Archive:000/Rooftop solar/gas stations

Revision as of 06:59, 14 January 2023 by Elie (talk | contribs) (Created page with "A gas station roof is potentially a good place to put solar panels. frame ==Viability== In peak sunlight, how long would it take to provide a full charge: {{calc |ev.battery / (sunlight_peak solar_panel.efficiency gas_station_roof.area) |minutes }} <small>Caveats:</small> {{p|- Might take longer due to some minor energy losses. Should <code>li_ion.charge_discharge_efficiency</code> be factored in?<br />- The more solar/challang...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

A gas station roof is potentially a good place to put solar panels.

File:GasStationRooftopSolar1.png

Viability

In peak sunlight, how long would it take to provide a full charge: ev.battery / (sunlight_peak solar_panel.efficiency gas_station_roof.area) minutes (calculation loading) Caveats: - Might take longer due to some minor energy losses. Should li_ion.charge_discharge_efficiency be factored in?
- The more viable solar panels might be less efficient, which would also slow the charging. But the panels would be cheaper, so it might still make economic sense.
- Is a 0%-to-100% charge even a common customer use-case? Maybe solar gas station rooftops could be mostly just for top-ups, which would be fine if they were commonplace.


Design challanges

  • Gasoline pumps are high traffic areas, so you wouldn't want a car to charge right in front of them. You could probably make room for a charging station 10 to 20 meters away. Some extra wires would be necessary. They could either go above ground (beware of interfering with tall trucks) or below ground (probably a lot of initial cost).
  • Gas station roofs also contain anti-fire systems designed to put out a gasoline fire in the rare case it happens. The solar wiring has to not interfere with that. This makes the engineering a bit more complex, but still manageable.

Marketing challanges

Daytime-only charging might be a tough sell now, but less so if it becomes a social norm. One way or another, the customer would have to pay a premium for nighttime charging (due to costs of energy storage) unless the grid has abundant amounts of other baseload power sources.

External links

Examples: