Electronic – Neophyte question about AC vs. DC (especially for powering a home)

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Here in the United States the electricity grid is AC. I have heard that AC allows transmission of power at greater distances with less loss. However, with the advent of solar panels, it would seem that one could generate DC power directly and power the home this way. There are no great distances involved.

Why is this not done? As far as I know, solar panels feed back into the main electricity grid. This means they convert dc to ac, presumably at some loss. Could you power your whole house using DC? Assuming you lived in a sunny area and had sufficient roof space, could you power everything (fridge air cond. etc), perhaps storing the power in batteries for use at night time? I assume you'd need all new appliances that work with DC?

It would seem a small price to pay to be energy independent. Could you reuse your existing house wires? I've never heard of this, so I assume there are major obstacles. Could someone give me the layman's explanation as to why it's a bad idea, or impossible, or just not done?

Best Answer

It's not impossible, it's just more complicated and expensive. Everything in your house is designed to run from AC. Many smaller products do take DC in but they come with an AC adapter because that's the only available source of continuous, inexpensive power nearly everywhere. The voltage required can be different for each device. The closest thing to a standard for DC power is probably USB 5.0V, which only offers enough current for small gadgets and not anything larger.

The way a solar powered house works is roughly: solar panel to battery charger to battery, to DC-AC inverter to wall outlets, plus another power regulator & meter if feeding extra energy back to the grid, which isn't a requirement. One could power a house directly with unregulated DC from the battery if the appliances were designed to run from it, but most aren't. If the battery voltage had to be regulated before distribution to the house, all you'd really be doing is swapping the DC-AC inverter for a DC-DC regulator, basically a different box with similar cost.

Due to the small size of the market for DC appliances (at the moment), they'd be harder to find and possibly more expensive than AC units. If a time comes when nearly every house has solar on the roof, they might be just as easy to purchase and maintain.

As to reusing wiring, a wire is just a strip of copper and doesn't care whether you put AC or DC on it, IF you stay within its capabilities. If you had to put a lot more current through the wire due to lower voltage, you might need thicker wires, different safety features in the wiring boxes, higher rated fuses and so on. You'd want different plugs on the outlets so nobody made a mistake of plugging an AC device into an outlet providing DC.

Overall, it's cheaper and simpler to put a DC-AC inverter at the battery than it is to gut the entire electrical system of the house and rebuild it, plus buying all new appliances, plus still needing small DC-AC inverter in each room for the devices which can't be repurchased to run from DC - which at the moment is nearly every gadget. You might think of the AC inverter as providing "backward compatibility" with the previous hundred years of electrical devices.