PVMT01 PV module temperature sensor

PV module temperature sensor PVMT01
PV module temperature measurement
Pt-1000 Class A temperature sensor
PV module temperature sensor PVMT01

PV module temperature sensor, Pt1000 Class A, for back-of-module temperature measurement

PVMT01 is a back-of-module temperature sensor. PVMT01 is used to estimate and correct the performance index for the temperature dependence of module efficiency. The sensor meets the requirements of the highest-class systems for PV monitoring: IEC 61724-1 Class A. IEC suggests 3 such sensors per monitoring station, and requires that 6 or more sensors are used on a PV system, depending on the size of the system. PVMT01 includes a Pt1000 in a small aluminium disk, and a thin and flexible 1 m cable with connector. The cable can be easily extended by the user.

Would you like a personalised quote?

or contact us: info@hukseflux.com

Specifications

Temperature sensor
  • :
Sensor type
  • Pt1000 Class A Platinum resistance thermometer (PRT)
Sensor connection
  • 4-wire
Sensor housing
  • aluminium disk
Rated operating temperature range
  • :
Sensor and cable
  • -40 °C to +150 °C
Connector
  • -40 °C to +80 °C
Measurement accuracy
  • ± (0.15 + 0.002∙T) °C
Compliance
  • :
Compliance
  • IEC 61724-1:2021, Class A
Number of sensors required
  • 3 per monitoring station required, minimum 6 per PV system, depending on the size of the system as per IEC 61724-1
IP protection class
  • IP67
Aluminium disk
  • :
Disk material
  • anodized aluminium
Disk diameter
  • 25 x 10⁻³ m
Disk thickness
  • 5.5 x 10⁻³ m
Insulation resistance
  • > 2 GΩ at 1 kV as per IEC 60060-1
Adhesive
  • :
Adhesive material
  • acrylic sticker
Adhesive thickness
  • 0.13 × 10⁻³ m
Total heat transfer coefficient
  • > 500 W/(m2∙K) as required in IEC 61724-1
Cable and connector
  • :
Cable length
  • 1 m
Cable extension
  • to preferred length, should be extended by the user
Cable diameter
  • 2.5 × 10⁻³ m
Connector type
  • 4P, male M12-A connector
Cable connector
  • 4P or 5P female M12-A connector

Description

PV panel performance measurement

PVMT01: critical for effective PV panel performance assessment


PVMT01 measures the temperature of a PV module. Assessing PV system performance, this back-of-module temperature measurement allows users to estimate and correct for the temperature dependence of module efficiency. PVMT01 meets or exceeds specifications required by IEC 61724-1.

PVMT01 consists of a Pt1000 Class A, connected in a 4-wire configuration for increased accuracy. The sensor is enclosed in a small aluminium disk. The small size minimises the impact on bifacial modules (IEC requires obscuring less than 10 % of the surface area of any cell). The adhesive on the sensor disk is well-suited for long-term outdoor use. The adhesive has excellent thermal properties, including a total heat transfer coefficient larger than 500 W/(m2∙ K) as required by IEC.

 

Measure bifacial PV panel performance

Unique features and benefits

  • high measurement accuracy 
  • compliant with requirements of IEC 61724-1 for Class A systems
  • disk adhesive rated for prolonged outdoor use
  • small surface area to minimise impact on bifacial modules
  • thin cable for routing between cells of bifacial modules
  • thin cable minimises the mechanical force on the adhesive connecting the sensor to the module
  • easily extendable cable
  • ingress protection class: IP67 
     
Sensor for PV panel

Flexible and weather-proof

The flexible and weather-proof cable has a small diameter. For bifacial modules, this cable should be routed between the cells, as recommended by IEC. The small cable diameter not only helps to improve measurement accuracy, but also helps minimising the mechanical stress on the sensor disk and on the adhesive connecting the sensor to the module. PVMT01 comes with a standard cable length of 1 m. The cable can be easily extended using an extension cable.

PVMT01 is supplied in packs of ten sensors; each sensor is provided with a cleaning alcohol wipe, two polyester tapes and two solar edge clips to attach the cable to the edge of the PV module. 

PV monitoring sensor

Installation

Installing PVMT01 is easy. The adhesive on the back of the disk is extremely strong and weather-resistant. An IPA (isopropyl alcohol) wipe is provided to clean the surface of the panel before attachment.

Mount the sensor on the rear side of the module. IEC 61724-1 recommends selecting a location at the centre of a cell close to the centre of the module. IEC requires a minimum of 3 such sensors for every monitoring station. A total of 6 or more sensors per PV system is required, depending on the size of the system.  

Operation

Once installed and connected to a measuring system, PVMT01 will reliably measure the temperature of the surface of the panel. The data is collected by your data logger. The 4-wire sensor connection ensures high measurement accuracy. The cable can be extended by the user without affecting the measurement accuracy.

Maintenance

PVMT01 requires little maintenance. The sensor and cable should be regularly checked for damage, contamination, correct attachment to the PV panel and correct fitting of connectors. 

Suggested use

  • long-term PV system performance monitoring
  • module temperature measurement in PV prospecting

Frequently asked questions

How does a pyranometer work?

A pyranometer measures the solar radiation received by a plane surface from a 180 ° field of view angle. This quantity, expressed in W/m², is called “hemispherical” solar radiation. The solar radiation spectrum extends roughly from 285 to 3000 x 10⁻⁹ m. By definition a pyranometer should cover that spectral range with a spectral selectivity that is as “flat” as possible.

In an irradiance measurement by definition the response to “beam” radiation varies with the cosine of the angle of incidence; i.e. it should have full response when the solar radiation hits the sensor perpendicularly (normal to the surface, sun at zenith, 0 ° angle of incidence), zero response when the sun is at the horizon (90 ° angle of incidence, 90 ° zenith angle), and 50 % of full response at 60 ° angle of incidence. A pyranometer should have a so-called “directional response” (older documents mention “cosine response”) that is as close as possible to the ideal cosine characteristic.

In order to attain the proper directional and spectral characteristics, a pyranometer's main components are:

•    a thermal sensor with black coating. It has a flat spectrum covering the 200 to 50000 x 10⁻⁹ m range, and has a near-perfect directional response. The coating absorbs all solar radiation and, at the moment of absorption, converts it to heat. The heat flows through the sensor to the sensor body. The thermopile sensor generates a voltage output signal that is proportional to the solar irradiance.

•    a glass dome. This dome limits the spectral range from 285 to 3000 x 10⁻⁹ m (cutting off the part above 3000 x 10⁻⁹ m), while preserving the 180 ° field of view angle. Another function of the dome is that it shields the thermopile sensor from the environment (convection, rain).

•    a second (inner) glass dome: For secondary standard and first class pyranometers, two domes are used, and not one single dome. This construction provides an additional "radiation shield", resulting in a better thermal equilibrium between the sensor and inner dome, compared to using a single dome. The effect of having a second dome is a strong reduction of instrument offsets.

•    a heater: in order to reduce the effect of dew deposition and frost on the outer dome surface, most advanced pyranometers have a built-in heater. The heater is coupled to the sensor body. Heating a pyranometer can generate additional irradiance offset signals, therefore it is recommended to activate the heater only during night-time. Combining a heater with external ventilation makes these heating offsets very low.

Why use a pyranometer?

There are good reasons why pyranometers are the standard for solar radiation measurement in outdoor PV system performance monitoring. 

The purpose of outdoor PV testing is to compare the available resource to system output and thus to determine efficiency. The efficiency estimate serves as an indication of overall performance and stability. It also serves as a reference for remote diagnostics and need for servicing.

The irradiance measurement for outdoor PV performance monitoring is usually carried out with pyranometers. Some standards suggest using PV reference cells. Reference cells are (with some minor exceptions) unsuitable for proof in bankability and in proof of PV system efficiency. Pyranometers are and will remain the standard for outdoor solar energy monitoring.

From a fundamental point of view:

  • Pyranometers measure truly available solar irradiance (so the amount of available resource). This is the parameter you need to have for a true efficiency calculation.
  • Reference cells measure only that part of solar radiation that can be used by cells of identical material and identical packaging (flat window), so the yield of a certain PV cell type. This is not a measurement that can be used in an efficiency calculation and in fact leads to several percentage points error in efficiency estimates.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) and ASTM standards for PV monitoring recommend pyranometers for outdoor PV monitoring. PV reference cells do not meet IEC 61724-1 class A requirements for irradiance measurement uncertainty: their directional response makes them systematically overestimate daily radiant exposure in J/m2 (or W·hr/m2 ) by more than 2 %, larger on hourly basis. 

How do I choose a pyranometer?

Choosing the right pyranometer for your application is not an easy task. We can offer assistance. But first, you should ask yourself the following questions:

  • are there standards for my application?
  • what level of accuracy do I need?
  • what will be the instrument maintenance level?
  • what are the interfacing possibilities?

When discussing with Hukseflux, our recommendation for the best suited pyranometer will be based on:

  • recommended pyranometer class
  • recommended maintenance level
  • estimate of the measurement accuracy
  • recommended calibration policy
  • recommended interface

Pyranometers can be manufactured to different specifications and with different levels of verification and characterisation during production. The ISO 9060 - 1990 standard, “Solar energy - specification and classification of instruments for measuring hemispherical solar and direct solar radiation”, distinguishes between 3 classes; secondary standard (highest accuracy), first class (second highest accuracy) and second class (third highest accuracy). From second class to first class and from first class to secondary standard, the achievable accuracy improves by a factor 2.

The ISO 9060 - 1990 standard is up for revision. The new 2018 version of the standard will be slightly different from the 1990 version. The new version of ISO 9060 includes three instrument accuracy classes A, B and C, and a special extension of every class “Spectrally Flat”, which is recommended for Plane of Array (POA), albedo, and reflected solar measurements.

Our pyranometer selection guide offers practical guidelines for choosing a pyranometer. The application of pyranometers in PV system performance monitoring according to IEC 61724-1 is highlighted as an example. Sensors specific for diffuse radiation and meteorological networks are also addressed in this selection guide.

What is the difference between a pyrheliometer and a pyranometer?

A pyranometer measures hemispherical solar radiation. When measuring in the horizontal plane this is called Global Horizontal Irradiance (GHI). When measuring in “plane of array”, next to PV panels, this is called plane of array POA irradiance.

A pyrheliometer is used to measure Direct Normal Irradiance (DNI). DNI is defined as the solar radiant flux collected by a plane unit surface normal to the axis pointing towards the centre of the sun, within an optical angular aperture. DNI is composed of the solar irradiance within the extent of the solar disk (half-angle 0.266 ° ± 1.7 %) plus some circumsolar radiation.

PVMT01 PV module temperature sensor
PV module temperature sensor PVMT01
  • high measurement accuracy 
  • compliant with requirements of IEC 61724-1 for Class A systems
  • disk adhesive rated for prolonged outdoor use
  • small surface area to minimise impact on bifacial modules
  • thin cable for routing between cells of bifacial modules
  • thin cable minimises the mechanical force on the adhesive connecting the sensor to the module
  • easily extendable cable
  • ingress protection class: IP67
Would you like a personalised quote?

or contact us: info@hukseflux.com