Trans‐oceanic subsurface photovoltaic performance

Utilization of marine photovoltaic energy is primarily focused on surface harvesting with limited photovoltaic cell implementations in submarine environments. Potential applications include marine wildlife telemetry devices, autonomous underwater vehicles, or remote sensing assets. In these applicat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Progress in photovoltaics 2024-03, Vol.32 (3), p.172-185
Hauptverfasser: Krawczyk, Collin A., Shafer, Michael W., Flikkema, Paul G., Rose Holser, Rachel, Costa, Daniel
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container_end_page 185
container_issue 3
container_start_page 172
container_title Progress in photovoltaics
container_volume 32
creator Krawczyk, Collin A.
Shafer, Michael W.
Flikkema, Paul G.
Rose Holser, Rachel
Costa, Daniel
description Utilization of marine photovoltaic energy is primarily focused on surface harvesting with limited photovoltaic cell implementations in submarine environments. Potential applications include marine wildlife telemetry devices, autonomous underwater vehicles, or remote sensing assets. In these applications, understanding the power at depth is critical, but there has yet to be a long‐term study of cell performance in a realistic marine environment that spans time, geographic location, and depth. In this paper, we present photovoltaic assessments carried out by devices mounted to adult female northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris) during their spring migrations in the Pacific Ocean with deployment times between 76 and 107 days. Encompassing a large geographic area between Santa Cruz, California, and the Aleutian Islands of Alaska during their migrations, elephant seal behavior allows for repeated depth profiles each day, making them an ideal host for subsurface power assessments. This paper presents the first longitudinal study of photovoltaic cell performance in the marine environment that spans location, time, and depth. This work discusses the calibration, data time alignment, and power calculations of these oceanic deployments. Deployment results, including power results and energy predictions from the data record, are presented up to 22 m in depth. We highlight how the recorded power data of these cells compares to previously published results and how depth impacts subsurface power and energy harvesting. Custom photovoltaic assessment modules (CPAMs) were designed to measure photovoltaic performance via current‐voltage measurements at depth. They were attached to adult female northern elephant seals prior to migrations in the Pacific Ocean. The results of this deployment, including power and energy averages, are presented up to 22 meters in depth.
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Assessments
Autonomous underwater vehicles
biologging
Depth profiling
Energy harvesting
Geographical locations
irradiance
Marine environment
marine telemetry
modeling
Photovoltaic cells
Remote sensing
solar power
submerged
tag
wildlife
title Trans‐oceanic subsurface photovoltaic performance
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