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Background & Objective: Due to the policy goals for sustainable energy production, renewable energy plants such as photovoltaics are increasingly in use. The energy production from solar radiation depends strongly on atmospheric conditions. As the weather mostly changes, electrical power generation fluctuates, making technical planning and control of power grids to a complex problem. Due to used materials (semiconductors e.g. silicon, gallium arsenide, cadmium telluride) the photovoltaic cells are spectrally selective. It means that only radiation of certain wavelengths converts into electrical energy. A material property called spectral response characterizes a certain degree of conversion of solar radiation into the electric current for each wavelength of solar light.
Fundamentals of Energy Meteorology - Influence of atmospheric parameters on solar energy production
(2015)
Solar energy is one option to serve the rising global energy demand with low environmental Impact [1]. Building an energy system with a considerable share of solar power requires long-term investment and a careful investigation of potential sites. Therefore, understanding the impacts from varying regionally and locally determined meteorological conditions on solar energy production will influence energy yield projections. Clouds are moving on a short term timescale and have a high influence on the available solar radiation, as they absorb, reflect and scatter parts of the incoming light [2]. However, modeling photovoltaic (PV) power yields with a spectral resolution and local cloud information gives new insights on the atmospheric impact on solar energy.
This thesis contributes to a better understanding of the effect of heterogeneous chemistry on ozone in the tropopause region. As part of the German research project ALTO, it especially focuses on the impact of aircraft emissions on heterogeneous ozone chemistry in this region. This is an important question as ozone is a strong greenhouse gas, whose radiative effect, is strongest near the tropopause.
In general, the treatment of heterogeneous processes on background and aviation-produced particles requires the consideration of processes ranging from nanometer to continental scale. For this reason the present modeling work includes a treatment of small scale processes as well as the development and subsequent application of parameterisations. Three numerical trajectory box models considering highly detailed microphysical and chemical processes have been developed: (a) an aircraft plume model including coagulation, chemistry and plume dilution, (b) a particle-size resolved microphysical box model and, (c) a comprehensive photo-chemical box model.