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Keywords = urban photovoltaics

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16 pages, 715 KiB  
Review
Public Perceptions and Social Acceptance of Renewable Energy Projects in Epirus, Greece: The Role of Education, Demographics and Visual Exposure
by Evangelos Tsiaras, Stergios Tampekis and Costas Gavrilakis
World 2025, 6(3), 111; https://doi.org/10.3390/world6030111 - 6 Aug 2025
Abstract
The social acceptance of Renewable Energy Sources (RESs) is a decisive factor in the successful implementation of clean energy projects. This study explores the attitudes, demographic profiles, and common misconceptions of citizens in the Region of Epirus, Greece, toward photovoltaic and wind energy [...] Read more.
The social acceptance of Renewable Energy Sources (RESs) is a decisive factor in the successful implementation of clean energy projects. This study explores the attitudes, demographic profiles, and common misconceptions of citizens in the Region of Epirus, Greece, toward photovoltaic and wind energy installations. Special attention is given to the role of education, age, and access to information—as well as spatial factors such as visual exposure—in shaping public perceptions and influencing acceptance of RES deployment. A structured questionnaire was administered to 320 participants across urban and rural areas, with subdivision between regions with and without visual exposure to RES infrastructure. Findings indicate that urban residents exhibit greater acceptance of RES, while rural inhabitants—especially those in proximity to installations—express skepticism, often grounded in esthetic concerns or perceived procedural injustice. Misinformation and lack of knowledge dominate in areas without visual contact. Statistical analysis confirms that younger and more educated participants are more supportive and environmentally aware. The study highlights the importance of targeted educational interventions, transparent consultation, and spatially sensitive communication strategies in fostering constructive engagement with renewable energy projects. The case of Epirus underscores the need for inclusive, place-based policies to bridge the social acceptance gap and support the national energy transition. Full article
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25 pages, 2661 KiB  
Article
Fuzzy Logic-Based Energy Management Strategy for Hybrid Renewable System with Dual Storage Dedicated to Railway Application
by Ismail Hacini, Sofia Lalouni Belaid, Kassa Idjdarene, Hammoudi Abderazek and Kahina Berabez
Technologies 2025, 13(8), 334; https://doi.org/10.3390/technologies13080334 - 1 Aug 2025
Viewed by 229
Abstract
Railway systems occupy a predominant role in urban transport, providing efficient, high-capacity mobility. Progress in rail transport allows fast traveling, whilst environmental concerns and CO2 emissions are on the rise. The integration of railway systems with renewable energy source (RES)-based stations presents [...] Read more.
Railway systems occupy a predominant role in urban transport, providing efficient, high-capacity mobility. Progress in rail transport allows fast traveling, whilst environmental concerns and CO2 emissions are on the rise. The integration of railway systems with renewable energy source (RES)-based stations presents a promising avenue to improve the sustainability, reliability, and efficiency of urban transport networks. A storage system is needed to both ensure a continuous power supply and meet train demand at the station. Batteries (BTs) offer high energy density, while supercapacitors (SCs) offer both a large number of charge and discharge cycles, and high-power density. This paper proposes a hybrid RES (photovoltaic and wind), combined with batteries and supercapacitors constituting the hybrid energy storage system (HESS). One major drawback of trains is the long charging time required in stations, so they have been fitted with SCs to allow them to charge up quickly. A new fuzzy energy management strategy (F-EMS) is proposed. This supervision strategy optimizes the power flow between renewable energy sources, HESS, and trains. DC bus voltage regulation is involved, maintaining BT and SC charging levels within acceptable ranges. The simulation results, carried out using MATLAB/Simulink, demonstrate the effectiveness of the suggested fuzzy energy management strategy for various production conditions and train demand. Full article
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21 pages, 1456 KiB  
Article
Life Cycle Assessment of Land Use Trade-Offs in Indoor Vertical Farming
by Ana C. Cavallo, Michael Parkes, Ricardo F. M. Teixeira and Serena Righi
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(15), 8429; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15158429 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 239
Abstract
Urban agriculture (UA) is emerging as a promising strategy for sustainable food production in response to growing environmental pressures. Indoor vertical farming (IVF), combining Controlled Environment Agriculture (CEA) with Building-Integrated Agriculture (BIA), enables efficient resource use and year-round crop cultivation in urban settings. [...] Read more.
Urban agriculture (UA) is emerging as a promising strategy for sustainable food production in response to growing environmental pressures. Indoor vertical farming (IVF), combining Controlled Environment Agriculture (CEA) with Building-Integrated Agriculture (BIA), enables efficient resource use and year-round crop cultivation in urban settings. This study assesses the environmental performance of a prospective IVF system located on a university campus in Portugal, focusing on the integration of photovoltaic (PV) energy as an alternative to the conventional electricity grid (GM). A Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) was conducted using the Environmental Footprint (EF) method and the LANCA model to account for land use and soil-related impacts. The PV-powered system demonstrated lower overall environmental impacts, with notable reductions across most impact categories, but important trade-offs with decreased soil quality. The LANCA results highlighted cultivation and packaging as key contributors to land occupation and transformation, while also revealing trade-offs associated with upstream material demands. By combining EF and LANCA, the study shows that IVF systems that are not soil-based can still impact soil quality indirectly. These findings contribute to a broader understanding of sustainability in urban farming and underscore the importance of multi-dimensional assessment approaches when evaluating emerging agricultural technologies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Innovative Engineering Technologies for the Agri-Food Sector)
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19 pages, 6937 KiB  
Article
Optimal Placement of Distributed Solar PV Adapting to Electricity Real-Time Market Operation
by Xi Chen and Hai Long
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 6879; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17156879 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 289
Abstract
Distributed photovoltaic (PV) generation is increasingly important for urban energy systems amid global climate change and the shift to renewable energy. Traditional PV deployment prioritizes maximizing energy output, often neglecting electricity price variability caused by time-of-use tariffs. This study develops a high-resolution planning [...] Read more.
Distributed photovoltaic (PV) generation is increasingly important for urban energy systems amid global climate change and the shift to renewable energy. Traditional PV deployment prioritizes maximizing energy output, often neglecting electricity price variability caused by time-of-use tariffs. This study develops a high-resolution planning and economic assessment model for building-integrated PV (BIPV) systems, incorporating hourly electricity real-time market prices, solar geometry, and submeter building spatial data. Wuhan (30.60° N, 114.05° E) serves as the case study to evaluate optimal PV placement and tilt angles on rooftops and façades, focusing on maximizing economic returns rather than energy production alone. The results indicate that adjusting rooftop PV tilt from a maximum generation angle (30°) to a maximum revenue angle (15°) slightly lowers generation but increases revenue, with west-facing orientations further improving returns by aligning output with peak electricity prices. For façades, south-facing panels yielded the highest output, while north-facing panels with tilt angles above 20° also showed significant potential. Façade PV systems demonstrated substantially higher generation potential—about 5 to 15 times that of rooftop PV systems under certain conditions. This model provides a spatially detailed, market-responsive framework supporting sustainable urban energy planning, quantifying economic and environmental benefits, and aligning with integrated approaches to urban sustainability. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Energy Planning and Environmental Assessment)
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19 pages, 3492 KiB  
Article
Deep Learning-Based Rooftop PV Detection and Techno Economic Feasibility for Sustainable Urban Energy Planning
by Ahmet Hamzaoğlu, Ali Erduman and Ali Kırçay
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 6853; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17156853 - 28 Jul 2025
Viewed by 253
Abstract
Accurate estimation of available rooftop areas for PV power generation at the city scale is critical for sustainable energy planning and policy development. In this study, using publicly available high-resolution satellite imagery, rooftop solar energy potential in urban, rural, and industrial areas is [...] Read more.
Accurate estimation of available rooftop areas for PV power generation at the city scale is critical for sustainable energy planning and policy development. In this study, using publicly available high-resolution satellite imagery, rooftop solar energy potential in urban, rural, and industrial areas is estimated using deep learning models. In order to identify roof areas, high-resolution open-source images were manually labeled, and the training dataset was trained with DeepLabv3+ architecture. The developed model performed roof area detection with high accuracy. Model outputs are integrated with a user-friendly interface for economic analysis such as cost, profitability, and amortization period. This interface automatically detects roof regions in the bird’s-eye -view images uploaded by users, calculates the total roof area, and classifies according to the potential of the area. The system, which is applied in 81 provinces of Turkey, provides sustainable energy projections such as PV installed capacity, installation cost, annual energy production, energy sales revenue, and amortization period depending on the panel type and region selection. This integrated system consists of a deep learning model that can extract the rooftop area with high accuracy and a user interface that automatically calculates all parameters related to PV installation for energy users. The results show that the DeepLabv3+ architecture and the Adam optimization algorithm provide superior performance in roof area estimation with accuracy between 67.21% and 99.27% and loss rates between 0.6% and 0.025%. Tests on 100 different regions yielded a maximum roof estimation accuracy IoU of 84.84% and an average of 77.11%. In the economic analysis, the amortization period reaches the lowest value of 4.5 years in high-density roof regions where polycrystalline panels are used, while this period increases up to 7.8 years for thin-film panels. In conclusion, this study presents an interactive user interface integrated with a deep learning model capable of high-accuracy rooftop area detection, enabling the assessment of sustainable PV energy potential at the city scale and easy economic analysis. This approach is a valuable tool for planning and decision support systems in the integration of renewable energy sources. Full article
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20 pages, 1676 KiB  
Article
Data-Driven Distributionally Robust Optimization for Solar-Powered EV Charging Under Spatiotemporal Uncertainty in Urban Distribution Networks
by Tianhao Wang, Xuejiao Zhang, Xiaolin Zheng, Jian Wang, Shiqian Ma, Jian Chen, Mengyu Liu and Wei Wei
Energies 2025, 18(15), 4001; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18154001 - 27 Jul 2025
Viewed by 375
Abstract
The rapid electrification of transportation and the proliferation of rooftop solar photovoltaics (PVs) in urban environments are reshaping the operational dynamics of power distribution networks. However, the inherent uncertainty in electric vehicle (EV) behavior—including arrival times, charging preferences, and state-of-charge—as well as spatially [...] Read more.
The rapid electrification of transportation and the proliferation of rooftop solar photovoltaics (PVs) in urban environments are reshaping the operational dynamics of power distribution networks. However, the inherent uncertainty in electric vehicle (EV) behavior—including arrival times, charging preferences, and state-of-charge—as well as spatially and temporally variable solar generation, presents a profound challenge to existing scheduling frameworks. This paper proposes a novel data-driven distributionally robust optimization (DDRO) framework for solar-powered EV charging coordination under spatiotemporal uncertainty. Leveraging empirical datasets of EV usage and solar irradiance from a smart city deployment, the framework constructs Wasserstein ambiguity sets around historical distributions, enabling worst-case-aware decision-making without requiring the assumption of probability laws. The problem is formulated as a two-stage optimization model. The first stage determines day-ahead charging schedules, solar utilization levels, and grid allocations across an urban-scale distribution feeder. The second stage models real-time recourse actions—such as dynamic curtailment or demand reshaping—after uncertainties are realized. Physical grid constraints are modeled using convexified LinDistFlow equations, while EV behavior is segmented into user classes with individualized uncertainty structures. The model is evaluated on a modified IEEE 123-bus feeder with 52 EV-PV nodes, using 15 min resolution over a 24 h horizon and 12 months of real-world data. Comparative results demonstrate that the proposed DDRO method reduces total operational costs by up to 15%, eliminates voltage violations entirely, and improves EV service satisfaction by more than 30% relative to deterministic and stochastic baselines. This work makes three primary contributions: it introduces a robust, tractable optimization architecture that captures spatiotemporal uncertainty using empirical Wasserstein sets; it integrates behavioral and physical modeling within a unified dispatch framework for urban energy-mobility systems; and it demonstrates the value of robust coordination in simultaneously improving grid resilience, renewable utilization, and EV user satisfaction. The results offer practical insights for city-scale planners seeking to enable the reliable and efficient electrification of mobility infrastructure under uncertainty. Full article
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27 pages, 1739 KiB  
Article
Hybrid Small Modular Reactor—Renewable Systems for Smart Cities: A Simulation-Based Assessment for Clean and Resilient Urban Energy Transitions
by Nikolay Hinov
Energies 2025, 18(15), 3993; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18153993 - 27 Jul 2025
Viewed by 549
Abstract
The global transition to clean energy necessitates integrated solutions that ensure both environmental sustainability and energy security. This paper proposes a scenario-based modeling framework for urban hybrid energy systems combining small modular reactors (SMRs), photovoltaic (PV) generation, and battery storage within a smart [...] Read more.
The global transition to clean energy necessitates integrated solutions that ensure both environmental sustainability and energy security. This paper proposes a scenario-based modeling framework for urban hybrid energy systems combining small modular reactors (SMRs), photovoltaic (PV) generation, and battery storage within a smart grid architecture. SMRs offer compact, low-carbon, and reliable baseload power suitable for urban environments, while PV and storage enhance system flexibility and renewable integration. Six energy mix scenarios are evaluated using a lifecycle-based cost model that incorporates both capital expenditures (CAPEX) and cumulative carbon costs over a 25-year horizon. The modeling results demonstrate that hybrid SMR–renewable systems—particularly those with high nuclear shares—can reduce lifecycle CO2 emissions by over 90%, while maintaining long-term economic viability under carbon pricing assumptions. Scenario C, which combines 50% SMR, 40% PV, and 10% battery, emerges as a balanced configuration offering deep decarbonization with moderate investment levels. The proposed framework highlights key trade-offs between emissions and capital cost and seeking resilient and scalable pathways to support the global clean energy transition and net-zero commitments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Challenges and Opportunities in the Global Clean Energy Transition)
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24 pages, 13362 KiB  
Article
Optimizing the Spatial Configuration of Renewable Energy Communities: A Model Applied in the RECMOP Project
by Michele Grimaldi and Alessandra Marra
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 6744; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17156744 - 24 Jul 2025
Viewed by 237
Abstract
Renewable Energy Communities (RECs) are voluntary coalitions of citizens, small and medium-sized enterprises and local authorities, which cooperate to share locally produced renewable energy, providing environmental, economic, and social benefits rather than profits. Despite a favorable European and Italian regulatory framework, their development [...] Read more.
Renewable Energy Communities (RECs) are voluntary coalitions of citizens, small and medium-sized enterprises and local authorities, which cooperate to share locally produced renewable energy, providing environmental, economic, and social benefits rather than profits. Despite a favorable European and Italian regulatory framework, their development is still limited in the Member States. To this end, this paper proposes a methodology to identify optimal spatial configurations of RECs, based on proximity criteria and maximization of energy self-sufficiency. This result is achieved through the mapping of the demand, expressive of the energy consumption of residential buildings; the suitable areas for installing photovoltaic panels on the roofs of existing buildings; the supply; the supply–demand balance, from which it is possible to identify Positive Energy Districts (PEDs) and Negative Energy Districts (NEDs). Through an iterative process, the optimal configuration is then sought, aggregating only PEDs and NEDs that meet the chosen criteria. This method is applied to the case study of the Avellino Province in the Campania Region (Italy). The maps obtained allow local authorities to inform citizens about the areas where it is convenient to aggregate with their neighbors in a REC to have benefits in terms of energy self-sufficiency, savings on bills or incentives at the local level, including those deriving from urban plans. The latter can encourage private initiative in order to speed up the RECs’ deployment. The presented model is being implemented in the framework of an ongoing research and development project, titled Renewable Energy Communities Monitoring, Optimization, and Planning (RECMOP). Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Urban Vulnerability and Resilience)
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19 pages, 474 KiB  
Review
A Review on the Technologies and Efficiency of Harvesting Energy from Pavements
by Shijing Chen, Luxi Wei, Chan Huang and Yinghong Qin
Energies 2025, 18(15), 3959; https://doi.org/10.3390/en18153959 - 24 Jul 2025
Viewed by 412
Abstract
Dark asphalt surfaces, absorbing about 95% of solar radiation and warming to 60–70 °C during summer, intensify urban heat while providing substantial prospects for energy extraction. This review evaluates four primary technologies—asphalt solar collectors (ASCs, including phase change material (PCM) integration), photovoltaic (PV) [...] Read more.
Dark asphalt surfaces, absorbing about 95% of solar radiation and warming to 60–70 °C during summer, intensify urban heat while providing substantial prospects for energy extraction. This review evaluates four primary technologies—asphalt solar collectors (ASCs, including phase change material (PCM) integration), photovoltaic (PV) systems, vibration-based harvesting, thermoelectric generators (TEGs)—focusing on their principles, efficiencies, and urban applications. ASCs achieve up to 30% efficiency with a 150–300 W/m2 output, reducing pavement temperatures by 0.5–3.2 °C, while PV pavements yield 42–49% efficiency, generating 245 kWh/m2 and lowering temperatures by an average of 6.4 °C. Piezoelectric transducers produce 50.41 mW under traffic loads, and TEGs deliver 0.3–5.0 W with a 23 °C gradient. Applications include powering sensors, streetlights, and de-icing systems, with ASCs extending pavement life by 3 years. Hybrid systems, like PV/T, achieve 37.31% efficiency, enhancing UHI mitigation and emissions reduction. Economically, ASCs offer a 5-year payback period with a USD 3000 net present value, though PV and piezoelectric systems face cost and durability challenges. Environmental benefits include 30–40% heat retention for winter use and 17% increased PV self-use with EV integration. Despite significant potential, high costs and scalability issues hinder adoption. Future research should optimize designs, develop adaptive materials, and validate systems under real-world conditions to advance sustainable urban infrastructure. Full article
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19 pages, 3805 KiB  
Article
Assessment of Urban Rooftop Photovoltaic Potential Based on Deep Learning: A Case Study of the Central Urban Area of Wuhan
by Yu Zhang, Wei He, Jinyan Hu, Chaohui Zhou, Bo Ren, Huiheng Luo, Zhiyong Tian and Weili Liu
Buildings 2025, 15(15), 2607; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15152607 - 23 Jul 2025
Viewed by 335
Abstract
Accurate assessment of urban rooftop solar photovoltaic (PV) potential is critical for the low-carbon energy transition. This study presents a deep learning-based approach using high-resolution (0.5 m) aerial imagery to automatically identify building rooftops in the central urban area of Wuhan, China (covering [...] Read more.
Accurate assessment of urban rooftop solar photovoltaic (PV) potential is critical for the low-carbon energy transition. This study presents a deep learning-based approach using high-resolution (0.5 m) aerial imagery to automatically identify building rooftops in the central urban area of Wuhan, China (covering seven districts), and to estimate their PV installation potential. Two state-of-the-art semantic segmentation models (DeepLabv3+ and U-Net) were trained and evaluated on a local rooftop dataset; U-Net with a ResNet50 backbone achieved the best performance with an overall segmentation accuracy of ~94%. Using this optimized model, we extracted approximately 130 km2 of suitable rooftop area, which could support an estimated 18.18 GW of PV capacity. These results demonstrate the effectiveness of deep learning for city-scale rooftop mapping and provide a data-driven basis for strategic planning of distributed PV installations to support carbon neutrality goals. The proposed framework can be generalized to facilitate large-scale solar energy assessments in other cities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Smart Technologies for Climate-Responsive Building Envelopes)
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22 pages, 4620 KiB  
Article
Spatial Strategies for the Renewable Energy Transition: Integrating Solar Photovoltaics into Barcelona’s Urban Morphology
by Maryam Roodneshin, Adrian Muros Alcojor and Torsten Masseck
Solar 2025, 5(3), 34; https://doi.org/10.3390/solar5030034 - 23 Jul 2025
Viewed by 516
Abstract
This study investigates strategies for urban-scale renewable energy integration through a photovoltaic-centric approach, with a case study of a district in Barcelona. The methodology integrates spatial and morphological data using a geographic information system (GIS)-based and clustering framework to address challenges of CO [...] Read more.
This study investigates strategies for urban-scale renewable energy integration through a photovoltaic-centric approach, with a case study of a district in Barcelona. The methodology integrates spatial and morphological data using a geographic information system (GIS)-based and clustering framework to address challenges of CO2 emissions, air pollution, and energy inefficiency. Rooftop availability and photovoltaic (PV) design constraints are analysed under current urban regulations. The spatial analysis incorporates building geometry and solar exposure, while an evolutionary optimisation algorithm in Grasshopper refines shading analysis, energy yield, and financial performance. Clustering methods (K-means and 3D proximity) group PV panels by solar irradiance uniformity and spatial coherence to enhance system efficiency. Eight PV deployment scenarios are evaluated, incorporating submodule integrated converter technology under a solar power purchase agreement model. Results show distinct trade-offs among PV scenarios. The standard fixed tilted (31.5° tilt, south-facing) scenario offers a top environmental and performance ratio (PR) = 66.81% but limited financial returns. In contrast, large- and huge-sized modules offer peak financial returns, aligning with private-sector priorities but with moderate energy efficiency. Medium- and large-size scenarios provide balanced outcomes, while a small module and its optimised rotated version scenarios maximise energy output yet suffer from high capital costs. A hybrid strategy combining standard fixed tilted with medium and large modules balances environmental and economic goals. The district’s morphology supports “solar neighbourhoods” and demonstrates how multi-scenario evaluation can guide resilient PV planning in Mediterranean cities. Full article
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22 pages, 76473 KiB  
Article
Modeling Renewable Energy Feed-In Dynamics in a German Metropolitan Region
by Sebastian Bottler and Christian Weindl
Processes 2025, 13(7), 2270; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13072270 - 16 Jul 2025
Viewed by 259
Abstract
This study presents community-specific modeling approaches for simulating power injection from photovoltaic and wind energy systems in a German metropolitan region. Developed within the EMN_SIM project and based on openly accessible datasets, the methods are broadly transferable across Germany. For PV, a cluster-based [...] Read more.
This study presents community-specific modeling approaches for simulating power injection from photovoltaic and wind energy systems in a German metropolitan region. Developed within the EMN_SIM project and based on openly accessible datasets, the methods are broadly transferable across Germany. For PV, a cluster-based model groups systems by geographic and technical characteristics, using real weather data to reduce computational effort. Validation against measured specific yields shows strong agreement, confirming energetic accuracy. The wind model operates on a per-turbine basis, integrating technical specifications, land use, and high-resolution wind data. Energetic validation indicates good consistency with Bavarian reference values, while power-based comparisons with selected turbines show reasonable correlation, subject to expected limitations in wind data resolution. The resulting high-resolution generation profiles reveal spatial and temporal patterns valuable for grid planning and targeted policy design. While further validation with additional measurement data could enhance model precision, the current results already offer a robust foundation for urban energy system analyses and future grid integration studies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Advances in Energy and Dynamical Systems)
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29 pages, 2431 KiB  
Article
Expectations Versus Reality: Economic Performance of a Building-Integrated Photovoltaic System in the Andean Ecuadorian Context
by Esteban Zalamea-León, Danny Ochoa-Correa, Hernan Sánchez-Castillo, Mateo Astudillo-Flores, Edgar A. Barragán-Escandón and Alfredo Ordoñez-Castro
Buildings 2025, 15(14), 2493; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15142493 - 16 Jul 2025
Viewed by 383
Abstract
This article presents an empirical evaluation of the technical and economic performance of a building-integrated photovoltaic (PV) system implemented at the Faculty of Architecture and Urbanism of the University of Cuenca, Ecuador. This study explores both stages of deployment, beginning with a 7.7 [...] Read more.
This article presents an empirical evaluation of the technical and economic performance of a building-integrated photovoltaic (PV) system implemented at the Faculty of Architecture and Urbanism of the University of Cuenca, Ecuador. This study explores both stages of deployment, beginning with a 7.7 kWp pilot system and later scaling to a full 75.6 kWp configuration. This hourly monitoring of power exchanges with utility was conducted over several months using high-resolution instrumentation and cloud-based analytics platforms. A detailed comparison between projected energy output, recorded production, and real energy consumption was carried out, revealing how seasonal variability, cloud cover, and academic schedules influence system behavior. The findings also include a comparison between billed and actual electricity prices, as well as an analysis of the system’s payback period under different cost scenarios, including state-subsidized and real-cost frameworks. The results confirm that energy exports are frequent during weekends and that daily generation often exceeds on-site demand on non-working days. Although the university benefits from low electricity tariffs, the system demonstrates financial feasibility when broader public cost structures are considered. This study highlights operational outcomes under real-use conditions and provides insights for scaling distributed generation in institutional settings, with particular relevance for Andean urban contexts with similar solar profiles and tariff structures. Full article
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15 pages, 3246 KiB  
Article
Enhanced Parallel Convolution Architecture YOLO Photovoltaic Panel Detection Model for Remote Sensing Images
by Jinsong Li, Xiaokai Meng, Shuai Wang, Zhumao Lu, Hua Yu, Zeng Qu and Jiayun Wang
Sustainability 2025, 17(14), 6476; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17146476 - 15 Jul 2025
Viewed by 264
Abstract
Object detection technology enables the automatic identification of photovoltaic (PV) panel locations and conditions, significantly enhancing operational efficiency for maintenance teams while reducing the time and cost associated with manual inspections. Challenges arise due to the low resolution of remote sensing images combined [...] Read more.
Object detection technology enables the automatic identification of photovoltaic (PV) panel locations and conditions, significantly enhancing operational efficiency for maintenance teams while reducing the time and cost associated with manual inspections. Challenges arise due to the low resolution of remote sensing images combined with small-sized targets—PV panels intertwined with complex urban or natural backgrounds. To address this, a parallel architecture model based on YOLOv5 was designed, substituting traditional residual connections with parallel convolution structures to enhance feature extraction capabilities and information transmission efficiency. Drawing inspiration from the bottleneck design concept, a primary feature extraction module framework was constructed to optimize the model’s deep learning capacity. The improved model achieved a 4.3% increase in mAP, a 0.07 rise in F1 score, a 6.55% enhancement in recall rate, and a 6.2% improvement in precision. Additionally, the study validated the model’s performance and examined the impact of different loss functions on it, explored learning rate adjustment strategies under various scenarios, and analyzed how individual factors affect learning rate decay during its initial stages. This research notably optimizes detection accuracy and efficiency, holding promise for application in large-scale intelligent PV power station maintenance systems and providing reliable technical support for clean energy infrastructure management. Full article
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21 pages, 3422 KiB  
Article
Techno-Economic Optimization of a Grid-Tied PV/Battery System in Johannesburg’s Subtropical Highland Climate
by Webster J. Makhubele, Bonginkosi A. Thango and Kingsley A. Ogudo
Sustainability 2025, 17(14), 6383; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17146383 - 11 Jul 2025
Viewed by 399
Abstract
With rising energy costs and the need for sustainable power solutions in urban South African settings, grid-tied renewable energy systems have become viable alternatives for reducing dependence on traditional grid supply. This study investigates the techno-economic feasibility of a grid-connected hybrid photovoltaic (PV) [...] Read more.
With rising energy costs and the need for sustainable power solutions in urban South African settings, grid-tied renewable energy systems have become viable alternatives for reducing dependence on traditional grid supply. This study investigates the techno-economic feasibility of a grid-connected hybrid photovoltaic (PV) and battery storage system designed for a commercial facility located in Johannesburg, South Africa—an area characterized by a subtropical highland climate. We conducted the analysis using the HOMER Grid software and evaluated the performance of the proposed PV/battery system against the baseline grid-only configuration. Simulation results indicate that the optimal systems, comprising 337 kW of flat-plate PV and 901 kWh of lithium-ion battery storage, offers a significant reduction in electricity expenditure, lowering the annual utility cost from $39,229 to $897. The system demonstrates a simple payback period of less than two years and achieves a net present value (NPV) of approximately $449,491 over a 25-year project lifespan. In addition to delivering substantial cost savings, the proposed configuration also enhances energy resilience. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to assess the impact of variables such as inflation rate, discount rate, and load profile fluctuations on system performance and economic returns. The results affirm the suitability of hybrid grid-tied PV/battery systems for cost-effective, sustainable urban energy solutions in climates with high solar potential. Full article
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