Choosing a Solar Panel for LoRa Nodes
Choosing a Solar Panel for LoRa Nodes
Solar panel selection involves matching the panel's output to the node's energy needs while accounting for real-world efficiency losses, geographic location, and physical mounting constraints. This page covers panel technology, rating systems, derating factors, geographic sizing, and wiring configurations.
Panel Technologies
| Technology | Efficiency Range | Temperature Coefficient | Low-Light Performance | Physical | Best Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monocrystalline silicon | 20–24% | −0.35% / °C above STC | Good | Rigid, glass-covered, aluminum frame | Fixed installations, roof/pole mounts |
| Polycrystalline silicon | 15–18% | −0.40% / °C above STC | Good | Rigid, glass-covered, aluminum frame | Budget fixed installations |
| Amorphous silicon (thin-film) | 6–8% | −0.20% / °C above STC | Excellent (diffuse light) | Flexible or glass, no frame | Curved surfaces, low-light climates |
| CIGS thin-film | 12–14% | −0.32% / °C above STC | Very good | Flexible or rigid | Curved surfaces where efficiency matters |
For most LoRa node deployments, monocrystalline panels are the correct choice. Their higher efficiency means a smaller, lighter panel for the same power output — important when mounting on a mast or in a small enclosure. Thin-film flexible panels are useful when the panel must conform to a curved surface (conduit mast, cylindrical enclosure) or when severe vibration makes rigid glass panels impractical.
Understanding Wp (Watt-Peak) Ratings
Panel power is rated in Watts-peak (Wp) at Standard Test Conditions (STC): 1000 W/m² irradiance, 25 °C cell temperature, AM 1.5 spectrum. Real-world conditions deviate from STC in several important ways:
Real-World Derating Factors
| Derating Factor | Typical Value | Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| Temperature (hot day) | 0.80–0.90 | Cell temp in direct sun reaches 50–75 °C. Monocrystalline loses ~0.35%/°C above 25 °C. At 60 °C: 1 − (35 × 0.0035) = 0.878. |
| Dirt / dust / pollen | 0.90–0.97 | Uncleaned outdoor panel loses 3–10% annually. Clean panels every 6–12 months. |
| Wiring and connection losses | 0.97–0.99 | Resistance in MC4 connectors and cable runs. Use AWG 10–12 for runs over 5 m. |
| Charge controller efficiency | 0.65–0.97 | PWM: 65–75%. MPPT: 93–97%. See Charge Controllers page. |
| Partial shading | 0.50–1.00 | Even 5% shadow on a cell in a string can reduce total output by 50%+ (bypass diodes mitigate but don't eliminate). |
| Spectral mismatch (overcast) | 1.0–1.05 for amorphous; 0.95 for mono | Amorphous panels outperform mono in overcast because diffuse light spectrum favors their bandgap. |
| Combined typical derating (MPPT, clean, no shade) | 0.70–0.80 | Use 0.75 as a conservative planning factor |
Peak Sun Hours by US Region
Peak sun hours (PSH) is the equivalent number of hours per day at 1000 W/m² irradiance that delivers the same daily energy as the actual variable irradiance. It is the single most important geographic variable in panel sizing.
| Region | Example Cities | Annual Avg PSH | Winter Worst-Month PSH |
|---|---|---|---|
| Southwest Desert | Phoenix, Las Vegas, El Paso | 6.0–7.0 | 4.5–5.5 |
| Mountain West | Denver, Salt Lake City, Albuquerque | 5.5–6.5 | 3.5–4.5 |
| Southeast | Miami, Atlanta, Dallas | 5.0–6.0 | 4.0–5.0 |
| Midwest / Great Plains | Kansas City, Minneapolis, Chicago | 4.5–5.5 | 2.5–3.5 |
| Mid-Atlantic / Northeast | NYC, Philadelphia, Boston | 4.0–4.8 | 2.0–3.0 |
| Pacific Northwest | Seattle, Portland, Eugene | 3.5–4.2 | 1.5–2.5 |
| Alaska (Anchorage) | Anchorage | 3.0–4.0 | 0.5–1.5 |
Always size for the worst-month PSH, not the annual average, to ensure year-round operation.
Panel Sizing Calculation
Required_Wp = Daily_Wh / (PSH_worst_month × overall_derating) Example: 5.75 Wh/day node, Seattle (1.8 PSH winter), MPPT controller (0.95), other derating (0.85): Combined derating = 0.95 × 0.85 = 0.808 Required_Wp = 5.75 / (1.8 × 0.808) = 5.75 / 1.454 = 3.95 Wp → use 5 Wp panel
Panel Sizing by Latitude (Rule of Thumb)
| Latitude (°N) | Panel Wp Required per 1 Wh/day node load | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 25–30° (South Florida, Texas) | 0.5–0.7 Wp | Year-round high sun |
| 30–37° (Southeast, Southwest) | 0.6–0.9 Wp | Good solar resource |
| 37–42° (Mid-Atlantic, Midwest) | 0.9–1.3 Wp | Moderate winter derating |
| 42–48° (New England, Northwest) | 1.3–2.0 Wp | Poor winter sun |
| 48–65° (Northern US, Alaska) | 2.0–5.0 Wp | Size for worst month or use large battery |
Wiring: 5 V USB Charging vs 12 V Systems
5 V USB Charging (small panels, direct LiPo charging)
Panels rated 5–6 V open-circuit (e.g., 0.5–2 W "USB solar panels") are designed to pair with TP4056 or CN3791 LiPo charger ICs. These work only in full sun — the panel voltage drops below the charger's minimum input at partial cloud cover. Acceptable for supplemental trickle charging of small nodes but not reliable primary power.
12 V Nominal Systems
Panels rated 18 V open-circuit (12 V nominal, e.g., 10 W, 20 W, 40 W monocrystalline) are the standard for serious solar deployments. These pair with a dedicated charge controller (PWM or MPPT) that regulates voltage down to the battery charge voltage. MC4 connectors are the industry standard for these panels.
Series vs Parallel Configuration
| Configuration | Effect on Voltage | Effect on Current | When to Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Series (panels in series) | Voltages add (2× 18 V = 36 V) | Current stays same | Higher voltage charge controllers; longer cable runs (less current = thinner wire) |
| Parallel (panels in parallel) | Voltage stays same | Currents add (2× 5 A = 10 A) | Same voltage system but need more current; partial shading (each panel has independent MPPT) |
For small LoRa deployments (5–40 Wp), a single panel in direct connection to a 12 V charge controller is the simplest and most reliable approach.
Recommended Panels for LoRa Deployments
| Panel | Power | Dimensions | Best For | Approximate Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Voltaic P110 (monocrystalline) | 2 W, 6 V | 132 × 91 mm | nRF52840 trickle charge, USB-C output | $25 |
| Newpowa NPA10-12MBK (mono) | 10 W, 12 V nominal | 340 × 235 mm | ESP32 nodes, primary solar | $20–25 |
| Renogy RNG-100D (mono) | 100 W, 12 V nominal | 1050 × 540 mm | Pi gateway installations | $85–100 |
| SunPower Flexible 50 W | 50 W, 12 V nominal | 710 × 540 mm | Curved mast mounting, marine | $90–110 |
| BougeRV 30 W (flexible CIGS) | 30 W, 12 V nominal | 580 × 350 mm | Curved enclosures, portable | $45–55 |