This application is a 371 of PCT/EP2010/065762 filed on Oct. 20, 2010, published on Apr. 28, 2011 under publication number WO 2011/048122, which claims priority benefits from French Patent Application Number 09/57450 filed Oct. 23, 2009, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The invention relates to a photovoltaic device comprising an electronic switch and a control device. It also relates to a diagnostic method for such a photovoltaic device enabling malfunction thereof to be detected.
It is known practice to use an electronic switch of MOSFET transistor type, as represented in
Thus, one general object of the invention is to propose a different solution for controlling the opening of a switch in a photovoltaic device.
To this end, the invention relies on a photovoltaic device comprising a photovoltaic generator comprising a number of photovoltaic cells, characterized in that it comprises at least one switch with a control device comprising a control capacitor (Ccde) and a control resistor (Rcde), linked to the switch so as to slow down the control of the opening of the switch, to allow at least one cell of the photovoltaic generator to switch from a short-circuit operating mode to an open-circuit mode, or vice versa.
The invention is more specifically defined by the claims.
These objects, features and advantages of the present invention will be explained in detail in the following description of a particular embodiment, given as a nonlimiting example in relation to the appended figures in which:
The devices for generating energy from intermittent sources, such as photovoltaic generators, are increasingly being used. The cost of their production depends on their autonomy and on their capacity to diagnose their failure, if possible in real time. The existing devices are not designed for a fast reaction in case of failure, even when their production becomes abnormally low. For this reason, they require complex and costly maintenance operations.
Photovoltaic devices are conventionally managed by observing their behaviour in systems linked to these devices, for example by measuring the charge of a battery linked to the device or by measuring the electricity production obtained on an electricity network to which the device is linked. In case of a measurement lower than the expected value, it is concluded that the photovoltaic device has failed. Such conventional management presents the drawback of being imprecise. This is because it does not make a distinction between a normal drop in production caused by shadows or particular weather conditions and a real failure of the device. Furthermore, it does not make it possible to differentiate different failures of the device such as an increase in the resistance of the wiring, for example following a connection system fault or an electrical arc in the device, or a deterioration of the front panel of a photovoltaic generator, for example following delamination or corrosion, shading or soiling.
One solution relies on the analysis of the trend of the voltage of a photovoltaic during its switch from a short-circuit operating mode to an open-circuit operating mode, or vice versa. This trend can be observed by the curve of the voltage as a function of time or by analyzing the curve representing the current as a function of the voltage in the photovoltaic generator during this change of mode.
The switch from short-circuit operation to an open-circuit operating mode requires a particular control of a switch, whose opening time must be sufficiently slow to allow for numerous points of voltage and/or current values to be measured, slower than the usual duration, and sufficiently fast so as not to disturb the inverter and the rest of the electricity network to which the photovoltaic device is linked.
Thus, the invention relies on a switch equipped with a control device which makes it possible to achieve an opening time which represents a good trade-off to respond to the above constraints. Its implementation in a photovoltaic device makes it possible to detect its failure, according to the principle explained above.
In the preamble to the description of an embodiment of the control device of a switch used by the invention, the principle of detection of the failure of a photovoltaic device will be detailed below.
A photovoltaic cell behaves according to an electrical circuit as represented schematically in
Thus, the above phenomenon is exploited to create, depending on the response of a photovoltaic generator during its switch from a short-circuit mode to an open-circuit mode, a diagnosis of its operation.
Thus, a first method for diagnosing the state of the photovoltaic generator, represented in
A second method, represented in
Curve 4 represents a photovoltaic generator in which all the photovoltaic cells are in a good operating state. When the circuit is opened, the current will reach a zero value whereas the voltage will reach a maximum value UCO after a relatively short time. The curve 5 represents the same curve obtained in the case of a generator comprising at least one defective photovoltaic cell. This curve exhibits a discontinuity 7 during which the current drops more rapidly whereas the voltage increases little. The curve 6 illustrates another example in which the curve exhibits two discontinuities 8, 9, which indicate the presence of at least two defective photovoltaic cells. In all cases, the same voltage value UCO is finally reached, but after a much longer time in the case of the curves 5, 6 for the generators having at least one defective cell as was explained above. These examples make it possible to illustrate a number of situations and teach that the U(I) curves make it possible to obtain the following diagnoses:
The above explanations will be used in an embodiment of a photovoltaic device equipped with a device allowing its operation to be diagnosed, represented in
The photovoltaic device of
The photovoltaic device also comprises a diagnostic device incorporated in the inverter 11 described above, whose CPU implements the diagnostic method for the photovoltaic generator and in particular the method for detecting failures, which will be described later. The diagnostic device corresponds to the electrical circuit diagram represented in
Such a device can make it possible to implement the method for diagnosing it according to a first embodiment comprising the following steps:
As a variant, it is possible to observe the voltage-current curve U(I) determined while the device switches from a short-circuit operating mode to an open-circuit mode. For this, the following steps are carried out:
As a variant, the two embodiments described previously may be aggregated. For example, the first embodiment relying on the analysis of the trend as a function of time of the voltage when it switches from a short-circuit operating mode to an open-circuit operating mode may be followed, in the case where a defect is detected, by the determination and the observation of the trend of the curve U(I) in order to deduce therefrom additional information concerning the defects of the device.
According to the invention, the time needed to implement the diagnosis is sufficiently short to allow it to be executed without completely stopping the inverter 11, which would then require a significant time in the contrary case possibly as long as a few minutes, to once again produce its maximum power. For this, it should be noted that the inverter comprises a capacitive bus that allows energy to be stored. So as not to disturb its operation, the U(I) curve should be plotted in less than 10 ms. However, the usual opening time of a switch of 10 ns is too fast to allow for a satisfactory number of measurements and to plot a satisfactory U(I) curve. Thus, the invention proposes slowing down the opening of such a switch by virtue of a particular control device to achieve an opening in a time of between 10 ns and 10 ms.
As an example, consider a voltage in rising and falling pulses varying between 0 and 17 V in a few ns. On direct command to open the transistor, via the diode Dcde, the value of the control voltage Vcde switches to 0 V. The control capacitor Ccde, whose value is 220 nF, slowly discharges through the control resistor Rcde, whose value is 12 kOhms. At the same time, the capacitor Cg of the transistor discharges just as slowly, the diode preventing a possible discharge by the voltage supply Vcde. Note, this diode is optional. To use this device with a polycrystalline silicon photovoltaic module, the opening time is 800 μs. During this opening, the device measures a hundred or so points, preferably at least 10 points, making it possible to plot the curves 20 of the trend of the voltage and 21 of the trend of the current, during these 800 μs of opening time, represented in
Naturally, the above numerical values are given by way of example, and they should be adapted to the switch and photovoltaic module technologies used, for which the capacitors vary from one technology to another, thereby influencing the shape of the U(I) curves. Thus, it is a good idea to slow down even more the switching of the switches associated with a module whose stray capacitance is high. For this, the values of the capacitors Ccde and of the control resistor Rcde, which determine the level of slowdown in the opening of the switch with which these components are associated, will be adapted to the photovoltaic modules to be equipped, based on particular tests performed previously on these modules. The greater the value of the control capacitance, the longer the switching time and the more accurate the U(I) curve obtained. Advantageously the control capacitor Ccde will have a value of between 10 and 10000 nF and the control resistor Rcde will have a value greater than 1 kOhm.
A diagnostic method for the photovoltaic device has been described as an example. Obviously, other variants are possible for this diagnosis, relying on the variation of the time needed to reach the maximum voltage UCO at the terminals of the generator in an open-circuit situation. This maximum voltage is not necessarily measured each time the diagnostic method is implemented, but it may, for example, be measured just once when the generator is new, in normal, non-defective operation, and stored. Similarly, the time needed to reach this value may be measured simultaneously, and stored to serve as a base for the diagnostic steps.
Thus, a possible variant of the first embodiment of the diagnostic method of the generator may consist in systematically waiting, while the generator switches to open-circuit mode, for the voltage to reach the maximum voltage, measuring the time needed and comparing it to the normal time in case of correct operation. If this time exceeds the normal time by a predefined percentage, then the generator is considered to be defective.
The diagnostic method has been described on the basis of a diagnostic device corresponding to the electrical circuit diagram represented in
As an additional note, the usual objective of a photovoltaic device is to produce electrical energy by reducing the losses of the system to the maximum, and therefore by using fast switching modes in the DC/DC or DC/AC converters mentioned above for the power conversion. Furthermore, the measurement devices currently used are not active but passive, that is to say that they do not intervene on the direct operation of the photovoltaic device. On the contrary, the photovoltaic device of the invention incorporates an active part, which will directly modify its operation. Furthermore, this active intervention is designed to be sufficiently slow to achieve a meaningful measurement of the trend of the voltage as a function of time in the situations described previously, but also sufficiently fast so as not to disturb the rest of the electricity network. Following the explanations given previously, those skilled in the art will be able to choose the parameters that determine this measurement time. Advantageously, they will choose them to achieve a total duration of the measurement, or the plot of the trend of the voltage as a function of time or of current, between 0.5 and 1 ms.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
09 57450 | Oct 2009 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2010/065762 | 10/20/2010 | WO | 00 | 4/11/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2011/048122 | 4/28/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4382224 | Miller | May 1983 | A |
4456880 | Warner et al. | Jun 1984 | A |
4528503 | Cole | Jul 1985 | A |
4970420 | Billings | Nov 1990 | A |
5444358 | Delepaut | Aug 1995 | A |
6339538 | Handleman | Jan 2002 | B1 |
7309850 | Sinton et al. | Dec 2007 | B2 |
20040264225 | Bhavaraju et al. | Dec 2004 | A1 |
20060164065 | Hoouk et al. | Jul 2006 | A1 |
20080198523 | Schmidt et al. | Aug 2008 | A1 |
20090146667 | Adest et al. | Jun 2009 | A1 |
20100106339 | Little et al. | Apr 2010 | A1 |
20100164459 | Perichon et al. | Jul 2010 | A1 |
20100176773 | Capel | Jul 2010 | A1 |
20110109346 | Moussaoui et al. | May 2011 | A1 |
20110298442 | Waltisperger et al. | Dec 2011 | A1 |
20110301772 | Zuercher et al. | Dec 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0 679 898 | Nov 1995 | EP |
0 679 898 | Jul 1996 | EP |
2912848 | Aug 2008 | FR |
Entry |
---|
Examination Report issued by European Patent Office for corresponding European application 10 771 418.0 dated Apr. 7, 2015. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20120200311 A1 | Aug 2012 | US |