On 7/13/2009 1:36:56 AM, Tom_Gutman wrote:
>Current direction is a matter
>of convention. That it is
>opposite the electric field
>does not make it negative.
>And clearly conventions
>differ. The paper you posted
>shows currents as positive,
>not negative.
>
>The usual convention for
>positive current is current
>flowing from the more positive
>terminal to the more negative
>terminal. Alternatively, it
>is opposite the electron flow
>(for normal electron carrier
>currents).
>
>As near as I can tell the
>conventions used in the paper
>are that the output end (upper
>in the diagram) of the cell is
>positive (open circuit), the
>positive direction for the
>generated current (Iph) is
>upwards, the positive
>direction for current through
>the diode and Rsh is downward
>and the positive direction for
>current through Rs is from
>left to right. This seems to
>be consistent with the output
>voltage being positive and the
>voltage at the top of the
>diode and Rsh being more
>positive than the output
>voltage V. All seems
>consistent ... except that the
>fit requires a negative Rs.
>This makes no sense, unless
>the current sign convention is
>wrong (or the model is simply
>incorrect).
>__________________
>� � � � Tom Gutman
Please take a look of Ch 4.6 in the following link which addresses the details of I-V characteristic (much better than wiki).
http://pvcdrom.pveducation.org/