The air mass coefficient defines the direct optical path length through the Earth's atmosphere, expressed as a ratio relative to the path length vertically upwards, i.e. at the zenith. The air mass coefficient can be used to help characterize the solar spectrum after solar radiation has traveled through the atmosphere.
The air mass coefficient is commonly used to characterize the performance of solar cells under standardized conditions, and is often referred to using the syntax "AM" followed by a number. "AM1.5" is almost universal when characterizing terrestrial power-generating panels.
The overall intensity of solar radiation is like that of a black body radiator of the same size at about 5,800 K.[1] As it passes through the atmosphere, sunlight is attenuated by scattering and absorption; the more atmosphere through which it passes, the greater the attenuation.
As the sunlight travels through the atmosphere, chemicals interact with the sunlight and absorb certain wavelengths changing the amount of short-wavelength light reaching the Earth's surface.A more active component of this process is water vapor, which results in a wide variety of absorption bands at many wavelengths, while molecular nitrogen, oxygen and carbon dioxide add to this process. By the time it reaches the Earth's surface, the spectrum is strongly confined between the far infrared and near ultraviolet.
Atmospheric scattering plays a role in removing higher frequencies from direct sunlight and scattering it about the sky.[2] This is why the sky appears blue and the sun yellow — more of the higher-frequency blue light arrives at the observer via indirect scattered paths; and less blue light follows the direct path, giving the sun a yellow tinge.[3] The greater the distance in the atmosphere through which the sunlight travels, the greater this effect, which is why the sun looks orange or red at dawn and sunset when the sunlight is travelling very obliquely through the atmosphere — progressively more of the blues and greens are removed from the direct rays, giving an orange or red appearance to the sun; and the sky appears pink — because the blues and greens are scattered over such long paths that they are highly attenuated before arriving at the observer, resulting in characteristic pink skies at dawn and sunset.
For a path length
L
z
where
Lo
The air mass number is thus dependent on the Sun's elevation path through the sky and therefore varies with time of day and with the passing seasons of the year, and with the latitude of the observer.
A first-order approximation for air mass is given bywhere
z
The above approximation overlooks the atmosphere's finite height, and predicts an infinite air mass at the horizon. However, it is reasonably accurate for values of
z
A more comprehensive list of such models is provided in the main article Airmass, for various atmospheric models and experimental data sets.At sea level the air mass towards the horizon (
z
Modelling the atmosphere as a simple spherical shell provides a reasonable approximation:[7]
where the radius of the Earth
RE
yatm
r=RE/yatm
AM= | 2r+1 |
\sqrt{(r\cosz)2+2r+1 |
+ r\cosz}
which also shows the similarity to the simple
1 | |
\cosz |
These models are compared in the table below:
z | Flat Earth | Kasten & Young | Spherical shell | |
---|---|---|---|---|
degree | ||||
0° | 1.0 | 1.0 | 1.0 | |
60° | 2.0 | 2.0 | 2.0 | |
70° | 2.9 | 2.9 | 2.9 | |
75° | 3.9 | 3.8 | 3.8 | |
80° | 5.8 | 5.6 | 5.6 | |
85° | 11.5 | 10.3 | 10.6 | |
88° | 28.7 | 19.4 | 20.3 | |
90° | infty | 37.9 | 37.6 |
These simple models assume that for these purposes the atmosphere can be considered to be effectively concentrated into around the bottom 9 km,[8] i.e. essentially all the atmospheric effects are due to the atmospheric mass in the lower half of the Troposphere. This is a useful and simple model when considering the atmospheric effects on solar intensity.
One can also assume that the air density falls off exponentially with height. If is the distance along the light ray from where it meets the ground, divided by the equivalent thickness of the atmosphere (approximately 9 km), then the height of a point is:
\sqrt{(r\sinz)2+(r\cosz+x)2}-r ≈ x\cosz+(\sinz)2x2/(2r)
The air mass is then:
infty | |
\begin{align} \int | |
0 |
\exp((-2x\cosz-(\sinz)2x2/r)/2)dx&= \exp((r\cot2
infty | |
z)/2)\int | |
0 |
\exp(-(\sqrt{r}\cotz+x\sinz/\sqrt{r})2/2)dx\\ &=-\exp(r(\cotz)2/2)
\sqrt{r\pi/2 | |
where
erfc
The spectrum outside the atmosphere is referred to as "AM0", meaning "zero atmospheres". Solar cells used for space power applications, like those on communications satellites, are generally characterized using AM0.
The spectrum after travelling through the atmosphere to sea level with the sun directly overhead is referred to, by definition, as "AM1". This means "one atmosphere".AM1 (
z
z
Solar panels do not generally operate under exactly one atmosphere's thickness: if the sun is at an angle to the Earth's surface the effective thickness will be greater. Many of the world's major population centres, and hence solar installations and industry, across Europe, China, Japan, the United States of America and elsewhere (including northern India, southern Africa and Australia) lie in temperate latitudes. An AM number representing the spectrum at mid-latitudes is therefore much more common.
"AM1.5", 1.5 atmosphere thickness, corresponds to a solar zenith angle of
z
The illuminance for Daylight (this version) under AM1.5 is given as 109,870 lux (corresponding with the AM1.5 spectrum to 1000.4 W/m2).
AM2 (
z
z
AM38 is generally regarded as being the airmass in the horizontal direction (
z
The relative air mass is only a function of the sun's zenith angle, and therefore does not change with local elevation. Conversely, the absolute air mass, equal to the relative air mass multiplied by the local atmospheric pressure and divided by the standard (sea-level) pressure, decreases with elevation above sea level. For solar panels installed at high altitudes, e.g. in an Altiplano region, it is possible to use a lower absolute AM numbers than for the corresponding latitude at sea level: AM numbers less than 1 towards the equator, and correspondingly lower numbers than listed above for other latitudes. However, this approach is approximate and not recommended. It is best to simulate the actual spectrum based on the relative air mass (e.g., 1.5) and the actual atmospheric conditions for the specific elevation of the site under scrutiny.
Solar intensity at the collector reduces with increasing airmass coefficient, but due to the complex and variable atmospheric factors involved, not in a simple or linear fashion.For example, almost all high energy radiation is removed in the upper atmosphere (between AM0 and AM1) and so AM2 is not twice as bad as AM1.Furthermore, there is great variability in many of the factors contributing to atmospheric attenuation,[12] such as water vapor, aerosols, photochemical smog and the effects of temperature inversions.Depending on level of pollution in the air, overall attenuation can change by up to ±70% towards the horizon, greatly affecting performance particularly towards the horizon where effects of the lower layers of atmosphere are amplified manyfold.
One empirical approximation model for solar intensity versus airmass is given by:[13] [14] where solar intensity external to the Earth's atmosphere
Io
This formula fits comfortably within the mid-range of the expected pollution-based variability:
z | AM | range due to pollution | formula | ASTM G-173 |
---|---|---|---|---|
degree | W/m2 | W/m2 | W/m2 | |
- | 0 | 1367[15] | 1353 | 1347.9[16] |
0° | 1 | 840 .. 1130 = 990 ± 15% | 1040 | |
23° | 1.09 | 800 .. 1110 = 960 ± 16%[17] | 1020 | |
30° | 1.15 | 780 .. 1100 = 940 ± 17% | 1010 | |
45° | 1.41 | 710 .. 1060 = 880 ± 20% | 950 | |
48.2° | 1.5 | 680 .. 1050 = 870 ± 21% | 930 | 1000.4[18] |
60° | 2 | 560 .. 970 = 770 ± 27% | 840 | |
70° | 2.9 | 430 .. 880 = 650 ± 34% | 710 | |
75° | 3.8 | 330 .. 800 = 560 ± 41% | 620 | |
80° | 5.6 | 200 .. 660 = 430 ± 53% | 470 | |
85° | 10 | 85 .. 480 = 280 ± 70% | 270 | |
90° | 38 | 20 |
This illustrates that significant power is available at only a few degrees above the horizon. For example, when the sun is more than about 60° above the horizon (
z
z
One approximate model for intensity increase with altitude and accurate to a few kilometres above sea level is given by:[19] where
h
AM
Alternatively, given the significant practical variabilities involved, the homogeneous spherical model could be applied to estimate AM, using:where the normalized heights of the atmosphere and of the collector are respectively
r=RE/yatm
c=h/yatm
And then the above table or the appropriate equation (or or for average, polluted or clean air respectively) can be used to estimate intensity from AM in the normal way.
These approximations at and are suitable for use only to altitudes of a few kilometres above sea level, implying as they do reduction to AM0 performance levels at only around 6 and 9 km respectively.By contrast much of the attenuation of the high energy components occurs in the ozone layer - at higher altitudes around 30 km.[20] Hence these approximations are suitable only for estimating the performance of ground-based collectors.
See main article: Solar cell efficiency.
The earth's atmosphere absorbs a considerable amount of the ultraviolet light. The resulting spectrum at the Earth's surface has fewer photons, but they are of lower energy on average, so the number of photons, above the bandgap, per unit of sunlight energy is greater than in space. This means that solar cells are more efficient at AM1 than AM0. This apparently counter-intuitive result arises simply because silicon cells can't make much use of the high energy radiation which the atmosphere filters out.As illustrated below, even though the efficiency is lower at AM0 the total output power (Pout) for a typical solar cell is still highest at AM0.Conversely, the shape of the spectrum does not significantly change with further increases in atmospheric thickness, and hence cell efficiency does not greatly change for AM numbers above 1.
AM | Solar intensity | Output power | Efficiency | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pin W/m2 | Pout W/m2 | Pout / Pin | ||
0 | 1350 | 160 | 12% | |
1 | 1000 | 150 | 15% | |
2 | 800 | 120 | 15% |
This illustrates the more general point that given that solar energy is "free", and where available space is not a limitation, other factors such as total output power Pout, and Pout per unit of invested money (e.g. per dollar), are often more important considerations than efficiency (Pout/Pin).
for polluted air:
for clean air: