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Torres Escribano, José Luis

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Torres Escribano

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José Luis

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Ingeniería

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ISC. Institute of Smart Cities

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0000-0001-9275-8158

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241

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  • PublicationOpen Access
    Evaluación multitemporal de métodos de corrección topográfica mediante el uso de imágenes sintéticas multiespectrales
    (Asociación Española de Teledetección, 2014) Sola Torralba, Ion; Álvarez Mozos, Jesús; González de Audícana Amenábar, María; Torres Escribano, José Luis; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak
    En este trabajo se presentan los resultados de la evaluación multitemporal de varios métodos de corrección topográfica (TOC), cuya bondad se determina de forma cuantitativa mediante el uso de imágenes sintéticas multiespectrales simuladas para diferentes fechas de adquisición a lo largo del año. Para cada fecha se generan dos imágenes sintéticas, una considerando el relieve real (imagen SR), y otra el relieve horizontal (imagen SH). Las imágenes SR se corrigen utilizando distintos TOC y estas imágenes corregidas se comparan con la corrección ideal (imagen SH) mediante el índice de similitud estructural (SSIM). Los valores de SSIM nos permiten evaluar la eficacia de cada corrección para distintas fechas, es decir, para distintos ángulos de elevación solar.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Validation and calibration of models to estimate photosynthetically active radiation considering different time scales and sky conditions
    (Elsevier, 2022) Blas Corral, María Ángeles de; García-Rodríguez, Ana; García Ruiz, Ignacio; Torres Escribano, José Luis; Ingeniaritza; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC; Ingeniería; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa
    Photosynthetically Active Radiation (PAR) is a fundamental parameter for developing plant productivity models. Nevertheless, instrumentation for measuring PAR and to record it is scarce at conventional meteorological stations. Several procedures have therefore been proposed for PAR estimation. In this work, 21 previously published analytical models that correlate PAR with easily available meteorological parameters are collected. Although longer time scales were considered in the original publications, a minute range was applied in this work to calibrate the PAR models. In total, more than 10 million input records were gathered from the SURFRAD station network from a 10-year long time series with data frequencies recorded every 1 min. The models were calibrated both globally, using data from all stations and locally, with data from each station. After calibration, the models were validated for minute, hourly and daily data, obtaining low fitting errors at the different stations in all cases, both when using the globally calibrated models and with the models calibrated for each location. Although the PAR results in general improved for locally calibrated models, the use of local models is not justified, since the global models presented offered very satisfactory PAR results for the different climatic conditions where the meteorological stations are located. Thus, PAR estimation model should then be selected, solely considering the meteorological variables available at the specific location. When applying the globally calibrated models to input data classified according to sky conditions (from clear to overcast), the PAR models continued to perform satisfactorily, although the error statistics of some models for overcast skies worsened.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Synthetic images for evaluating topographic correction algorithm
    (IEEE, 2013) Sola Torralba, Ion; González de Audícana Amenábar, María; Álvarez Mozos, Jesús; Torres Escribano, José Luis; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak; Gobierno de Navarra / Nafarroako Gobernua
    In the last years, many topographic correction (TOC) methods have been proposed to correct the illumination differences between the areas observed by optical remote sensors. Although the available number of TOC methods is high, the evaluation of their performance generally relies on the existence of precise land-cover information, and a standardized and objective evaluation procedure has not been proposed yet. In this paper, we propose an objective procedure to assess the accuracy of these TOC methods on the basis of simulated scenes, i.e., synthetically generated images. These images represent the radiance an optical sensor would receive under specific geometric and temporal acquisition conditions and assuming a certain land-cover type. A simplified method for creating synthetic images using the stateof- the-art irradiance models is proposed, both considering the real topography of a certain area [synthetic real (SR) image] or considering the relief of this area as being completely flat [synthetic horizontal image (SH)]. The comparison between the corrected image obtained by applying a TOC method to the SR and SH images of the same area, allows assessing the performance of each TOC algorithm. This comparison is quantitatively carried out using the structural similarity index. The proposed TOC evaluation procedure is applied to a specific case study in northern Spain to explain its implementation and demonstrate its potential. The procedure proposed in this paper could be also used to assess the behavior of TOC methods operating under different scenarios considering diverse topographic, geometrical, and temporal acquisition configurations.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Diffuse irradiance on tilted planes in urban environments: evaluation of models modified with sky and circumsolar view factors
    (Elsevier, 2021) García Ruiz, Ignacio; Blas Corral, María Ángeles de; Hernández Salueña, Begoña; Sáenz Gamasa, Carlos; Torres Escribano, José Luis; Ingeniaritza; Zientziak; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC; Institute for Advanced Materials and Mathematics - INAMAT2; Ingeniería; Ciencias
    Numerous studies have analyzed existing irradiance models for estimating sky diffuse irradiance on tilted planes. However, few have evaluated the suitability of these models for estimating irradiance in obstructed environments, specifically considering the effects of obstacles. In this study, three irradiance models —one of them with five variants— for estimating diffuse irradiance on tilted planes located in urban environments were evaluated. All models have been adapted to consider the effect of an urban canyon on the diffuse irradiance received on a tilted plane through the sky view factor and the circumsolar view factor. All the models were evaluated against the diffuse irradiance values obtained by the ISO 15469:2004(E)/CIE S 011/E:2003 angular distribution model. Therefore, it was necessary to determine the standard sky type corresponding to each record of the measurements performed by a sky scanner at the radiometric station of UPNA (Spain). A total of 4,864 scenarios were considered to occur from the combination of different orientations and inclinations of the plane, and different orientations and aspect ratios of the urban canyon. The results revealed that the Perez model considering a 35° half-angle circumsolar region has the best performance, followed by the Perez model considering a 45° half-angle circumsolar region.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Evaluación comparativa de 19 modelos de estimación de irradiancia difusa sobre planos inclinados dependiendo del tipo de cielo estándar ISO/CIE
    (LNEG, 2020) García Ruiz, Ignacio; Torres Escribano, José Luis; Blas Corral, María Ángeles de; Sáenz Gamasa, Carlos; Hernández Salueña, Begoña; Illanes, R.; Ingeniería; Ingeniaritza; Ciencias; Zientziak
    En este trabajo se han evaluado 19 modelos de estimación de irradiancia difusa sobre el plano inclinado, que incluyen tanto modelos isotrópicos o pseudoisotrópicos como modelos anisotrópicos. Dicha evaluación se ha llevado a cabo a partir una serie de 5396 observaciones de irradiancia global, difusa y directa realizadas entre julio y diciembre de 2018 en la estación radiométrica de la Universidad Pública de Navarra (UPNA). El estado del cielo correspondiente a cada observación se ha caracterizado de acuerdo con el CIE Standard General Sky propuesto en la norma ISO 15469:2004(E)/CIE S 011/E:2003. Para esta clasificación se han utilizado las medidas de distribución angular de luminancia y radiancia proporcionadas por un escáner de cielo ubicado en la propia estación de la UPNA. De tal manera que, para cada combinación de orientación e inclinación del plano, se ha evaluado la bondad de los distintos modelos de acuerdo con los 15 tipos de cielo estándar propuestos por la norma ISO/CIE. Los resultados revelan que el modelo de Perez et al. 2 presenta los mejores resultados globales, así como en 5 de los 15 tipos de cielo ISO/CIE.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Temporal downscaling of test reference years: effects on the long-term evaluation of photovoltaic systems
    (Elsevier, 2018) García Ruiz, Ignacio; Torres Escribano, José Luis; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak
    Representative meteorological data from a given location are necessary to assess the long-term performance of photovoltaic (PV) systems. Test reference years (TRYs) or typical meteorological years (TMYs) are widely used as input to PV models. Most of current procedures propose the construction of TRYs by concatenating 12 months belonging to different years of a dataset. This paper evaluates the effects of the temporal downscaling of typical periods that compose different TRYs on the long-term assessment of PV systems. The Festa-Ratto TRY, WYSS, EN ISO 15927-4 TRY, TMY3, TGY and TDY are used. Thus, an adapted version of these six methodologies aimed at the selection of typical days rather than months is proposed. The electricity production obtained by simulation for daily and monthly TRYs is compared with simulations performed for each actual year of the dataset. This analysis is performed for seven locations in the USA considering a 5.6 kWp grid-connected PV system. The results reveal that the timescale reduction improves the behavior of Festa-Ratto TRY, WYSS, TMY3, TDY and TDY when estimating the long-term production of a PV system considering the hourly, daily, monthly and annual timescales, while the modified EN ISO 15927-4 TRY performs worse than its monthly version.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    The sky characterization according to the CIE Standard General Sky: comparative analysis of three classification methods
    (Elsevier, 2020) García Ruiz, Ignacio; Blas Corral, María Ángeles de; Torres Escribano, José Luis; Ingeniaritza; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC; Ingeniería
    Since the publication of the standard sky luminance distributions (SSLD) that was consolidated in the ISO 15469:2004(E)/CIE S 011/E:2003, numerous procedures have emerged for the characterization of the sky condition according to that standard. Precisely, the use of different procedures for the classification of the skies of a certain place according to the ISO/CIE standard can lead to obtain different frequencies of sky types. The existing uncertainties in the characterization of the sky condition according to the CIE Standard General Sky as a consequence of the classification procedure used are analyzed in this study. For this, three different classification procedures are used to characterize the sky radiance and luminance distribution measurements made by means of a sky-scanner in Pamplona (Spain) from 2007 to 2013. That is, (1) a method focused on determining the relative gradation and indicatrix functions, (2) a method based on the comparison of measured and standard luminances normalized against the horizontal diffuse illuminance, and (3) a new high-spatial-resolution approach that compares measured and standard luminances relative to zenith. In general terms, it is concluded that there is some uncertainty in the classification depending on the procedure used to characterize the sky.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Estimation of the solar thermal power generation potential in Pamplona (northern Spain)
    (Universidad Carlos III, 2022) García Ruiz, Ignacio; Prieto Cobo, Eduardo; Torres Escribano, José Luis; Ingeniería; Ingeniaritza; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC
    In this work, an analysis of the potential of the city of Pamplona to produce solar thermal energy was carried out, according to the solar radiation received. As a result, for each residential, industrial, or service rooftop, information was provided on (1) the area available for thermal installation, (2) the solar thermal installation capacity and (3) the monthly and annual thermal energy generation potential. It was found that, if all suitable areas of the city are used, it would be possible to achieve an annual total solar thermal energy production of 1197.69 GWh. If solar energy supply and thermal demand were perfectly coupled over time, it would be possible to cover 99.1% of Pamplona's thermal energy demand.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    A GIS-based methodology for assigning experimental measurements of angular distribution of sky radiance and luminance to selected sky sectors
    (Elsevier, 2019) García Ruiz, Ignacio; García Gorostiaga, M. Almudena; Torres Escribano, José Luis; Ingeniería; Ingeniaritza; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC
    Mathematical models for the estimation of the angular distribution of diffuse radiance/luminance in the sky describe the anisotropic character of diffuse solar radiation and daylight in the sky vault. In most of these models the radiance/luminance of a sky point is determined by the product of the indicatrix function and the gradation function. When developing and/or calibrating these models, it is typical to consider separately the dispersion effects in the direction of the sun's rays and the gradation from the zenith towards the horizon. To do this, the sky is divided into a number of concentric spherical zones around the sun and a number of concentric spherical zones around the zenith. The intersection between both sets of zones delimits a series of sky elements. Unfortunately, these sky elements do not correspond to the 145 patches of sky vault recommended by the International Commission on Illumination (CIE), which are routinely scanned by the existing commercial sky scanners. The identification of the sky elements, geometrically different from those observed by commercial sky scanners, and the assignation of the radiance/luminance values registered by such sky scanners are not analytically trivial tasks. A GISbased methodology is presented in this work to undertake these goals.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Luminance calibration of a full sky HDR imaging system using sky scanner measurements
    (Solar Energy Society, 2022) García Ruiz, Ignacio; Sáenz Gamasa, Carlos; Hernández Salueña, Begoña; García Santos, Rafael; Torres Escribano, José Luis; Zientziak; Ingeniaritza; Institute of Smart Cities - ISC; Institute for Advanced Materials and Mathematics - INAMAT2; Ciencias; Ingeniería
    A full sky High Dynamic Range imaging system, based on a Single-Lens Reflex camera with a fisheye lens, has been constructed and calibrated with a sky scanner luminance meter. The method considers the geometrical, spectral, timing and orientation issues between instruments. The calibration data sets, having nearly simultaneous measurements under stable sky conditions, were obtained from approximately one month of data using selection variables based in the experimental design. For luminance estimation we use the standard 𝐶𝐼𝐸𝑌 RGB combination and a Spectrally Matched Luminance (𝑆𝑀𝐿) predictor, matching the spectral response of the instruments. With 738 calibration points having luminances up to 23.6 kcd∕m2, covering 98.5% of the sky luminance range, 𝐶𝐼𝐸𝑌 is linearly correlated with sky scanner measurements with a coefficient of determination 𝑅2 = 0.9927 and a Root Mean Squared Error (𝑅𝑀𝑆𝐸) of 7.7%. 𝑆𝑀𝐿 gives better results, with 𝑅2 = 0.9973 and 𝑅𝑀𝑆𝐸 = 5.3%. With 253 calibration points with luminances up to 12.9 kcd∕m2, comprising 94.1% of the sky luminance range, both predictors clearly improve, with 𝑅2 = 0.9964 and 𝑅𝑀𝑆𝐸 = 4.1% in case of 𝐶𝐼𝐸𝑌 and 𝑅2 = 0.9982 and 𝑅𝑀𝑆𝐸 = 2.9% in case of 𝑆𝑀𝐿.