Title of article :
Measuring solar reflectance—Part II: Review of practical methods
Author/Authors :
Ronnen Levinson ، نويسنده , , Hashem Akbari، نويسنده , , Paul Berdahl، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
A companion article explored how solar reflectance varies with surface orientation and solar position, and found that clear sky air
mass 1 global horizontal (AM1GH) solar reflectance is a preferred quantity for estimating solar heat gain. In this study we show that
AM1GH solar reflectance Rg,0 can be accurately measured with a pyranometer, a solar spectrophotometer, or an updated edition of the
Solar Spectrum Reflectometer (version 6). Of primary concern are errors that result from variations in the spectral and angular distributions
of incident sunlight.
Neglecting shadow, background and instrument errors, the conventional pyranometer technique can measure Rg,0 to within 0.01 for
surface slopes up to 5:12 [23 ], and to within 0.02 for surface slopes up to 12:12 [45 ]. An alternative pyranometer method minimizes
shadow errors and can be used to measure Rg,0 of a surface as small as 1 m in diameter. The accuracy with which it can measure
Rg,0 is otherwise comparable to that of the conventional pyranometer technique.
A solar spectrophotometer can be used to determine R g;0, a solar reflectance computed by averaging solar spectral reflectance weighted
with AM1GH solar spectral irradiance. Neglecting instrument errors, R g;0 matches Rg,0 to within 0.006. The air mass 1.5 solar reflectance
measured with version 5 of the Solar Spectrum Reflectometer can differ from R g;0 by as much as 0.08, but the AM1GH output of version
6 of this instrument matches R g;0 to within about 0.01.
2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords :
Solar reflectance , pyranometer , Solar spectrophotometer , Solar heat gain , Spectrally selective “cool colored”surface , Solar spectrum reflectometer
Journal title :
Solar Energy
Journal title :
Solar Energy