Solar Panel data sheets show both cell efficiency and module efficiency.   How do you calculate module efficiency?  Do you include the solar panel frame in the calculation?

Read More: Maximizing Solar Panel Efficiency

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Below is a brief description of how to calculate the peak efficiency of a solar panel. 

  1. Determine the surface area of the panel by multiplying the length by the width.  For example a SolarWorld 245W Mono panel is 1675 mm long by 1001 mm wide or 1,676.67 square meters.  The surface area is aperture area of the solar panel, therefore, this does include the frame.
  2. Pull the name plate rating of the panel from the datasheet.   For example if it is a 235 W panel, that is the name plate rating at STC (Standard Test Conditions)
  3. At STC the watts per meter squred (W/m²) is 1,000 W/m²   This is the standard used to determine how many watts of power are produced in a square meter on earth.   (Note: Temperature is always a factor in the output of a panel so STC assumes less than 25 degrees C.)
  4. Divide the name plate rating by the square meters at 1000 W/m² to get the solar panel efficiency.  In our example for the SW 245 mono (245/1.676.67)=14.61% efficiency 
  5. Remember to look at the power tolerance as although the name plate rating might be 245W, the power tolerance will tell you how many more or less Watts a the STC the panel produce.  In this example the SW 245 Mono have a power tolerance of -3%/+3%.

The solar cell peak efficiency might be a few percentage points higher when tested at STC.  Those points of efficiency are lost in the movement of energy from the cell to the output of the module. 

Michael,

Thanks for the question.  A solar panel's power will increase fairly linearly with the amount of light that hits them; however, concentrators such as mirrors pose a couple of critical risks for solar modules.

1) Temperature: solar cell's efficiencies will drop as their temperature rises.

2) Aim: the mirror must be properly aimed at the cell at all times to see a rise in production.

Submitted
13 years 4 months ago
Asked by
Jeff Ramsay
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