Degradation analysis of installed solar photovoltaic (PV) modules under outdoor conditions in Ghana
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Energy Reports
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Abstract
Photovoltaic (PV) module degradation rate depends on technology, manufacturer and environmental
conditions. This makes it challenging to transfer the results of degradation analysis from one country
to another. Thus, the increase in deployment of PV systems in Ghana makes degradation analysis a
necessity. This study quantified the degradation rates and predicted the lifetime of 16 PV systems of
different module technologies and age groups installed in different locations under outdoor conditions
in Ghana to provide a better understanding of the long-term behavior of installed PV systems in
Ghana. It presented the frequency distribution of output power degradation of different PV module
technologies, estimated their power degradation rates, and predicted and compared the lifetime of
these technologies. The country was grouped into three strata and 104 PV modules of different
technologies which were older than 5 years were selected from 16 PV systems in these strata,
depending on availability and accessibility. The electrical parameters of the PV modules were measured
by current–voltage (IV) tracing. The results revealed that crystalline silicon modules degraded less
than amorphous silicon. The median and mean power degradation rates of, monocrystalline silicon
were 1.23%/year and 1.37%/year respectively, polycrystalline silicon were 1.35%/year and 1.44%/year
respectively and, amorphous silicon were 1.65%/year and 1.67%/year respectively. Overall, the median
and mean predicted lifetime of the PV systems (crystalline and amorphous silicon) were 14 year and
16 years respectively but the median lifetime of both monocrystalline and polycrystalline modules
was 16 years while that of amorphous was 13 years. It was predicted that 50% of PV modules studied
would fail before 15 years, indicating that most of the PV modules in Ghana are unlikely to operate for
the 25 years warranty, signifying less power output and shorter lifetime of the modules which could
discourage the widespread implementation of PV systems in Ghana