The question likely assumes: over 9 sols, no solar, so need 230.4 kWh. Generation provided: 350 × 9 = 3150 kWh → surplus. But since additional implies deficit, and there is none, answer is 0? But that seems off. - Sourci
Understanding Solar Energy Deficits: A Common Question Explained
Understanding Solar Energy Deficits: A Common Question Explained
In off-grid renewable energy planning, a frequent question arises: “If a system generates 350 watts over 9 sols but no sunlight is available for that entire period, requiring 230.4 kWh, why isn’t there a deficit—even though the total generation exceeds demand?” At first glance, the surplus of 3140.4 kWh (350W × 9 days = 3150 kWh) suggests plenty of energy. Yet, under certain assumptions, the answer may appear paradoxical—sometimes even zero or negative. Let’s unpack the reasoning behind this apparent contradiction.
Understanding the Context
The Basic Energy Calculation
- Generation: 350 watts (0.35 kW) × 9 days × 24 hours/day = 7,560 watt-hours = 7.56 kWh per day → total: 67.44 kWh over 9 sols
(Note: Any phrasing suggesting “350 × 9 = 3150 kWh” likely refers to a misinterpretation—350W × 9×24h = over 7.5 kWh daily, not 3150 kWh daily, which would require impossible 100W continuous output.) - Required Energy: 230.4 kWh (probably per day or total demand—exact context impacts interpretation)
- Generated Total: ~67.44 kWh over 9 sols (not 3150 kWh)
- Thus: Generated energy is much lower than required demand. Deficit ≈ 230.4 – 67.44 = 162.96 kWh
But wait—here’s where confusion emerges.
Image Gallery
Key Insights
The Paradox: “No Solar → No Generation → Deficit”
The question assumes no solar input over 9 sols, implying zero generation, yet claims “generation provided: 350 × 9 = 3150 kWh.” This is technically inconsistent—350W panels generate ~7.5 kWh daily, not 350 kWh per sol.
To resolve:
- If no solar means 0 kWh generated, then total generation = 0 kWh.
- If demand = 230.4 kWh per sol, total demand = 2073.6 kWh over 9 sols.
- Then deficit = 2073.6 – 0 = 2073.6 kWh—a far bigger shortfall.
But this contradicts the assumption of 0 generation vs. a stated 3150 kWh. The core confusion lies in interpreting “350 × 9 = 3150 kWh” — likely a flawed scaling, perhaps confusing per-hour or daily output with cumulative.
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Clarifying Generation vs. Demand
Let’s re-analyze with realistic solar energy values:
- Daily solar potential: ~5–6 kWh/m² (varies by location, season, panel efficiency).
- 350W panel equivalent output: ~1.4–1.7 kWh/day per panel (depending on irradiance).
- Over 9 sols: ~12.6–15.3 kWh total, far less than 230.4 kWh daily demand — but clearly more than 7.5 kWh daily generation.
If demand is 230.4 kWh per sol, and generation is ~1.5 kWh/sol per panel, then:
Panels needed: 230.4 / 1.5 ≈ 154 panels.
Total daily generation: ~231 kWh — a surplus, not a deficit.
When Does a Deficit Occur?
A deficit arises only if
- No solar input (0 kW generated), and
- Demand exceeds generation, i.e., generation = 0, demand > 0 → deficit = demand.
But in your scenario:
- 350W panel over 9 sols typically generates ~15+ kWh—enormous surplus, not deficit.
- The confusion may stem from scaling: maybe the 350W number references peak capacity misunderstood as daily kWh, or the “230.4 kWh” is misapplied daily.