Power Electronics



Ideal Power Converters Announces First Commercial Installation of Revolutionary Solar Inverter at UTSA

Dec 28, 2011 11:51 AM


Ideal Power Converters (IPC) announced the first commercial installation of its revolutionary photovoltaic (PV) inverters at The University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA). The UTSA installation is utilizing five of IPC's inverters between two buildings on its Main Campus.

IPC's 30kW PV inverter was selected for installation by UTSA because of its disruptive capabilities including a 90 percent weight reduction over conventional PV inverters, substantially reducing both manufacturing and installation costs, as well as improving efficiency and reliability.

The IPC inverter delivers 480V AC 3-phase power and supports grounded PV arrays without an internal or external transformer. It weighs only 94lbs compared to 1200lbs from conventional PV inverters with similar capabilities. The lower weight is achieved through IPC's patented current-modulation topology. The IPC inverter uses standard materials and components, but with an entirely different approach to controlling the power flow. This allows more than a 90 percent reduction in magnetic components such as transformer and inductors, which are the most expensive part of inverters.

In addition to lowering materials and manufacturing costs, the lightweight inverter reduces shipping and installation costs up to 90 percent, saving installers $0.15 to $0.20 per watt. As PV module costs have declined dramatically over the last year, installation costs are increasingly the key to enable cost effective solar power without subsidies.

"UTSA's selection of our technology for their photovoltaic installation clearly demonstrates that the industry is recognizing the technical superiority of our products," commented Bill Alexander, CEO of Ideal Power Converters. "This is an important milestone in our plans to transform the electronic power converter market and make the United States a manufacturing powerhouse in this cleantech industry."


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