Air (or other coolant) flow is not only important, it's essential, and what makes heat exchangers work to haul the waste heat away.
Q = M* c*delta T. where, Q = heat removed. M = mass flow rate, in this case air. c = The specific heat of air. Delta T = (to a 1st approx. here) the temp. diff between the heat exchanger and the air.
An additional and complicating consideration for nat. convection devices, at least in a gravity field : The M is largely controlled by the delta T, with design considerations to minimize pressure drop, make maint. as easy as possible, and of course, safety and cost considerations.
A thought experiment: Put a nat. convection cooled inverter in a sealed, insulated box while its operating and imagine what will happen. Without (cooler) air flowing through the heat dissipation apparatus on the inverter (cooling fins, etc.), things will heat up quite quickly and (hopefully) the protective devices will shut the unit down. The unit needs a cool air source.
Devices dependent on nat. convection for cooling will run cooler in cooler environments. An inverter cooled via nat. convection in a 60 deg. F. environment will run cooler than in, say, an 80 deg. F. environment by probably something like 20 deg. F. That's probably part of the reason why you're inverters are still functional. If they were in an outside shed with a commonn air temp. of, say, 90 F., they'd often be running something like 30 deg. F. warmer.
Your 60 F. basement temp. has probably contributed to the inverters' longevity.
Adding forced convection (fan assist) to any nat. convection cooled inverter in the same environment will decrease an inverter's delta T and thus lower the inverter operating temp. How effective the scheme is, and how cost effective it will be in terms of efficiency improvements, longevity and operating/maint. costs are separate questions and considerations that will change with the application and goals of the user.
When planning inverter location during system design, a stable environment with somewhat controllable conditions is often deemed best. That's usually indoors in a controlled environment with reasonable access. Under a panel in the middle of an array where access is limited and an annual temp. swings of, say 100 F. are possible, if not likely, as in the case of microinverter location, does not seem to meet the stable, accessible requirements part as well as does a garage or basement location for a sting inverter. However, the design process is always a set of tradeoffs and priorities.
Q = M* c*delta T. where, Q = heat removed. M = mass flow rate, in this case air. c = The specific heat of air. Delta T = (to a 1st approx. here) the temp. diff between the heat exchanger and the air.
An additional and complicating consideration for nat. convection devices, at least in a gravity field : The M is largely controlled by the delta T, with design considerations to minimize pressure drop, make maint. as easy as possible, and of course, safety and cost considerations.
A thought experiment: Put a nat. convection cooled inverter in a sealed, insulated box while its operating and imagine what will happen. Without (cooler) air flowing through the heat dissipation apparatus on the inverter (cooling fins, etc.), things will heat up quite quickly and (hopefully) the protective devices will shut the unit down. The unit needs a cool air source.
Devices dependent on nat. convection for cooling will run cooler in cooler environments. An inverter cooled via nat. convection in a 60 deg. F. environment will run cooler than in, say, an 80 deg. F. environment by probably something like 20 deg. F. That's probably part of the reason why you're inverters are still functional. If they were in an outside shed with a commonn air temp. of, say, 90 F., they'd often be running something like 30 deg. F. warmer.
Your 60 F. basement temp. has probably contributed to the inverters' longevity.
Adding forced convection (fan assist) to any nat. convection cooled inverter in the same environment will decrease an inverter's delta T and thus lower the inverter operating temp. How effective the scheme is, and how cost effective it will be in terms of efficiency improvements, longevity and operating/maint. costs are separate questions and considerations that will change with the application and goals of the user.
When planning inverter location during system design, a stable environment with somewhat controllable conditions is often deemed best. That's usually indoors in a controlled environment with reasonable access. Under a panel in the middle of an array where access is limited and an annual temp. swings of, say 100 F. are possible, if not likely, as in the case of microinverter location, does not seem to meet the stable, accessible requirements part as well as does a garage or basement location for a sting inverter. However, the design process is always a set of tradeoffs and priorities.
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