1. Introduction
According to [
1], by 2030 1.9 billion people will still not have access to clean cooking technologies. This gives scale to the problem.
Solar cooking is a relief for isolated and remote populations in favor of their energy independence and sustainable development. Aemro et al. [
2] and De [
3] describe solar cooking as environmentally friendly and healthy. The impact of using solar can be high as cooking usually consumes more energy than food production, processing, packaging, and distribution. Commonly, the low-income population relies on burning wood and even charcoal. This applies pressure on the vegetal cover of the territory, very frequently causing deforestation, Bailis [
4], Aberilla [
5] among others, even if improved cookstoves are used, Chagunda [
6]. Additionally, quotidian in-home indoor combustion generates toxic fumes, Geng [
7]. They can harm the human body directly or indirectly and induce several kinds of diseases that result in high levels of premature deaths, e.g., WHO [
8], Bruce [
9], WHO [
10]. The use of modern energy vectors, such as LPG and kerosene, is not without problems, such as excessive cost and uncertain availability in poor economies. Also, the related polluting and greenhouse gas emissions should not be ignored. Grid electricity for cooking is not always available in the studied locations, and its cost can be too high for many low-income families [
11]. Given that a significant fraction of the population affected by energy concerns is located in sunny regions, solar cooking is attractive, at least for the partial fulfillment of daily needs. Many studies address this possibility, including Batchelor [
12] and Lecuona-Neumann [
13], among others. Halkos [
14] studies the multi-dimensional aspects of energy poverty. These references indicate that solar electric cooking can fulfill some of the dimensions addressed.
Indoor cooking. Direct and indirect solar cooking is based on heating the cooking pot or a heat transfer fluid by irradiance absorption and its immediate conversion into heat, Arunachala [
15]. They offer relief for the above-mentioned problem. These thermal cookers must be operated outdoors, at least partially, with low social acceptance, in addition to risks of robbery, dust, and animal aggression. To allow indoor cooking, direct cookers concentrate the solar rays into a hole in a dwelling wall, e.g., the Scheffler parabola, or other options, e.g., Balachandran [
16] and Singh [
17], while indirect types use a heat transfer fluid to bring heat from outdoors to the cooking utensil, which can be located indoors, e.g., Varun [
18]. Varun [
19] reviews the topic with particular emphasis on indoor cooking, stating that it is the need of the hour. Sizable solar cookers produce steam to cook indoors using steam indirectly, typical for temples in India, Indora [
20]. There is a need for practical layouts for family-size solar cookers allowing indoor cooking in a conventional kitchen. The quality of the food and the life quality of the housekeeper increases. To fulfill this need, Photo-Voltaic (PV) panels as a primary energy source seem suitable for this, since the panels can easily be affixed to the roof. This technology is supported by the continuous decrease in PV panel prices, which have reached the order of 0.1 €/nominal watt (peak) wholesale, IEA [
21], and [
22] by Our World in Data. Even today, there is no technology widely used for off-grid PV cooking of the family size, although some studies address its viability, such as Dufo-López [
23], Altouni [
24] and Batchelor et al. [
25] among others.
The heating produced by dissipating the electricity of the panels into heat can also be applied to heating air for drying vegetables, meat, or seafood, which is not the aim of this article. Moreover, the proposed heaters can be added to a kind of commercial electric pressure cooker, Rose [
26] modified it to accept PV electricity, but still, they are not available. These devices substantially reduce the thermal energy loss of water evaporation. Simultaneously they incorporate some thermal insulation, reducing sensible heat losses, Asok Rose [
27], thus also increasing energy efficiency.
Solar panels and direct drive. PV panels are sets of in-series solarized reverse-biased diodes that offer a direct electrical Current (DC) approximately proportional to solar irradiance times exposed area. However, they show a non-linear dependence on voltage. Moreover, partial shading on a conventional panel causes a considerable loss in conversion efficiency, which in standard operating conditions is 17% to 24% for silicon-based cells. All this makes an electronic controller for establishing the appropriate operating voltage and the resulting intensity necessary. These controllers, on the one hand, try to maximize efficiency and, on the other hand, adapt voltage for electricity use, e.g., [
24]. Usually, the controller is embedded into the so-called inverter, as these types of equipment aim to inject Alternate Current (AC) electricity into some kind of grid, either mains or micro(smart)-grid.
When this is not the case, the Direct Current (DC) produced by the panels is usually directly consumed, sparing the inverter, e.g., Simon Prabu [
28], and Atmane [
29] among others. There are commercial devices that rely on charging a local battery for later use while eventually supplying a load. Using these devices makes it necessary to transport the costly, heavy, and short-lived batteries at large distances, carrying the possibility of the users abandoning them in situ when dead, with the associated pollution of the environment. These controllers/chargers are designed for standard voltage panels, such as 12 V and 24 V, for the battery’s requirements. These voltages are not aimed for by the standard nowadays of massively produced panels but are in the range of 30 to 40 V for panels made with in-series 60 to 72 cells, or twice in the case of the split cell type. Matching the panel intensity and voltage with the battery charge and discharge requirements wastes substantial energy and limits the power to the additional connected load. I Zobaa [
30] states that PV panel output to user electricity can be as low as 50% under normal operation. Moreover, these controller/charger devices incorporate integrated electronics and batteries that, in the event of a malfunction in a remote or isolated location can rarely be diagnosed and replaced, making them somehow undesirable, especially for low-income economies.
As a preliminary consideration, it is worth establishing if the silicon PV panels are efficient enough for family cooking. Assuming 20% as the representative efficiency from solar energy to electricity, it follows that this is lower than the representative efficiency of a thermal solar cooker, which is around 30% maximum, e.g., Onokwai [
31]. This later low figure incorporates the need to reorient the thermal solar cooker to stay focused. This operation is seldom performed daily as frequently as needed and can be non-perfect. In the case of a PV-based electric cooker, sun tracking is possible but non-compulsory as there is no sun ray concentration. The electricity can be dissipated into useful heat in direct contact with the electrified cooking pot and is always internal to the thermal insulation. The peripheral thermal insulation results in reduced ambient losses, positioning electrical cooking in an advantageous position. A roof-mounted PV panel is usually in a fixed orientation towards the equator, thus losing some direct radiance, but it captures the diffuse component.
The paper focuses on this technology. Moreover, the low ambient losses allow an increase in cooking temperature, suitable for frying, braising, and the like. One inrush into this technology is Watkins [
32], who cast the term Insulated Solar Electric Cooking (ISEC). The peak power of a single silicon PV panel in the market is between 300 and 500 W at the present state of the art, enough for this kind of cooking. If this is not enough, the proposed configuration allows for adding panels in parallel, thus ensuring a safe voltage and multiplying the intensity. This way, the increased power can be used in a single high-power hot plate or several ones, thus allowing recipes needing in-parallel cooking of several ingredients.
This work addresses the possibility of eliminating both electronics and batteries, in an independent installation of an apriorist single PV panel and a thermally insulated cooking pot. No other publication has been found on this layout nor has a model describing it. An approach is Osei [
33]; there, nichrome heaters are embedded into erythritol Phase Change Material (PCM) used as thermal energy storage. The resistors are directly connected to a PV panel to form an integrated unit. When directly connecting conventional resistors to PV panels, there is a primary difficulty. As no electronics are present, it is difficult to efficiently dissipate electricity using the almost constant resistance such as nichrome wires for different irradiances. In the mentioned work, this problem is overcome: a string of diodes has been tried as heaters directly connected to a PV panel to better match the panel intensity-voltage I-V curves so that operation near the Maximum Power Point (MPP). Some thermal problems arise with the diode semiconductors’ thermal breakdown. The present paper illustrates these issues and, as a consequence, proposes using ceramic Positive Thermal Coefficient (PTC) commercial resistors as heaters, Wikipedia [
34] and Yang [
35].
There is an unavoidable thermal resistance from the PTC heaters up to the cooking pot. It can be avoided by using induction heating at the pot bottom, although this incorporates electronics. Some studies address the topic of designing such devices using the DC electricity available from a PV panel, e.g., Sibiya [
36], Anusree [
37], and Dhar [
38]. Even a commercial unit with an inbuilt controller and a battery has been found, Greenwax Technology [
39]. This attractive option finds an additional drawback; it needs special cook pots not always available in some communities.
In the analyzed simple layout that avoids a battery, there is no purpose for electrical storage for off-sunshine cooking, e.g., batteries. Complementary methods can overcome this. The recently cooked meal is hot, so it has in-built thermal storage, and having it warm later on is an extra value. When cooking, the yield produces a moderately elevated temperature in the food. This forms what is called Thermal Energy Storage (TES) to replace electricity storage. It is common to use “wonder bags”, Mawire [
40]; this means storing the already-cooked hot meal inside a heat-insulating bag or box and even complementing this heat storage capacity with some extra material storing sensible or latent heat, Lecuona-Neumann [
41]. This will not only keep the meal warm for later use, e.g., up to dinner time but also prolong low-temperature “slow cooking” without any extra energy consumption. Another possibility is to incorporate a Phase Change Material (PCM) as a TES with a higher energy content, 100 to 400 kJ/kg, than a single-phase material, although at a higher cost, e.g., Opoku [
42]. Such materials can be paraffin, erythritol, mannitol, xylitol, and other non-organic ones, Santhi Rekha [
43]. Storing the melted PCM in a well-heat-insulated vessel can maintain its temperature above solidification. The latent heat of solidification re-heats and even can softly cook breakfast from the previous day’s collected solar heat. Some of these materials are non-toxic or polluting and are mass-produced, Lecuona [
44] and Agyenim [
45] among others.
Not including storage in the initial layout does not preclude using the surplus electric PV production for charging appliances such as mobile phones, lanterns, radios, and the like, as needed for enhancing the quality of life in the home, as their consumption is typically lower than of a solar cooker.
2. Materials and Methods
The methodology chosen is based on a mathematical model of the PV solar cooker described, using direct connection to the PTCs through a switching unit. This model uses commercial curves of PV panels to explore their direct connection to PTC commercial heating elements. Just as an example, a sample of resistance curves has been experimentally determined. The direct connection layout is developed. The aim is to offer a simple enough model and information so that a design and later construction is possible with confidence in the performances and for diverse sizes and solar resources.
Simple cases are modeled, taking as an example a single-family single hot plate representative size. The results are explained and discussed and finally, some conclusions are offered, such that PV-based solar cookers can be constructed quickly and reasonably priced, avoiding using electronics and batteries.
If during cooking a power reduction is needed there are two kinds of options, firstly mechanical, such as disorienting the panel or separating the pot from the hot plate by an insulating sheet; secondly, electrical, such as adding or switching the PTC elements off away from the optimum number of them.
The theory presented here uses the least possible complexity to reduce the computing requirements for a design to a minimum, allowing the use of widely available spreadsheets and, in an extreme case, a scientific calculator. It proposes a solution of appropriate technology for sustainable development and a tool for fighting energy poverty and food insecurity. For the construction, a multimeter, in addition to simple tools, is just what is needed. A sensible experimental calibration can counteract the loss of accuracy because of the low modeling mathematical order.
3. Results
Section 3.1 models a generic PV panel or set of panels in a practical way using only catalog data and the basic properties of these devices.
Section 3.2 models the PTC heaters in the same way.
Section 3.3 offers the model results of matching both devices as a function of irradiance and temperatures.
Section 3.4 maximizes heat production.
Section 4 models two extreme cases in a time-marching way, incorporating a model of heat losses to ambient.
Section 5 summarizes the results and offers a set of usable conclusions.
3.1. PV Panel Modeling
Detailed and highly accurate electrical modeling of PV cells is possible when numerous required physical parameters are known. Alternatively, acceptable accuracy can be reached using the basic parameters of the materials and their layout. This is possible through a multiparameter prediction or even the least square fitting to the overall characteristic curves of a whole panel such that the delivered intensity can be formulated as
, reaching a respectable accuracy. 〈 〉 indicates functional dependence,
is solar irradiance,
is the panel temperature, and
is the output voltage. Unfortunately, such curve-fitting leads to a non-linear procedure that is complex in application. Semiempirical variants are available using just some parameters when all necessary ones are not given, such as in commercial panels, such as Rawat [
46] and El Tayyan [
47] among others. Within these approaches, one finds fitting empirical formulations based on physically reduced models. This is a practical approach that is preferred for simplicity, reducing the number of parameters by using
.
The particular model used in this paper follows Equation (1). It discriminates two voltage ranges above and below a reference voltage :
For voltages below this empirical reference, , the intensity is assumed to be proportional to irradiance using the peak nominal values and for normalization. Within this range, is almost constant, near the value at the short circuit. It has a low dependence with decreasing as Equation (1) indicates by the effect of in-series resistance , following the simple one-diode model. When operating, the panel temperature is higher than ambient temperature, requiring a correction that usually is referred to as a standard .
Beyond the specific reference voltage and the corresponding , a continuous exponential decrease considers saturation down to the open circuit voltage when .
The fitting of this model to the commercial data, usually given by purchasers, has been performed in two ways: Equation (2) (a) is a simpler one and (b) a more accurate alternative which includes an extra fitting parameter to the expression of
, leading to different parameter values.
The extra correction to of option (b) allows reproducing , especially for low values of . These two alternatives allow for comparing two slightly different fitting options on the same panel data. Unfortunately, the adopted model does not give an explicit expression for the voltage at the Maximum Power Point (MPP) called , which happens at the point that maximizes . This means .
In what follows, the model is applied to an average-performance solar panel. It is representative of the average PV residential market. This one has a 1.85 m
2 aperture area, delivering a nominal peak power of
.
Figure 1 shows the results of fitting both options in Equation (2). Equation (3) shows the set of empirical and manually fitted parameters. The resulting maximum peak power values obtained are (a)
and (b) 319 W. The most crucial zone in the
map is the corner of the curves as the power reaches its Maximum Power Point (MPP) as
; this condition can only happen there.
Figure 2 shows the results.
Now it seems clear that a fixed resistance
, i.e., the inverse of the slope of a straight line passing from (0,0) in the
graph, can only intercept a single MPP corresponding to a single
and
.
Figure 1 allows us to easily reason the problems associated with feeding a fixed resistance,
, with the PV panel. It would impose a fixed straight line of operation:
, coming from (0,0) to intercept the panel curve. If the value of
is chosen for the line to intercept the panel curve at the MPP for certain
and
, any variation on one of these parameters shifts the MPP away from the intersection.
Figure 3 shows the required value of
for operation at the MPP for different irradiance values and working temperatures. Both optional fits defined in Equation (2) are displayed, evidencing slight differences. It shows that the MPP happens at a relatively constant
and the resistance for MPP decreases with
. It also shows the linearity of the maximum power achievable
.
If a variable linear resistance
loads the panel working continuously on the MPP, it must increase for lower
and it has to be sensitive to
. This is evident from the fact that
for fixed
.
Figure 2 shows the differences in power for the two optional fittings, especially on the MPP voltages, in the order of 10%.
The usual large variations in irradiance during panel operation and the associated need for a variable load resistance justify the need for a controller. It can be either the Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) type or the perturb-and-observe tracking type [
48]. Both are commercial implementations. They require a microcontroller and a battery, plus power electronics. They are oriented to properly charge and discharge the battery. The ideal way out for MPP tracking (MPPT) would be a non-linear charge that would present every time the resistance maximizes the panel power
, from now on
, in an automated way.
Figure 3 represents the voltage, the
, and the resulting power for two values of
. Observing it, the trends highlighted are evident. Some differences can be appreciated between both fits, but overall, they are equivalent. There is an almost linear change in
with
.
Figure 3 also shows that for this panel
is around 25 to 32 V at the representative temperatures resulting from a cloudless day with no wind, here simplified to
. Incidentally, this is not too far for charging 24 V batteries. These calculations could be improved by using a time-varying
, but this would oblige to describe a time marching of the operating point of the panel using the NOCT (Normal Operating Cell Temperature) parameter, Alonso [
49]. It would also require information on the not-always-available day temperature and wind speed, which can be quite different from day to day and for distinct locations.
As a preliminary conclusion, avoiding electronics calls for a non-linear and/or variable load. In what follows, the selected case is Positive Thermal Coefficient (PTC) variable resistors for heating.
3.2. PTC Modeling
PTCs can be defined as thermally sensitive semiconductor resistors. They are polycrystalline ceramics based on barium titanate, Abidi [
48], and Alonso [
49]. They correspond to a class of materials named crystalline ferroelectric ceramics, which are obtained by sintering a powder typically of barium titanate at temperatures up to 1400 °C. PTC heating elements are a kind of thermistor, so they share the same principles of operation. During the fabrication of the PTC heaters of interest, dopants are added to give the material specific semiconductor properties.
With the PTC temperature rising above a reference ambient
, the resistance of the PTC initially decreases exponentially with a thermal coefficient
, behaving like an NTC. For a near ambient temperature (e.g., 50 °C), the resistance becomes relatively constant up to a second tailor-made temperature, (e.g., 100, 150, 200, 250 °C) where a phase change occurs. Above this temperature, the resistance rises steeply at a larger
and
.
Figure 4 shows a realistic curve for resistance as a semi-logarithmic chart of a generic encapsulated PTC available from Asian suppliers of an active size of 60 × 21 mm, which from now on is called “full size”. It is recommended for a voltage range available in the PV panel presented above. This resistance corresponds to a non-loaded PTC at a very low voltage, such as the one applied by a DC multimeter. Loaded PTCs suffer from self-heating, changing in a non-negligible amount the apparent resistance
, especially at high dissipated power. The Steinhart–Hart equation is often used to approximate this rise, Wikipedia [
50]. Other models are available. Beyond the range of the large resistance rise, the resistance again decreases out of our range of interest, and eventually, a breakdown occurs. The temperature where the resistance duplicates above the minimum is called the Curie temperature
. It is considered a limiting temperature due to the sharp reversible cutoff of power it produces, implying a safety mechanism against overheating. PTC heating elements are used widely; fuel pre-heating, compartment air warming, air hairdressers, defrosters, silicone cement melting pistols, evaporators, boilers, and electric motor protection are just a few examples. Samples can be bought for around one € and one-tenth of this in quantities.
For a low applied voltage, the resulting low-temperature high resistance, and its decrease as the temperature increases together help approach the PV panel MPP at low irradiances, such as in the morning,
Figure 3. Energizing the PTC at an initially cold state implies feeding a large resistance with the resulting low intensity. As the temperature increases, the reduction in resistance helps raise the PV panel curve towards the MPP. If the MPP passes a low PV voltage region, an excessive reduction in dissipated power would result in a reduction in temperature with a consequent backward displacement towards the MPP. From another point of view, the large resistance increase near the Curie temperature helps limit the temperature as a thermostat would do.
is selected for the present application to avoid burning the cooking pot or its thermal insulation. The resulting hot plate temperature allows meat frying and roasting in a pot or other utensil, Sagade [
51], as well as food preservation, Berk [
52].
Commercial PTC heating elements sold by generic suppliers show a slender flat tablet structure. They are circular or rectangular, of ≅5 mm thickness, with both sides metalized as electrodes. They usually are offered bare or electrically insulated by a temperature-resistant plastic socket. In the latter case, the set is pressed inside a flat aluminum tube, with two side leads for electrical connection insulated from the outside by a temperature-resistant material, as depicted in
Figure 4. The generic commercial PTCs are specified by a few parameters: (i) the recommended supply voltage
, in our case 36 V; (ii) the minimum resistance temperature
; (iii)
, or an intermediate one. Eventually, some nominal or maximum acceptable parameters are available, such as (iv) the recommended power
although this is rarely specified; (v) the maximum continuous temperature; (vi) the maximum or breakdown voltage. With PTCs being a distributed resistor, as the electrode area increases, the usable power is proportional to it, and the resistance is inversely proportional, ceteris paribus. The unloaded resistance vs. temperature can be measured by heating the PTC and when offline immediately measuring
, Boubour [
53]. Thermally insulating the PTC allows for surpassing
. An operating resistance can be obtained as
. This method does not give exactly the same result, presumably because of self-heating, Musat [
54].
In our case, after a measuring campaign using laboratory-grade instrumentation for measuring resistance, voltage, and DC intensity,
has been obtained. These curves were obtained using a stabilized power supply to reach the indicated temperature, which was measured by a calibrated K-type thermocouple located inside the PTC. The temperature was stabilized by two massive aluminum blocks reaching a steady state for half an hour. The differences in the PTC resistances resulted in the expanded ±(2σ) interval around the average.
Figure 4 shows the
interval to avoid overlapping. This was much larger than the Gaussian combined uncertainty of the thermocouple of ±1 °C and of the multimeter and power supply of 3 1/2 digits of accuracy. The number of PTCs tested was twenty and a normal distribution of resistance was checked. Equation (4) shows the data fitting expression proposed for the PTC resistances used for loading the PV panel. The rationale of the proposed expression is that the thermal coefficients
apply smoothly around the minimum resistance
through the combining exponent
.
Equation (5) indicates the appropriate values found for several samples tested of generic encapsulated PTCs with an active size of 35 × 21 mm and a recommended supply voltage of 30 V given at
and a maximum power of 162 W. This size is called “half size”. When applying the fitting function, the minimum resistance resulted in
,
and the fitted
with
, and
is an empirical value.
Figure 4 shows the resulting continuous function and the experimental variation found.
Neither the applied power nor the load resistance of a single PTC element can be suitable for all the range of and the number , of, respectively, in-parallel connection of sets and of in-series strings of elements are considered to load the PV panel. This way, the total resistance becomes . and is anticipated as suitable in our case, but at the limit for dissipating the PV panel rated power at a PTC temperature corresponding to . The following section illustrates this point.
3.3. Direct Matching of the PV Panel with the PTC Heater
This section calculates the useful power that results when connecting both the selected PTCs and the PV panel, specifying
but leaving
and
free. When compared with the power at the MPP at each
and
condition, one can figure out how far from the optimum the operating point is.
Figure 5 shows the results for the (a) and (b) fits for
with half-size PTC heaters. Differences between both panel fits are negligible, as the knee of the curves is only marginally affected. For the two in-parallel identical half-size PTCs selected in this case, and for low
, the power is close to the MPP for a wide range of
but separates progressively for
, suggesting that a lower resistance would be more suitable.
This
connection also suffers from another limitation. The recommended maximum power through each single PTC of
is surpassed when @
and
. The excessive power will be limited for
but separated progressively from MPP as
increases. Even duplicating
, the
connection restricts the near optimum power for low
s, as
Figure 5 shows.
A more progressive stair of higher to lower resistance range would have six of the widely available half-size of the selected PTCs for an in-parallel layout and three switches. The possible single connections positions are as follows:
Position 1: Switch 1 ON and the others OFF, one PTC connected (), highest resistance.
Position 2: Switch 2 ON and the others OFF, two in-parallel PTCs are connected ().
Position 3: Switch 3 ON and the others OFF, three in-parallel PTCs are connected ().
This way, combining the three ON/OF in-parallel switches makes six different equally stepped combinations of half-size PTCs: Position 1, one PTC active. Position 2, two PTCs active or a single full-size one. Position 1 + Position 2 activates three PTCs so that , equivalent to Position 3 alone. Position 3 + Position 1, . Position 2 + Position 3, resulting in five active PTCs, . Position 1 + 2 + 3, all switches ON, 1 + 2 + 3 = 6 in parallel resistances, . No in-series resistances have been contemplated in the present design as the voltage of a single PV panel is acceptable for the PTCs considered. Several in-series PV panels to multiply power could be contemplated but using a higher unsafe voltage. In parallel, equal PV panels would require less load resistance, thus a high , not only to match them but to avoid PTC overload.
As a comparison with
Figure 5,
Figure 6 shows two cases with more resistance. Both
and
can be near MPP for large values of
, but they separate for low values of
, indicating that a low value of
is necessary for low values of
for approaching MPP, indicated in
Figure 5. For
,
and for
, both happening at
and for
. Both figures corroborate the suitability of the connection scheme using the 3 switches indicated above. Curiously,
is near MPP @
but unless a cold object is in good thermal connection with the PTCs, heating will occur immediately, making this equilibrium solution not realistic. This calls for a time-marching analysis.
The PTC temperatures can temporarily be different among them, e.g., during heating when some of them are recently connected and have a lower temperature than the others located side by side that have been operating for a longer time, i.e., with self-heating. In a short time, PTC temperature homogeneity is reached owing to the low heat capacity of the PTCs.
This exercise clears the intervening non-directly-controllable factors,
and
, besides
. There is some way for the operator (or the controller) to select
, the PTC temperatures, by switching a number of them depending on the pot’s temperature. Two examples are offered in
Section 4 to illustrate these issues.
3.4. Practical Maximization of Power
As PTC resistances can only be modified by their temperature, the remaining possibility is to switch a combination of PTCs to approach the MPP as much as possible, as analyzed in the previous section. This can be performed by a continuously operating perturb and observe technique. An automatic version would switch resistances through CMOS electronic elements, [
53], preferably in the correct direction toward MPP, using a programmable microcontroller, and stay if there is an increase in
. This requires electronics.
A straightforward alternative technique is to offer the user both a Wattmeter (electronic), which nowadays can be purchased at a moderate cost (around 4 €), and manual switches so that the operator decides. After a learning period, the correct manual selection can be anticipated. In the specific layout selected here, the following exercises corroborate that only large resistances seem advantageous for the lower irradiances to approach the necessarily low maximum power. An additional consideration is that low s means low so approaching the MPP is of less importance than for high s.
5. Conclusions
The proposed PV solar cooker allows indoor off-grid e-cooking and avoids electronics by directly connecting the right amount of PTC heaters to a solar panel or a plurality. No controller or battery charger is needed for its functioning, and it can reach high efficiency. The innovative design offers a better energy transfer from the PV panel to the cooker than linear resistors, reaching an electrical energy efficiency of up to 91% for a particular operation, even without any PTC switching. PTCs offer resistance growth at their low temperatures and a temperature-limiting effect, avoiding overheating.
The proposal is based on simplified models that have been developed to ascertain the adequate PV panel and PTC characteristics for this duty, illustrating the basic working and relevant parameters. The energy and temperature–time evolution has been described by a transient 0D ordinary differential equation that allows the use of ordinary calculation methods such as spreadsheets, thus allowing the dimensioning of a system with a small budget. The differential equation has been numerically solved using two representative forcing functions: constant peak irradiance for midday operation and sinusoidal irradiance mimicking a full-day operation. Both cases reveal relevant characteristics. More complex three bulk thermal masses have been analyzed to highlight some features without having to solve the whole mathematical model. Experimental campaigns will add valuable data to tune the models proposed for each implementation performed.
The model shows that thermally insulating the outside of the cooker is of paramount importance, which, in this case, can be performed with ordinary materials.
Switching several ordinary PTCs by any means offers the possibility of a wider energy match between the panel and the PTCs. The selected generic PTC heaters offer a good enough match for both low and elevated temperatures. Insufficient PTC resistance when starting cold with low irradiance can be overcome by disconnecting in-parallel PTCs and/or preheating either the empty pot or loaded with a small amount of oil for pre-cooking/frying or sauteing, as many recipes ask for.
Overcoming cloudy periods, extending cooking in the afternoon, and even cooking or heating breakfast before the next day’s sunrise is possible by heating a load of sensible Thermal Energy Storage (TES) or solid/liquid Phase Change Material (PCM). These replace batteries in the duty of cooking, keep the food warm, and extend the usability of PV solar cookers in a low-cost and environmentally friendly way. A single PV panel from the residential rooftop market with around a 2 m2 aperture surface offers enough heat for cooking for an average family inside locations with good solar resources. This allows elementary indoor solar cooking and, in addition to other electrical services for fighting energy poverty.
Some issues need further research. Along with the running experimental campaign for characterizing the PTC performances, some unexpected phenomena have been experienced. When cooling, a sudden, short-time off-circuit resistance increase can happen at moderate temperatures. Additionally, a persistent low resistance can last until a slight shock returns to normal when reaching the ambient temperature. Whether this is caused by a PTC material phase change or by a contact deficiency must be investigated. Self-heating modifies the resistances of the PTCs; its relevance needs further research. Testing solar cooker prototypes under realistic conditions will illuminate the promising performances offered by the design.