The air void under the PV installation
Posted: Sun Feb 11, 2024 10:20 pm -1100
Dear WUFI Users,
I am wondering how the case of a photovoltaic installation on a sloping roof (10 degrees of pitch) with a 4 cm air void under the installation should be properly simulated?
I have seen articles about flat roof and rack PV installation (model using correction coefficients of 0.3 and 0.5), one seems to me that my case is different. The installation completely covers the roof surface, there is a 4 cm air void between the wind proofing layer and the PV installation.
I made a detail model including the void and the photovoltaic panel. I made the panel as a 1 mm surface (vapour retarder) with changed parameters so that the thermal conductivity properties and other corresponded to the real PV panel.
However, the question arose what type of void should be used: "Luftschicht 40 mm" or "Luftschicht 40 mm; ohne zasätzl. Feuchtespeicherung"? I made calculations for both voids, but the results contradict the description of the phenomenon of moisture accumulation in the material.
According to the database, the void "Luftschicht 40 mm" generates a non-ralistically high water content in the material, so it is recommended to use "Luftschicht 40 mm; ohne zasätzl. Feuchtespeicherung."
The another question, what air exchange should I use in the air void? From my calculations I came up with 7/h, is this a realistic value?
The outdoor air climate was selected from the WUFI database and assigned to the exterior surface of the PV panel. The inner climate as normal moisture load according to the external climate and the sides of the detail as adiabatic.
With this setting, the relative humidity in the void "Luftschicht 40 mm; ohne zasätzl. Feuchtespeicherung" is almost all the time 100%, while with the void "Luftschicht 40 mm" it varies from 18% (summer) to 89% (winter). The variant with a void "Luftschicht 40 mm" seems more real, but I find the moisture behaviour contradictory to the description seen in the WUFI database. I will be grateful with explanation of this phenomenon and advice on how best to simulate such a case.
kind regards
Thomas
I am wondering how the case of a photovoltaic installation on a sloping roof (10 degrees of pitch) with a 4 cm air void under the installation should be properly simulated?
I have seen articles about flat roof and rack PV installation (model using correction coefficients of 0.3 and 0.5), one seems to me that my case is different. The installation completely covers the roof surface, there is a 4 cm air void between the wind proofing layer and the PV installation.
I made a detail model including the void and the photovoltaic panel. I made the panel as a 1 mm surface (vapour retarder) with changed parameters so that the thermal conductivity properties and other corresponded to the real PV panel.
However, the question arose what type of void should be used: "Luftschicht 40 mm" or "Luftschicht 40 mm; ohne zasätzl. Feuchtespeicherung"? I made calculations for both voids, but the results contradict the description of the phenomenon of moisture accumulation in the material.
According to the database, the void "Luftschicht 40 mm" generates a non-ralistically high water content in the material, so it is recommended to use "Luftschicht 40 mm; ohne zasätzl. Feuchtespeicherung."
The another question, what air exchange should I use in the air void? From my calculations I came up with 7/h, is this a realistic value?
The outdoor air climate was selected from the WUFI database and assigned to the exterior surface of the PV panel. The inner climate as normal moisture load according to the external climate and the sides of the detail as adiabatic.
With this setting, the relative humidity in the void "Luftschicht 40 mm; ohne zasätzl. Feuchtespeicherung" is almost all the time 100%, while with the void "Luftschicht 40 mm" it varies from 18% (summer) to 89% (winter). The variant with a void "Luftschicht 40 mm" seems more real, but I find the moisture behaviour contradictory to the description seen in the WUFI database. I will be grateful with explanation of this phenomenon and advice on how best to simulate such a case.
kind regards
Thomas