Internship Report
Internship Report
Internship Report
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INTERSHIP REPORT
(in partial fulfilment on VCE internship program)
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
My experience during my internship has been memorable and influential. I have been
given guidance and opportunities that will contribute greatly in my personal growth
and development towards a successful professional career.
I express my deepest gratitude to the Vardhan Consulting Engineers for giving me
an opportunity in the facility of Solar PV Power Simulation and Design.
I express my sincere gratitude and acknowledge to my mentor Mr. Ashish S. Kumar
for his encouraging guidance, valuable suggestions and inestimable help they have
rendered during my whole Internship period.
I acknowledge Ms. Neha Kumari, HR for her kind assistance in making my
Internship possible.
Last but not the least, I also acknowledge the help and cooperation which I have
received from all the employees that I have interacted and worked with, during the
period of my Internship.
ABOUT VCE
VCE have different business horizons and revenue sources such as;
VCE select students from various engineering and management colleges and provide
them internship and training. Our internships and training are very unique in nature
and its specially for the students of Core Engineering Sector (Electrical, Mechanical,
Civil and Energy Engineering) and Finance Management for preparing them to
corporate / industry ready. We provide them mentor from the industry.
CONTENTS
1. Introduction
2. Summary of Smart Task 1, 2 and 3
3. Solar Resource Assessment
4. PV Syst Analysis
5. Annual Losses Analysis
6. Conclusion
INTRODUCTION
Solar PV system
Solar cells produce direct current (DC), therefore they are only used for DC
equipment. If alternating current (AC) is needed for AC equipment or backup energy
is needed, solar photovoltaic systems require other components in addition to solar
modules. These components are specially designed to integrate into solar PV system,
that is to say they are renewable energy products or energy conservation products and
one or more of components may be included depending on type of application.
1. Solar PV Module
Solar Module is the essential component of any solar PV system that converts
sunlight directly into DC electricity.
3. Battery
Battery stores current electricity that produces from solar arrays for using
when sunlight is not visible, night time or other purposes.
4. Inverter
Inverter is a critical component of any solar PV system that converts DC
power output of solar arrays into AC for AC appliances.
5. Lightning protection
It prevents electrical equipment from damages caused by lightning or
induction of high voltage surge. It is required for the large size and critical
solar PV systems, which include the efficient grounding.
Basic components of solar PV plant which includes solar panels, on-grid inverter,
system monitoring, transformer, input counter and external power grid.
We can simulate the required power solar PV plant on PV syst software by setting up
type of panel used, geographical location, and inverter input parameter and then
software simulate all the required result.
1.1 Calculate total Watt-hours per day for each appliance used.
Add the Watt-hours needed for all appliances together to get the total Watt-
hours per day which must be delivered to the appliances.
1.2 Calculate total Watt-hours per day needed from the PV modules.
Multiply the total appliances Watt-hours per day times 1.3 (the energy lost in
the system) to get the total Watt-hours per day which must be provided by the panels.
3. Inverter sizing
An inverter is used in the system where AC power output is needed. The input rating
of the inverter should never be lower than the total watt of appliances. The inverter
must have the same nominal voltage as your battery.
For stand-alone systems, the inverter must be large enough to handle the total amount
of Watts you will be using at one time. The inverter size should be 25-30% bigger
than total Watts of appliances. In case of appliance type is motor or compressor then
inverter size should be minimum 3 times the capacity of those appliances and must be
added to the inverter capacity to handle surge current during starting.
For grid tie systems or grid connected systems, the input rating of the inverter should
be same as PV array rating to allow for safe and efficient operation.
4. Battery sizing
The battery type recommended for using in solar PV system is deep cycle battery.
Deep cycle battery is specifically designed for to be discharged to low energy level
and rapid recharged or cycle charged and discharged day after day for years. The
battery should be large enough to store sufficient energy to operate the appliances at
night and cloudy days. To find out the size of battery, calculate as follows:
4.3 Divide the answer obtained in item 4.2 by 0.6 for depth of discharge.
4.4 Divide the answer obtained in item 4.3 by the nominal battery voltage.
4.5 Multiply the answer obtained in item 4.4 with days of autonomy (the number of
days that you need the system to operate when there is no power produced by PV
panels) to get the required
Ampere-hour capacity of deep-cycle battery.
Battery Capacity (Ah) = Total Watt-hours per day used by appliances x Days of
autonomy
(0.85 x 0.6 x nominal battery voltage)
One 18 Watt fluorescent lamp with electronic ballast used 4 hours per day.
One 60 Watt fan used for 2 hours per day.
One 75 Watt refrigerator that runs 24 hours per day with compressor run 12
hours and off 12 hours.
3. Inverter sizing
Total Watt of all appliances = 18 + 60 + 75 = 153 W
For safety, the inverter should be considered 25-30% bigger size.
The inverter size should be about 190 W or greater.
4. Battery sizing
Total appliances use = (18 W x 4 hours) + (60 W x 2 hours) + (75 W x 12 hours)
Nominal battery voltage = 12 V
Days of autonomy = 3 days
SMART TASK 1
The main motive of smart task 1 is to understand and get familiar with the basic terms
and terminology of solar PV plant. Some of the terms that we learn after completing
this task are as follow :
1. PCC :- Point of Common Coupling is a point at which solar plant is connected
to the grid.
2. Charge Controller:- This regulates the electricity going into a battery, and
protects the battery charge during off hours.
3. Grid Connected System:- A grid-connected system acts much the same as
an independent PV system, but instead of running all on its own, it works
in tandem with a utility grid.
4. Pyranometer:- A pyranometer is a type of actinometer used for measuring solar
irradiance on a planar surface.
5. Solar Tracker:- Trackers direct solar panels or modules toward the sun
6. Transformer:- The system inverters typically provide power output at voltages
of the order of 480 volt AC.
SMART TASK 2
In smart task 2 we simulate a 100 KW rooftop solar PV plant located in Delhi.
The steps of set up are as follows:
Installation set up
PV module selection
Inverter selection
Array design
After completing these steps on software the following results are obtained and
discussed briefly in this task.
System production
Losses in system
Array losses
Performance ratio
Normalized production
The results are obtained in the form of bar graphs, charts, tables.
SMART TASK 3
In this task we understand the basic terms and terminologies used in solar PV Syst
software. At the end of this task we are familiar with the following terms:
1. Collector plate orientation* 10. Inverter losses
2. E-Grid 11. PV module
3. Shading 12. Mismatch losses
4. IAM factor* 13. Produced energy
5. Meteo database 14. Yr & Yf
6. Module quality loss 15. Glob Hor*
7. Performance ratio* 16. Glob Inc
8. Array virtual energy at MPP* 17. E-Array*
9. Specific production*
The process of collecting data and analyse the condition that directly influence solar
energy production rate and finally estimate the annual energy production in an
efficient manner. It provide a mean to accurately determining the availability of solar
radiation for developing cost effective solar energy.
These losses are evaluated through PV Syst software for a particular plant. The
detailed evaluation of these losses for a 100 KW rooftop solar PV plant have
been studied.
In smart task 4 we are provided with three projects out of which we have to
select any one of them then we must go through the case problem assessment
of the project and start analysing the project using PV Syst software.
1. Installation Setup:
Site: Noida, U.P.
Meteo: MeteoNorm 7.2 station
Field Type: Fixed Tilted Plane
Plane tilt: 30o
Azimuth: 0o
Planned power: 100 KWp
2. PV module selection:
Manufacturer: Generic
Size: Poly 60wp 36 cells
Voltage: 14 volts
Module needed: 1660
3. Inverter Selection :
Manufacturer: Generic
Output Voltage: 230 volts
No. of inverter: 25
Nominal AC Power: 3 KW
Frequency: 50/60 Hz
4. Array Design:
Module in series: 20
No. of strings: 83
No. of modules: 1660
1. Main Result:
System production: 168 MWh/year
Performance Ratio: 0.756
Normalized Production : 4.63 KWh/KWp/day
Array Losses: 1.33 KWh/KWp/day
System Losses : 0.16 KWh/KWp/day
Fig below shows the detailed power loss diagram which we want to conclude
in this report
Figure below shows various loss fraction and loss values which we obtained
from the software.
The detailed study of above-mentioned losses in power loss diagram are studied below
with the value obtained in each case. In module 4 we have to prepare a detailed report
of losses for our client.
5. Inverter losses:
o Global inverter losses: Sum of all inverter losses. In our project it was 4.58%
approx.
o Inverter loss due to power threshold: loss when the power of the array is not
sufficient for starting the inverter. It is negligible around 0.01%.
CONCLUSIONS
I gained quite a lot of things from this training and they are quoted below:
Thus, I confidently conclude that this training was the most beneficial and
enlightening experience, which is bound to help me in my future. I will forever be
grateful to VCE for this internship experience.
To be a part of this online internship conducted by Vardhman Consulting Engineers
(VCE) under the guidance of Mr. Ashish Kumar I learned a lot of new things and
commercially applicability.