Development of a computer program for general use in the design of solar powered water pumping systems
Loading...
Files
Date
2007-05
Authors
Denny, Ernest Edward
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Water is one of the basic necessities of life. In addition to being essential for the
maintenance of life, this basic resource is a crucial requirement for combating
poverty, hunger and disease in South African communities. In excess of twenty-nine
percent of South African households do not have water in either their dwellings, or
on site (source: 2005 RSA census data).
This study documents an engineering solution to the problem of water pumping,
utilising renewable energy (solar power) and readily available pumping hardware,
configured via a structured design process. Resultant from the research, a software
application has been developed that facilitates the design of solar (photovoltaic)
powered water pumping applications. The selected design configuration of a nontracking, stand-alone, directly coupled system provides for the most robust and least
complex design possible, making it imminently suitable for application in rural
African conditions. Operation of the program is via a simple graphical user interface,
with full and context sensitive help provided. It is tailored for use in Southern Africa
and is provided with comprehensive databases of location dependant design
information such as solar radiation, meteorology and magnetic declination data,
together with expandable databases of pre-configured pump and solar panel
hardware specification data. The program is manufacturer and component
independent, with no affiliations in the choice of hardware.
Design methodologies, together with a component matching strategy. Optimisation is
achieved by a quantitative and efficiency 'best fit' analysis of the selected hardware
components within the design context. Design output predictions are tabulated and
graphed by month for a period of one year, allowing design visualisation.
The application has been named 'South African Stand-alone Solar (PV) Water
Pumping Design Aid', abbreviated as 'SAS-SWP' in its run-time form. The SASSWP
application is illustrated in the functional overview provided in Figure 1.
Description
M. Tech. (Electrical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering) Vaal University of Technology)
Keywords
Water pump aid, Solar water pump