Using sky-classification to improve the short-term prediction of irradiance with sky images and convolutional neural networks

Victor Arturo Martinez Lopez*, Gijs van Urk, Pim J.F. Doodkorte, Miro Zeman, Olindo Isabella, Hesan Ziar

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

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Abstract

Clouds moving in front or away from the sun are the leading cause of irradiance variability. These variations have a repercussion on the electricity production of photovoltaic systems. Predicting such changes is essential for proper control of these systems and for maintaining grid stability. Images from the sky have proven to help with short-term solar irradiance forecasting, especially when combined with artificial intelligence. Nevertheless, these models tend to smooth the irradiance fluctuations. We propose a forecasting model to predict the clear-sky index in a forecast horizon of 20 min with a 1-minute resolution. Our model, based on a classifier to determine the sky conditions and, on an optical flow, applies an artificial intelligence model explicitly trained on each class of sky conditions. This strategy has an equivalent performance to an unclassified model and a forecast skill between 5 and 20% with respect to the smart persistence model for most classes of sky conditions while requiring considerably less training data. Although our model reduces the overall predicting error, it still has difficulties predicting irradiance changes and mainly overcast days. Our classifying strategy can be applied to other models targeting different objectives to predict sudden changes in either irradiance or power related to photovoltaic systems.

Original languageEnglish
Article number112320
Number of pages13
JournalSolar Energy
Volume269
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Funding

This activity is co-financed by Shell and a PPP-allowance from Top Consortia for Knowledge and Innovation (TKI's) of the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate in the context of the TU Delft e-Refinery program.

Keywords

  • All-sky images
  • Deep learning
  • Irradiance nowcasting
  • Sky-image processing

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