How to clean solar panels without water
Date:
March 11, 2022
Source:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Summary:
Dust that accumulates on solar panels is a major problem, but
washing the panels uses huge amounts of water. Engineers have
now developed a waterless cleaning method to remove dust on
solar installations in water- limited regions, improving overall
efficiency.
FULL STORY ========================================================================== Solar power is expected to reach 10 percent of global power generation by
the year 2030, and much of that is likely to be located in desert areas,
where sunlight is abundant. But the accumulation of dust on solar panels
or mirrors is already a significant issue -- it can reduce the output
of photovoltaic panels by as much as 30 percent in just one month --
so regular cleaning is essential for such installations.
==========================================================================
But cleaning solar panels currently is estimated to use about 10 billion gallons of water per year -- enough to supply drinking water for up to
2 million people. Attempts at waterless cleaning are labor intensive
and tend to cause irreversible scratching of the surfaces, which also
reduces efficiency.
Now, a team of researchers at MIT has devised a way of automatically
cleaning solar panels, or the mirrors of solar thermal plants, in a
waterless, no- contact system that could significantly reduce the dust
problem, they say.
The new system uses electrostatic repulsion to cause dust particles to
detach and virtually leap off the panel's surface, without the need for
water or brushes. To activate the system, a simple electrode passes
just above the solar panel's surface, imparting an electrical charge
to the dust particles, which are then repelled by a charge applied
to the panel itself. The system can be operated automatically using a
simple electric motor and guide rails along the side of the panel. The
research is described in the journal Science Advances, in a paper by MIT graduate student Sreedath Panat and professor of mechanical engineering
Kripa Varanasi.
Despite concerted efforts worldwide to develop ever more efficient
solar panels, Varanasi says, "a mundane problem like dust can actually
put a serious dent in the whole thing." Lab tests conducted by Panat
and Varanasi showed that the dropoff of energy output from the panels
happens steeply at the very beginning of the process of dust accumulation
and can easily reach 30 percent reduction after just one month without cleaning. Even a 1 percent reduction in power, for a 150-megawatt solar installation, they calculated, could result in a $200,000 loss in annual revenue. The researchers say that globally, a 3 to 4 percent reduction
in power output from solar plants would amount to a loss of between $3.3 billion and $5.5 billion.
"There is so much work going on in solar materials," Varanasi
says. "They're pushing the boundaries, trying to gain a few percent here
and there in improving the efficiency, and here you have something that
can obliterate all of that right away." Many of the largest solar power installations in the world, including ones in China, India, the U.A.E.,
and the U.S., are located in desert regions. The water used for cleaning
these solar panels using pressurized water jets has to be trucked in from
a distance, and it has to be very pure to avoid leaving behind deposits
on the surfaces. Dry scrubbing is sometimes used but is less effective
at cleaning the surfaces and can cause permanent scratching that also
reduces light transmission.
========================================================================== Water cleaning makes up about 10 percent of the operating costs of solar installations. The new system could potentially reduce these costs while improving the overall power output by allowing for more frequent automated cleanings, the researchers say.
"The water footprint of the solar industry is mind boggling," Varanasi
says, and it will be increasing as these installations continue to
expand worldwide.
"So, the industry has to be very careful and thoughtful about how to
make this a sustainable solution." Other groups have tried to develop electrostatic based solutions, but these have relied on a layer called
an electrodynamic screen, using interdigitated electrodes. These screens
can have defects that allow moisture in and cause them to fail, Varanasi
says. While they might be useful on a place like Mars, he says, where
moisture is not an issue, even in desert environments on Earth this can
be a serious problem.
The new system they developed only requires an electrode, which can be
a simple metal bar, to pass over the panel, producing an electric field
that imparts a charge to the dust particles as it goes. An opposite
charge applied to a transparent conductive layer just a few nanometers
thick deposited on the glass covering of the the solar panel then
repels the particles, and by calculating the right voltage to apply,
the researchers were able to find a voltage range sufficient to overcome
the pull of gravity and adhesion forces, and cause the dust to lift away.
Using specially prepared laboratory samples of dust with a range of
particle sizes, experiments proved that the process works effectively on
a laboratory- scale test installation, Panat says. The tests showed that humidity in the air provided a thin coating of water on the particles,
which turned out to be crucial to making the effect work. "We performed experiments at varying humidities from 5 percent to 95 percent," Panat
says. "As long as the ambient humidity is greater than 30 percent, you
can remove almost all of the particles from the surface, but as humidity decreases, it becomes harder." Varanasi says that "the good news is that
when you get to 30 percent humidity, most deserts actually fall in this regime." And even those that are typically drier than that tend to have
higher humidity in the early morning hours, leading to dew formation,
so the cleaning could be timed accordingly.
========================================================================== "Moreover, unlike some of the prior work on electrodynamic screens, which actually do not work at high or even moderate humidity, our system can
work at humidity even as high as 95 percent, indefinitely," Panat says.
In practice, at scale, each solar panel could be fitted with railings on
each side, with an electrode spanning across the panel. A small electric
motor, perhaps using a tiny portion of the output from the panel itself,
would drive a belt system to move the electrode from one end of the
panel to the other, causing all the dust to fall away. The whole process
could be automated or controlled remotely. Alternatively, thin strips
of conductive transparent material could be permanently arranged above
the panel, eliminating the need for moving parts.
By eliminating the dependency on trucked-in water, by eliminating the
buildup of dust that can contain corrosive compounds, and by lowering
the overall operational costs, such systems have the potential to
significantly improve the overall efficiency and reliability of solar installations, Varanasi says.
The research was supported by Italian energy firm Eni. S.p.A. through
the MIT Energy Initiative.
========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
Massachusetts_Institute_of_Technology. Original written by David
L. Chandler. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
========================================================================== Journal Reference:
1. Sreedath Panat, Kripa K. Varanasi. Electrostatic dust removal using
adsorbed moisture-assisted charge induction for sustainable
operation of solar panels. Science Advances, 2022; 8 (10) DOI:
10.1126/sciadv.abm0078 ==========================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/03/220311141427.htm
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