emaq
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Hi,
What´s your goal?
Use as much solar power as possible and thus draw only a minimum from mains? Then I assume you need a more intelligent solution.
Klaus
I want combine the power supplied by solar panels and power from a AC to DC rectifier. For that, is it possible to connect the solar panels output (210V, 6A DC) and a full-wave rectifier output (260V RMS) together?
I think the the operating point of 7 solar panels connected in series (7 x 30V = 210V) will move to the high voltage side (set by rectifier output) and current supplied will drop to almost zero. Is there a cheap and dirty solution to combine the power?
the solar panels will only charge the input caps when the rectified (but unfiltered) voltage goes below 210V
How about a simple series diode for the solar panel blocking reverse current and joining both sources at the bridge rectifier output?
I have actually measured 260V RMS after rectifier with a voltmeter... for which I don't know the reason... theoretically it shouldn't be.
Adding sounds like: V1 + V2 = Vtotal....you are adding two sources
While a rectified a 230V AC is about 56% of the time higher than 210V DC...means in best case 44% of time the power is delivered by the PV. No way to come beyond this 44% with your circuit.It will deliver about 30% of the total power.
A rectifed DC will give DC, a rectified AC will give DC and AC.Full wave rectified DC is equivalent to DC +AC.
According EMC regulations I assume you need a filter. And because of the "current source" behaviour of the PV.the solar panel DC (no need to filter)
This is true for a pure DC voltmeter without internal filters (I don't know if they exist).You need to put a small capacitor across the multimeter leads.
What is your goal in all of this?
Only possible if you have a separate MPPT controlled DC/DC converter for the solar panel. If a boost converter for the AC input is required depends on the intended output voltage, not yet specified in this thread.My goal is to get as much power from solar panels as possible even when AC power is available.
My goal is to get as much power from solar panels as possible even when AC power is available and to drive a 1 KW load...
That's what I want to avoid... no external DC converter for solar panels and no batteries.Only possible if you have a separate MPPT controlled DC/DC converter for the solar panel
What do you mean by capacity?... solar panels characteristics are defined by I/V curve...What is the peak and typical capacity of the solar panel? Is the load constant?
right now I have 30V x 7 = 210V, 6A available around peak power and it depends on the operating point on I/V curve... yes, the load is constant.
I think it would be best to have the AC - DC feed at a
voltage below the panels' peak power output voltage
Yes, it seems thats the only solution available at this moment.
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