How Many Square Meters of Solar Panels Are Needed for Household Usage?

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating the area of solar panels required for household energy consumption, specifically focusing on the conversion of energy units and the efficiency of solar panels. The subject area includes concepts from energy calculations and solar panel efficiency.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Mathematical reasoning

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the calculation of energy needs in watts and the conversion from kilowatt-hours to watts. There is an examination of how to properly account for the efficiency of solar panels and the total energy consumption of a household.

Discussion Status

The discussion is ongoing, with participants questioning their calculations and assumptions regarding energy conversion. Some guidance has been offered on unit conversions, and there is a recognition of the need to clarify how to derive the correct number of square meters needed for solar panels.

Contextual Notes

Participants are working under the constraints of a homework problem that requires accurate energy calculations and unit conversions. There is a noted discrepancy in the expected answer, prompting further exploration of the calculations involved.

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Homework Statement
The solay Intensity in the Netherlands is 1.0e3 W/m^2 at a maximum sunshine and a perpendicular incidence.
On average, about 10% of this peak power can be utilized.
The efficiency of the solar panel is 13%.
An average household in the Netherlands consumes approximately 3.5 kWh of the electrical energy in one year.
Calculate how many m^2 solar panel is required to produce the energy of one household.
Relevant Equations
E=Pt
n= E-useful/E-in (or power)
First, I calculated the power generated by the solar panel in one day. So since the intensity is 1.0e3 watts per 1 m2.
10% of this peak power is utilized so

(1000)(0.10)=P-utilized=100W (per 1 m2)
the solar panel has the efficiency of 13% so of this power only 13% is useful.
P-useful= (100)(0.13)= 13W (or J per second per m2)
Now, since the household uses 3.5e3 kwh in one year. P-useful multiplied by 365 days gives me the Power generated in one year.
(13)(365)= 4745 W or J per second for 1 m2

So i divided the household power by the value i find so i could find how many m2 i needed.
3.5e3 kwh (or kilo Joules)
3.5e6/ 4745 = 737 m^2

However this answer is wrong. I should be getting 31 m^2. Could you help me where i went wrong? or how to find this answer?
thanks!
 
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You have correctly calculated that a household needs 13 W per m2. If the house uses 3.5 kWh of energy in one year, what is its consumption of energy in one second? Hint: How many Joules in one kWh or in one 1000 (J/s)*(1 hour)?
 
to be able to get W from Wh (or Joules), i should divide 3500 kWh by 3600 right?
so i get 972 W or (joules per second is used by the house)
since the solar panel produces 13 W per m2 i divide the watts needed by watts produced
971w/13w = 74 m2
the correct answer is 31 m2
 
Zeynaz said:
to be able to get W from Wh (or Joules), i should divide 3500 kWh by 3600 right?
Not right. You can see what's going on better if you use units after your numbers. The 3600 (I assume) is seconds/hour. Now 3.5 kWh = 3500 Wh = 3500 (Joules/s)*(1 hour). If you divide that by 3600 (seconds/hour) what do you get?

On edit: The yearly energy consumption of 3.5 kWh that you posted should be 3500 kWh.
 
Last edited:
if i divide it like that then i would get Joules/ s^2 * 1hour^2 which not what i want.
so the h in there equals to the number of hours in 1 year? because if i multiply wh with 3600s/1h i would get joules. So to be able to get W only, i would have to divide 3500 kwh by the number of hours in 1 year??
 
Zeynaz said:
if i divide it like that then i would get Joules/ s^2 * 1hour^2 which not what i want.
so the h in there equals to the number of hours in 1 year? because if i multiply wh with 3600s/1h i would get joules. So to be able to get W only, i would have to divide 3500 kwh by the number of hours in 1 year??
Yes.
 
yes, because when i do that and divide the value i got by 13 i get 31m2. which is the correct answer. Thank you!
 

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