with respect to conventional PWM inverters: a greater efficiency, a greater reliability, a lower harmonic pollution on the AC output voltage and so on. To confirm the effectiveness of the proposed idea, the circuit configuration of the introduced AC PV-module and its operating principle are numerically tested by means of some Pspice simulations, performed under ideal operating conditions of batteries.
Keywords :
energy storage; invertors; maximum power point trackers; photovoltaic power systems; AC PV-modules; DC output; Pspice simulations; distributed energy storage system; generation losses; grid-connected photovoltaic plants; multilevel inverter technology; AC PV-modules; Distributed MPPTs; Energy Storage; Multilevel Inverters;
Conference_Titel :
Clean Electrical Power (ICCEP), 2011 International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Ischia
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-8929-9
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-8928-2
DOI :
10.1109/ICCEP.2011.6036365