Solar Living Lab at the University of Portsmouth

As part of the SOLARISE project, co-funded by Interreg 2 Seas and the European Regional Development Fund, a solar living lab has been created consisting of solar PV and smart battery storage installations at two buildings at the University of Portsmouth. 
 

Speaker 1:

As the world continues to suffer the effects of climate change and fossil fuel dependency. The University of Portsmouth is committed to making a difference. Our ambition to be climate positive by 2030 inspired us to open our new solar living lab.

An important early Milestone was the development of our Port Eco house based in our mock residential home on campus. The three bedroom property is already being used for groundbreaking Research into residential Energy Efficiency and the physical and environmental performance of dwellings, including human interaction with the property. 

We're now taking another exciting and Innovative Leap Forward. Our Port Eco house is being combined with our 12 million pound Future Technology Center, a cutting-edge center for engineering students and staff to explore today's new and emerging technologies. The two facilities are joining forces to become our new solar living lab a state of the art pioneering research facility focused on complex energy solutions in evolving real-life conditions. 

Solar Voltaic Panels and Photovoltaic Windows harness solar energy and work alongside our smart batteries which store excess electricity for later use. The monitoring data collected by the solar living lab will be correlated with data from weather stations already in place at the University, opening up many exciting avenues of research for our PhD students while supporting the training and projects of masters and undergraduate students at the School of Energy and Electronic Engineering and elsewhere in the Faculty of Technology. As part of the intereg to see solarized project, our new solar living lab will help to shape the careers and futures of our students as well as contribute to the global move away from fossil fuels and the health of our planet.
 

The University of Portsmouth is harnessing solar energy to use its Port-Eco House and £12m Future Technology Centre as a ‘solar living lab’ - a research facility to test, verify and refine complex energy solutions in evolving real-life contexts.  

The project is part of SOLARISE, a €4.18m European project to facilitate the broad roll-out of new solar energy and storage technologies funded by Interreg 2 Seas and the European Regional Development Fund. 

Solar photovoltaic panels have been installed next to the Port-Eco House, a three-bedroom property used for research into the energy efficiency and building performance of houses. A smart Tesla Powerwall battery has also been installed in the house, which allows excess electricity generated by the panels to be stored for later use. 

Based in a former caretaker's lodge on campus, the Port-Eco House is used to conduct pioneering research into the physical and environmental performance of dwellings, including human interaction with the property.

The house’s solar panels are being individually monitored, while the battery provides monitoring of the overall solar energy production, building load and input/export of electricity.

Professor of Power Systems Engineering, Victor Becerra, said: “With the combined work of the solar photovoltaic panels and the Tesla battery, the University’s Eco House has become mostly self-sufficient in terms of its electricity consumption, which is around 10 kWh per day. At any given time, the electricity consumption of the house is being supplied by either the panels, the battery, or both, with any excess energy generated by the panels being stored in the battery, and with only very occasional import from the external electricity supply.”

Three Tesla Powerwall batteries have also been fitted at the University’s Future Technology Centre (FTC), a facility for engineering students and staff to explore today’s new and emerging technologies. The building was already equipped with rooftop solar panels and photovoltaic windows. Spanning five floors, the FTC has achieved the BREEAM 'Excellent' rating for environmental sustainability from the National Building Specification.

When fully charged, the batteries can become the building’s sole electricity source for up to four hours. They can also capture and store excess electricity generated by the solar panels during the day, which can be used in the evenings or during poor weather. The Tesla batteries will also provide monitoring of solar generation and other key power flows within the building’s electrical network, which powers lighting, computers and workshop machinery. 

Professor Becerra said: “In the case of the Port-Eco house, the batteries are able to provide backup functionality in the event of an unexpected power cut. They can also take additional charge as a precautionary manner ahead of a forecasted lightning storm affecting the area, which increases the likelihood of an outage.

“In periods when there is less solar energy available, in winter for example, it is also possible to charge the batteries with cheap off-peak electricity, usually at night, for use at peak times when electricity can be significantly more expensive.”

Installing solar panels and batteries on campus aligns with the University’s ambitions to become a climate-positive institution by 2030 and also allows us to research solar power and battery storage technologies.

Victor Becerra, Professor of Power Systems Engineering

The monitoring data collected by the solar living lab will be correlated with data from weather stations already in place at the university. Together, all these data streams will enable research into various aspects of solar photovoltaic energy, including the synergy between solar power generation and energy storage, the efficiency of solar photovoltaic panels and mechanisms to enhance it, the effect of shade, weather and other environmental variables on solar power generation, and the techno-economic modelling of solar energy systems, among many others.

“Solar energy is the most abundant of all renewable energy sources. It is a free and clean energy source and its use is rapidly growing around the world. Installing solar panels and batteries on campus aligns with the University’s ambitions to become a climate-positive institution by 2030 and also allows us to research solar power and battery storage technologies”, said Professor Becerra. 

The solar living lab will be used by PhD students for their research, and will support the training and projects of Master’s and undergraduate students at the School of Energy and Electronic Engineering and elsewhere in the Faculty of Technology. Students on the new MEng/BEng (Hons) Electrical and Renewable Energy Engineering course will particularly benefit from this facility.