PRINCIPLES OF
SOLAR
 RADIATION
                               Contents:
• Role and potential of new and renewable source
• the solar energy option
• Environmental impact of solar power, physics of the sun
• The solar constant
• Extraterrestrial and terrestrial solar radiation
• Solar radiation on titled surface
• Instruments for measuring solar radiation and sun shine
• Solar radiation data
                          Introduction
• It is the greatest energy of all the sources of all sources of renewable
  energy
• Solar energy is the most readily available and free source of energy
• It is estimated that solar energy equivalent to over 15,000 times the
  world's annual commercial energy consumption reaches the earth every
  year.
• India receives solar energy in the region of 5 to 7 kWh/m2 for 300 to 330
  days in a year.
• Solar energy can be utilized through two different routes
  1. solar thermal route and
  2. solar electric (solar photovoltaic) routes.
• Solar thermal route uses the sun's heat to produce hot water or air, cook
  food, drying materials etc…
• Solar photovoltaic uses sun’s heat to produce electricity for lighting home
  and building, running motors, pumps, electric appliances, and lighting.
                            Solar energy
•   Solar power where the sun hits atmosphere is 1017 watts
•   Solar power on the earth surface is 1016 watts
•   Sun gives 1000 times more power thane we need
•   If we can use 5% of this energy, it will 50 times what the world will require
•   Energy radiated by the sun appox 1KW/m2
•   In general, solar energy received in the form of radiation
•   Energy radiated by sun as electromagnetic waves
•   Its wave length in the range of 0.2 to 4 micrometres
Advantages
• Clean
• Sustainable
• Free
• Provide Electricity to Remote Places
Major drawbacks:
• The intermittent or variable manner in which the solar energy arrives to
  the earth
• Large area required to collect the energy
• It is not possible to store
Solar energy consists of,
                        % amount   Wave length
Ultraviolet radiation   8          Small (<0.39 micrometers)
Visible light           46         Medium (0.39 to 0.78 micrometers)
Infrared radiation      46         Large (>0.78 micro meters)
Radiant Energy
  The NEED Project: 30 Years of Energy
                                         7
              Education
  Environmental impact of solar power
• reduction of the CO2 emissions
• It reduce the consumption of fossil fuels and will consequently reduce the
  environmental impacts associated with these fuels
• improvement of the quality of water supplies
• reclamation of degraded land
• reduction of the number of the required power transmission lines.
                        Physics of sun
• Sun is a huge nuclear reactor. Its diameter is 1.39*106 KM
• Earth diameter is 1.27*104 KM
• Mean distance between these two is 1.5*108 KM
• It subtends an angle of only 32 minutes at the earth surface
• Brightness of the sun is almost varied from its centre
• It emits a great amount of radiant energy (3,8x1023 kW, 5762ºK), which
  can be easily converted into thermal energy
• The Earth intercepts only 1,7x1014 kW of solar radiation
                         Solar constant
Definition:
• The rate at which the solar energy arrives at the top of the atmosphere is
   called solar constant (Isc)
• This is the amount of energy received in unit time on a unit area
   perpendicular to the sun’s direction at the mean distance of the earth
   from sun.
As per the NASA standards
• 1.353 KW per square meter
• 116.5 Langley's (calories per sq.cm.)
• 429.2 Btu per sq. ft. per hour
• The variation in the distance produces nearly a sinusoidal variation in the
  intensity of the solar radiation (I)
• I/Isc = 1+0.033 cos[360(n-2)/365]
Wave length           0 – 0.38   0.38 - 0.78   >0.78
Approximate energy    95         640           618
(W/m2)
Approximate           7%         47.3%         45.7%
percentage of total
enrgy
                        Solar radiation
Direct or Beam radiation:
• Solar radiation that has not been absorbed or scattered and reaches the
   ground directly
Diffuse Radiation:
• It is received from the sun after its
   direction has been changed by reflection
   or scattering by the atmosphere
Reflect Radiation:
• It is reflected back to the space mostly
   by clouds
           Solar Radiation measurements
There are two types of instruments employed for solar radiation
1.   Pyrheliometer used to measure direct radiation
     i. Angstrom compensation pyrheliometer
     ii. The abbot silver disc pyrheliometer
     iii. Eppley pyrheliometer
2.   Pyranometer used to measure global radiation
     i. Eppely pyranometer
     ii. Yellot soarimeter
     iii. Moll-gorczyheski solarimeter
     iV. Bimetallic Actionographs of the rabitzsch type
     V. Velochme pyranometer
     Vi. Thermo elctric pyranometer etc…
                    Eppley B&W Pyranometer
•        The Black and White (B&W)
         pyranometer is an instrument
         designed to measure diffuse
         broadband solar irradiance.
•        The difference between PSP and
         B&W are:
    1.     It has only one dome to filter out IR radiation coming from the atmosphere;
    2.     The detector is coated with white and black paint;
    3.     It has much less thermal mass.
                                                                                   15
                        Pyrheliometer
• A pyrheliometer is used to measure direct solar radiation from the sun
• To measure direct solar radiation correctly, its receiving surface must be
  arranged to be normal to the solar direction
• the instrument is usually mounted on a sun-tracking device called an
  equatorial mount
        Angstrom electrical compensation
                pyrheliometer
•This is a reliable instrument used to observe direct solar radiation
• It consists of thin blackened shaded strip (20*2*0.1mm) is heated
  electrically until it is the same temperature as a similar strip which is
  exposed to solar radiation.
• Under steady state condition
  the energy used for heating = the absorbed solar energy
  Here galvanometer represents null position
• Thermocouples on the back of the each strip, connected in opposition
  through a sensitive galvanometer
• Direct radiation incident on an area normal to the sun’s rays
                          HDN = K*i^2
• Heating current in amps I = R/Wα
       • Here R = resistance per unit length
                  α = Absorbing coefficient of absorbing strip
Abbot silver disk pyrheliometer
• The sensing element is a silver disk measuring 28 mm in diameter with a
  thickness of 7 mm that is painted black on its radiation-receiving side
• It has a hole from the periphery toward the center to allow insertion of
  the bulb of a high-precision mercury-in-glass thermometer
• To maintain good thermal contact between the disk and the bulb, the hole
  is filled with a small amount of mercury
• It is enclosed outside by a heat-insulating wooden container
• A cylinder with diaphragms inside is fitted in the wooden container to let
  direct solar radiation fall onto the silver disk
• There is a metallic-plate shutter at the top end of the cylinder to block or
  allow the passage of solar radiation to the disk
• During the measurement phase, the disk is heated by solar radiation and
  its temperature rises
• The intensity of this radiation is ascertained by measuring the
  temperature change of the disk between the measurement phase and the
  shading phase with the mercury-in-glass thermometer
                      Solar radiation data
• Most of the data on solar radiation is received on the surface of the earth
  are measured by solarimeter which give instantaneous measurements
• Integrating the plot of the rate of energy received per unit area unit time
  over a whole day give the langleys of radiation received on a horizontal
  surface
• Daily solar radiation received in Calcutta on the basis of yearly average is
  680 langleys (cal/cm2/day)
• intensity of solar radiation in India
    – Average value 16700 – 29260 KJ/m2/day
    – Peak value 25100 KJ/m2/day (in Rajasthan)
• Daily diffuse radiation received over whole country
    – Average value 7300 KJ/m2/day
    – Maximum value 12550 KJ/m2/day
    – Minimum value 25100 KJ/m2/day
       Solar radiation on tilted surface
• The rate of solar energy on a given surface is depends on the orientation
  of the surface
• A fully sun solar tracking surface that always faces the sun receives the
  maximum possible solar energy
• the radiation on a tilted surface
  has three components
         Here
       Here     = 0.2 when there is no snow
                = 0.7 when there is a snow cover