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CA_Traveler's avatar
CA_Traveler
Explorer III
Dec 31, 2017

Serial vs Parallel Solar Panel Shading

I was asked if a post in another thread if this "Serial is actually better for shading (than parallel) if that is a concern for you." was a typo. It is not a typo but panel shading is not always understood on this board.

What is overlooked is the bypass diodes and how they operate. All 24V 6x10 or 6x12 cell panels have 3 bypass diodes. Some 12V 4x9 cell panels have 2 bypss diodes. The diodes bypass 2 rows each, ie 2x9, 2x10 or 2x12 cells in what I’ll call a panel section. The diodes are installed to protect the serial panels from shade which can damage them which is why virtually all 24V panels have them. BUT they also allow the panel to produce more output in shaded conditions than parallel panels.

While there are various online articles on the need for bypass diodes to protect the panels (which I’ll skip) and articles on the shading/power effects, I’ll provide my own experience.

My 60 cell panels have 3 diodes each and each one can and does bypass 1/3 of a panel voltage in shading conditions. One key to understanding is that while shading on one section reduces the voltage by 1/3, the amps from the other 2 is the full amps from that panel for the given light conditions. Or to express it another way the panel produces 2/3 of its power. This is a dream made in heaven for MPPT controllers because by design they can harvest that 2/3 power from that panel plus all of the power from other series panels.

The same shading scenario for parallel panels means that the reduced panel voltage doesn’t contribute to the total power that the CC can harvest.

My 3 series connected panel’s means that I have 9 panel sections. Shade on one section means that I have 8/9 of the panel power for the MPPT controller to harvest. If 2 sections are shaded with either the same or different panels means that I now have 7/9 of the panel power. And so forth all the way to 2/9, with 1/9 being about 10V for my panels.

My panels are 30V (rounding) panels so I have 90V in series. Each shaded section that activates a bypass diode reduces that voltage by 10V down to 20V and the MPPT is happy as a clam to continue charging the batteries. Ie At high noon if I had 7 shaded sections the panel output would be 20V at 8A or 160W/14.8V = 10A bulk battery charging at 14.8V.

This picture shows the morning leafy shade 10V voltage changes due to shading. This is a graph of the Morningstar MPPT 60 CC and represents any MPPT controller. The thread is Click.

38 Replies

  • Boon Docker wrote:
    When wired in parallel if one panel gets shaded it does not effect the rest of the system. When wired in series if one panel gets shaded it effects the rest of the system.
    I don't understand your point. The shaded panel will not produce any amps which effects the rest of the system.
  • LittleBill

    In the shaded example the 3 panels in parallel will have 20V, 30V and 20V. Due to the lower 20V from 2 panels they will not contribute any amps. Only the 30V panel will contribute amps.
  • CA Traveler wrote:
    .

    Assuming 8A the output would be 8*70 = 560W for the serial panels. For parallel connected panels the output would be 8*30 = 240W.



    I think the math is wrong here. for parallel it should be 8a*3*30=720

    each panel should be doing 8a
  • And when you do it, Scott, you’ll wonder why you didn’t sooner. 60 consecutive camping days...no generator needed (weekly 5 minute exercise however)
  • Thanks for this explanation.
    I plan on doing some solar in the distant future. Hopefully I'll remember this!
  • When wired in parallel if one panel gets shaded it does not effect the rest of the system. When wired in series if one panel gets shaded it effects the rest of the system.
  • Three 60 cell 30V panels with 3 bypass diodes in each panel. Each panel can be viewed as composed of 3 subpanels each with a bypass diode. As shown below the output would consist of 20+30+20 = 70V at the given amps. The amps depend upon the given light conditions.

    Assuming 8A the output would be 8*70 = 560W for the serial panels. For parallel connected panels the output would be 8*30 = 240W.

    With shadows on 7 of the 9 subpanels there would be 8*20 = 160W available for charging with serial panels.


    Click For Full-Size Image.

    The panel amps will be the full amps for the given light conditions.

    A conducting diode will have a small voltage drop (0.3-0.5V) which I have not accounted for.

    The right hand red arrow should be on the right hand side along with the shadow...:S

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