University of Queensland associate professor Rahul Sharma speaking about SolarisAI. Video by UQ
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00:00 Solar farms have hundreds and thousands of panels, sometimes millions of panels.
00:03 It's impractical to install monitoring infrastructure on each individual panel
00:07 because that'll be just too costly and too complicated to manage.
00:10 It's also impractical to monitor each individual panel manually
00:15 because there are just so many of them.
00:16 So really what we need is to use the information that is available in the solar farms,
00:19 the data that is available in the solar farms,
00:21 to come up with ways to detect any underperformance and hidden faults in the sea of panels.
00:28 So Solaris AI is an all-in-one solar farm operation and maintenance system.
00:33 It is meant to detect, locate, identify any faults and underperformance issues in large solar farms.
00:40 It also tries to see if there are any trends or patterns
00:44 which indicate likelihood of occurrence of the faults in the future.
00:48 And that way we can schedule preventive maintenance work
00:52 prior to the occurrence of the fault so that any major disruptions can be avoided.
00:55 [ Silence ]