Why Proper Solar Battery Sizing Matters
Installing a solar battery bank that is too small means you will run out of power on cloudy days or during high-demand periods. One that is too large wastes money on unused capacity and may not charge efficiently. Getting the sizing right from the start is critical to the performance and economics of your solar energy system.
The Fundamental Formula
At its core, solar battery sizing follows a straightforward calculation. Here is the step-by-step formula:
Step 1: Calculate Your Daily Energy Consumption
First, list all the appliances and devices you want to power, their wattage, and how many hours per day they will run:
Daily Wh Consumption = Sum of (Appliance Wattage x Hours Used)
Example: 5 LED lights (10W each) x 6 hours = 300Wh; Refrigerator (150W) x 24 hours = 3,600Wh; Laptop (60W) x 4 hours = 240Wh. Total = 4,140Wh/day
Step 2: Account for System Inefficiencies
No system is 100% efficient. Solar charge controllers, inverters, and wiring all introduce losses. Apply a system efficiency factor of 0.85 (85% efficiency):
Required Daily Wh = Daily Consumption / 0.85
4,140Wh / 0.85 = 4,871Wh/day
Step 3: Choose Your Battery Voltage
Common system voltages: 12V, 24V, or 48V. Higher voltages are more efficient for larger systems and allow the use of smaller gauge wiring:
- Small systems under 3kW: 12V or 24V
- Medium systems 3-10kW: 24V or 48V
- Large systems over 10kW: 48V
Step 4: Calculate Required Battery Capacity (Ah)
Battery Bank Capacity (Ah) = Required Daily Wh / System Voltage / Depth of Discharge
Using our example with a 48V system and 50% depth of discharge:
4,871Wh / 48V / 0.50 = 203Ah
Step 5: Size for Days of Autonomy
How many consecutive cloudy days do you want to survive? Multiply your capacity by the number of backup days you need:
Total Battery Bank = Daily Capacity x Days of Autonomy
203Ah x 2 days = 406Ah at 48V
Step 6: Include Solar Recharge Capacity
Your battery bank should be able to fully recharge from the solar panels. A general rule: solar array should be sized to fully recharge the batteries in 1-2 peak sun hours:
Solar Array (W) = Battery Bank Wh / Peak Sun Hours x 1.2
Assuming 4 peak sun hours: (4,871Wh x 2 days) / 4 x 1.2 = 2,923W of solar panels
Quick Reference Sizing Table
| Daily Use (Wh) | System Voltage | Battery Capacity (50% DoD) | Battery Bank (2 Days) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2,000 | 24V | 167Ah | 333Ah |
| 5,000 | 48V | 208Ah | 417Ah |
| 10,000 | 48V | 417Ah | 833Ah |
| 20,000 | 48V | 833Ah | 1,667Ah |
Common Sizing Mistakes to Avoid
- Ignoring inverter efficiency: Inverters are typically 90-95% efficient. Size accordingly.
- Choosing too small a depth of discharge: Using only 30% DoD doubles the required battery capacity unnecessarily.
- Not planning for future expansion: Leave space in your battery enclosure and budget for additional batteries.
- Mixing old and new batteries: Always replace the entire battery bank; mixing ages causes imbalance.
- Forgetting temperature derating: Battery capacity is reduced in cold temperatures. Derate by 10-20% for cold climates.
CHISEN Battery Solar Battery Solutions
CHISEN Battery manufactures a comprehensive range of solar storage batteries including OPzV tubular gel batteries, AGM deep cycle batteries, and front-terminal batteries. Our batteries are designed for solar applications with cycle lives of 1,200+ cycles at 50% DoD. We offer battery bank design consultation and can provide complete system specifications for your solar project.
Contact CHISEN Battery
Jack Chen | General Manager | CHISEN Battery
Tel: +86 131 2666 8999
Email: jack@chisen.cn | www.chisen.cn