jaggedben
Senior Member
- Location
- Northern California
- Occupation
- Solar and Energy Storage Installer
Differing string voltages is by no means a non-issue. Older inverters would do okay finding the maximum powerpoint voltage with multiple strings paralleled together. But overall system production would suffer. In small residential systems it was also constraining if you couldn't make all the strings the same length and face them in the same direction. In utility scale systems, my understanding is that the biasing at higher voltages is pretty detrimental to the panels longevity, although to my knowledge it's still standard practice on the largest systems where O&M labor costs are actually cheaper than spending more $$$ on electronics for every panel and losing efficiency therein.
There are other, arguably bigger factors that also drove the adoption of micro-inverters and DC optimizers in residential and commercial, mostly having to do with safety (not working with uncontrolled high DC voltage) and the rapid shutdown requirement. But string inverters had already evolved in the direction of multiple MPPTs before rapid shutdown, because it increased system production and design flexibility. Not exactly one inverter/string, but no longer paralleling as many strings on a common bus before going to the inverter input.
There are other, arguably bigger factors that also drove the adoption of micro-inverters and DC optimizers in residential and commercial, mostly having to do with safety (not working with uncontrolled high DC voltage) and the rapid shutdown requirement. But string inverters had already evolved in the direction of multiple MPPTs before rapid shutdown, because it increased system production and design flexibility. Not exactly one inverter/string, but no longer paralleling as many strings on a common bus before going to the inverter input.