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Quantifying the impact of inverter clipping on photovoltaic performance and soiling losses

Renewable Energy

Micheli, Leonardo; Muller, Matthew; Theristis, Marios; Smestad, Greg P.; Almonacid, Florencia; Fernandez, Eduardo F.

It is commonly assumed that cleaning photovoltaic (PV) modules is unnecessary when the inverter is undersized because clipping will sufficiently mask the soiling losses. Clipping occurs when the inverter's AC size is smaller than the overall modules' DC capacity and leads to the conversion of only part of the PV-generated DC energy into AC. This study evaluates the validity of this assumption, theoretically investigating the current magnitude of clipping and its effect on soiling over the contiguous United States. This is done by modelling energy yield, clipping and soiling across a grid of locations. The results show that in reality, under the current deployment trends, inverter undersizing minimally affects soiling, as it reduces these losses by no more than 1%absolute. Indeed, clipping masks soiling in areas where losses are already low, whereas it has a negligible effect where soiling is most significant. However, the mitigation effects might increase under conditions of lower performance losses or more pronounced inverter undersizing. In any case, one should take into account that degradation makes clipping less frequent as systems age, also decreasing its masking effect on soiling. Therefore, even if soiling was initially mitigated by the inverter undersizing, its effect would become more visible with time.

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Performance-based earthquake early warning for tall buildings

Earthquake Spectra

Ghahari, Farid; Sargsyan, Khachik; Parker, Grace A.; Swensen, Daniel; Celebi, Mehmet; Haddadi, Hamid; Taciroglu, Ertugrul

The ShakeAlert Earthquake Early Warning (EEW) system aims to issue an advance warning to residents on the West Coast of the United States seconds before the ground shaking arrives, if the expected ground shaking exceeds a certain threshold. However, residents in tall buildings may experience much greater motion due to the dynamic response of the buildings. Therefore, there is an ongoing effort to extend ShakeAlert to include the contribution of building response to provide a more accurate estimation of the expected shaking intensity for tall buildings. Currently, the supposedly ideal solution of analyzing detailed finite element models of buildings under predicted ground-motion time histories is not theoretically or practically feasible. The authors have recently investigated existing simple methods to estimate peak floor acceleration (PFA) and determined these simple formulas are not practically suitable. Instead, this article explores another approach by extending the Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research Center (PEER) performance-based earthquake engineering (PBEE) to EEW, considering that every component involved in building response prediction is uncertain in the EEW scenario. While this idea is not new and has been proposed by other researchers, it has two shortcomings: (1) the simple beam model used for response prediction is prone to modeling uncertainty, which has not been quantified, and (2) the ground motions used for probabilistic demand models are not suitable for EEW applications. In this article, we address these two issues by incorporating modeling errors into the parameters of the beam model and using a new set of ground motions, respectively. We demonstrate how this approach could practically work using data from a 52-story building in downtown Los Angeles. Using the criteria and thresholds employed by previous researchers, we show that if peak ground acceleration (PGA) is accurately estimated, this approach can predict the expected level of human comfort in tall buildings.

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Metrological Guidance for the Calibration of Laboratory Glassware

Mackrory, Andrew J.

This report provides technical guidance for the calibration of laboratory glassware to help the practitioner achieve traceability to the International System of Units and meet customer quality requirements. The discussion of traceability uses the National Institute of Standards and Technology’s seven essential elements of traceability as a framework. The guidance also includes how to determine when calibration is necessary, practical tips, and helpful references.

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Results 2226–2250 of 101,000
Results 2226–2250 of 101,000
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