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Electricity Basics
The Basics of Electricity
Before purchasing a photovoltaic system, it is a good idea to have
a basic understanding of electricity. Simple familiarity with basic
electrical terms and concepts will enable you to better understand
your renewable energy system and use it with confidence. The building
blocks of an electrical vocabulary are voltage, amperage, resistance,
watts and watt-hours. Electricity can simply be thought of as the
flow of electrons (amperage) through a copper wire under electrical
pressure (voltage) and is analogous to the flow of water through
a pipe. If we think of copper wire in an electrical circuit as the
pipe, then voltage is equivalent to pressure (psi) and amperage
is equivalent to flow rate (gpm). To continue with our electricity
to water analogy, a battery stores energy much as a water tower
stores water.
Since a column of water 2.31 feet tall produces 1 psi at the base,
the taller the water tower the higher the pressure you get at the
base. As you can see from the picture to the right, the mushroom
shape design of a water tower allows it to provide a large volume
of water to end users at between 40-60 psi. Once drained below 40
psi which occurs near the neck of the tower, continued water usage
will rapidly deplete the water supply at an ever decreasing pressure.
Although a 12 volt battery is not physically shaped like a water
tower, it has most of its stored electricity available between 12
volts to 12.7 volts. When drained below 12 volts, little amperage
remains and the battery voltage will decrease rapidly.
In a simple system, a power source likea solar module provides
the voltage which pushes the amperage through a conductor (wire)
and on through a load that offers resistance to the current flow
which in turn consumes power (watts). Power is measured in watts
and is the product of voltage multiplied by amperage. Energy is
power (watts) used over a given time frame (hours) and is measured
in watt-hours or kilowatt-hours (1 kilowatt-hour equals 1000 watt-hours).
For example, a 100 watt light left on for 10 hours each night will
consume 1000 watt-hours or 1 kilowatt-hour of energy. A kilowatt-hour
is the unit of energy measurement that the utility company bills
you for each month. Electrical appliances are rated in terms of
how many watts (or amps) they draw when turned on. To determine
how much energy a particular appliance uses each day, you need to
multiply the wattage by the number of hours used each day.
When wiring solar modules or batteries together in an renewable
energy system, remember that connecting two of them in series (+
to -) doubles their voltage output, but keeps their amperage (or
amp-hour capacity) the same. Connecting two of them in parallel
(+ to +, - to -) doubles their amperage output (or amp-hour capacity),
but keeps their voltage output the same. For example, most solar
modules have a 12V nominal output so you would need to wire four
of them in series (+ to -) to charge a 48V battery bank. The amperage
output from these four solar modules in series is the same as that
of a single solar module. Similarly, you would need to wire four
6V 350 amp-hour (AH) L-16 size batteries in series (+ to -) to configure
them for 24V operation and then connect two strings of four batteries
in parallel (+ to +, - to -) to obtain a 700 amp-hour capacity battery.
The discussion above of voltage and amperage leads to the subject
of wire size. The amount of current that you can send through any
electrical circuit depends on three things; the size or gauge (AWG)
of the wire being used, the voltage of the system and the one way
wire run distance. All wire (Cu and Al) has a listed resistance
per 1000 feet with a larger gauge wire having a lower resistance
value than a smaller one. The longer the distance and lower the
voltage, the larger gauge wire you will need to use to minimize
the voltage drop.
As a "rule of thumb", if your solar array consists of
4 or more, 60 watt or larger solar modules and is 50 feet or more
away from the battery bank you should consider setting your system
up at 24 or 48V instead of 12V. See the voltage drop tables in Appendix
B at the back of the catalog for more information on wire sizing
for 12, 24 or 48 VDC.
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