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Current technology is certainly capable of an inverter per panel, or at least per short string of panels. It should be possible to swap out a single inverter, just as we currently swap out a bad circuit breaker.
No fans. The masses are not going to accept a noisy device. And the fan is certainly going to fail before the solar panels.
There have been attempts with micro inverters. For some reason all have failed. Trace offered a 100w grid tie microsine that was discontinued. Solarex experimented with an AC PV module. Sandia apparently patented "AC PV Building Blocks". SunSine offered a 300w and 275w AC panel which were are now discontinued. An interesting point is that the SunSine unit warranted the panel for 20 years but the attached inverter for only five.
Unfortunately I feel we are still in market infancy and the market is not yet ready for integration.
Currently you can build a system as small as three panels with a SMA 700w inverter and RWE panels. However with the 700w inverter being ~$2/w and a 2500w inverter being ~$1/w I don't see it being a viable solution. I considered and rejected it myself.
Based upon current technology I tend to favor a modular central inverter design along the lines of the APC Symmetra UPS. I'd like to see a chassis with bays for inverters modules. Each module should support parallel operation with other modules as well as independant operation for small sub arrays. All would be controlled with a single grid-tie interface per box and single management card for monitoring. Small boxes could be designed for roof mount with larger units being wall mount or floor standing.
For example start on grid with 1Kw and a grid-tie module. Add a second or third 1Kw module as needed and later go off grid with a battery charging module. Stack enough units side by side and do a commercial install.
Failed module, fine. The unit should run using the remaining modules to full capacity while you yank the bad module, fedex it back and shove in the replacement. This is routine on high end computer equipment.
Finally the inverter needs to store logged data. Why dedicate a PC to something a CF slot or occasional downloads over an ethernet port can do much more efficiently.
The advantage to the consumer is an convenient growth, easy maintenance and a future upgrade path.
The advantage to the manufacturer is fewer parts to test, certify and stock, and a path to future sales.
Sean
Pertinent links:
Philips AC PV Panel presentation
http://www.nesea.org/buildings/be/Solar ... veland.pdf
AC PV Building Blocks
http://www.nrel.gov/ncpv_prm/pdfs/33586036.pdf
Solarex System
http://www.nrel.gov/ncpv/pdfs/26084.pdf
SunSine 300
http://www.nrel.gov/ncpv/pdfs/26085.pdf
http://www.nooutage.com/sunsine3.htm
http://www.ascensiontech.com/sunsine/ge ... espec.html
APC Symmetra
http://www.apcc.com/products/family/index.cfm?id=189