Clean Energy Insights

How Do Solar Panels Work?


6 minute read

If you've been thinking about going solar for a while, you might be wondering how do solar panels work? It’s been formulated that the amount of sunlight reaching Earth is enough to power the needs of the entire world more than 8,500 times over. So, if we could just capture that power and use it somehow… Ok yes, as most know by now, indeed we can, with solar panels.  But how do solar panels work?  Knowing how can answer a lot of questions and calm many lingering concerns about solar energy.

In the Beginning - Solar Panel Structure 

Basically, at the heart of this answer is a chemical reaction.  The process starts with the previously mentioned sunlight, as it arrives to us in the official form of electromagnetic radiation (aka “photons”).  At this point, the sun has pretty much done its part.

how do solar panels work on each stages

On our end, we start with the construction of a solar cell.  Solar cells are very thin wafers usually made of silicon, as it is a good conductor of electricity.  Within silicon are atoms, consisting of protons, electrons, and neutron particles.  Protons have a positive charge and are fairly static, whereby electrons are negative and fairly active.  They like to move about.  A glorious example is lightning, which is electrons moving at the speed of light between clouds and the ground.

The solar cells are made of two layers of treated silicon with different atomic structures.  So as  sunlight hits a panel, the cells within absorb the sun’s photons, through the top silicon layer. This causes very rapid electron movement (better described as “vibrations”), which in turn “frees” the electrons from the atoms. Since like charges repel and unlike charges attract,  the electrons will seek out and move toward the bottom positive layer of protons located within the solar cell.  Once all this activity is connected to an external load, the electrons will flow along  a circuit in one direction, thus creating DC electricity (direct current).

Rounding out the picture, each cell in a panel is then wired together and interconnected in “series”,  thereby increasing the overall voltage potential of the panel.  Modern panels are most commonly made up of 60 or 72 cells per module, arranged in rectangular form under tempered glass, and can now generate well over 400 watts per panel.  Translated into kilowatt-hours, which is how one is billed by utilities for the amount of electrical usage, 400 watts provides up to 2 kilowatt-hours a day, or 730 kilowatt hours per year in sunny climates.

Introducing the Inverter

The result then, of a collection of solar panels, or “array”, is the generation of DC current.  The DC current however needs to be converted to AC (alternative current) in order to be used in the home to power appliances and turn on the lights.  And there we find our partner in the process, the inverter.

the stages of how solar panels work

The DC current will travel from the panels to an inverter, which will convert the current to AC, and send it on to the main electrical (circuit breaker) panel of the house.  Once at the panel the power will serve all the circuits for the house. If at any time the panels are generating more power than the house can use, the “extra” power can be fed onto the main electrical grid by the inverter to be used elsewhere, or could also be fed to and saved in a battery if one has this solar storage option.  So, a fairly simple process.  At the core, a chemical reaction that is continuously harvested to generate electricity while the sun is out, and that generation is converted to AC electricity for use in the home.  

Even on cloudy days, the panels will generate electricity, but will produce the most on sunny, cool days. Panels will produce even more energy when they have optimum orientation (south facing, for those in the northern hemisphere, and opposite for those in the southern hemisphere), and mounting angle (or “tilt”),  as further described in this previous RE-volv article.

Panels will produce the most when the sun’s rays are perpendicular to the panels, a time which is referred to as “peak sun hours”.  Shading, from trees, debris on the panels or clouds, can cause a loss of production, although there are technologies and electronics such as power optimizers and microinverters that fit on the undersides of each panel to help minimize those losses.

How Long Do Solar Panels Last?

There are no moving parts to solar panels, and very little to go wrong in a well-made panel.  Most manufacturers have warranties on the panels for 25-30 years, and they will last much longer.  In fact, the first solar cell was invented by Bell Labs in the mid-1950’s, and now over 60 years later it still works!  Essentially, the cells themselves should never completely wear out.

Not to say panels don’t show a little age over time.  Panels age ever so slowly by losing a slight amount of production over the years.  This is usually due to the internal wiring of the cell  corroding over time, causing some output loss.

Even so, the top-tier panel manufacturers warrant at least 90% of a panel’s original level of production after those 25 years, so the production decline is very slow and quite minimal overall. Panels rarely just completely stop working. If a panel stops providing electricity, it’s usually due to something external to the panel, such as a corroded wire or broken connection point to another panel. However, the chemical reaction within the solar panels lives on.

Solar technology therefore is well-proven, safe, and very reliable.  In general, over the years panels have gotten and will continue to get more efficient (incrementally producing more energy), but otherwise should not see any sort of major technology change that would render current models obsolete.

Are solar panels durable?  The standard test solar panels must first pass is the “hail test,” whereby a 3” ice ball is projected on the panel at 50 mph at 90 degrees.

What Maintenance is Needed?

Solar panels are about as maintenance free as something could get, especially something outdoors over a 25+ year period.  The only ongoing recommendation is to keep the panel faces clean, and for that in many areas regular rainfall will do the trick.

 

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