Maryland Solar

 Inverters

Function, Architecture, and Selection Criteria for Residential Solar Systems

A. What is an Inverter?

An inverter converts the direct current electricity produced by solar panels into the alternating current used by residential electrical systems and the utility grid. It is the primary power conversion component in a solar installation.

In addition to electrical conversion, modern residential inverters perform several secondary functions: real-time production monitoring, grid communication and safety disconnection, maximum power point tracking to optimize panel output under variable conditions, and — in systems with battery storage — management of charge and discharge cycles.

The inverter is the component most likely to require replacement or service within a system’s 25-year lifespan. Panel warranties typically run 25 years. Standard string inverter warranties run 10–12 years, with extended warranty options available. Microinverter manufacturers generally warrant their products for 25 years.

B. How An Inverter Works in a Residential System

Solar panels produce DC electricity at a voltage that varies with sunlight intensity and temperature. The inverter accepts that variable DC input and converts it to AC electricity at the voltage and frequency required by the home’s electrical panel — typically 240V at 60Hz in U.S. residential applications.

In a net metering configuration, the inverter also manages the interface between the home’s electrical system and the utility grid. When the system produces more electricity than the home is consuming, the inverter directs excess production onto the grid. When consumption exceeds production, the inverter allows grid electricity to supplement solar generation. This transition happens continuously and automatically.

The manner in which panels connect to the inverter — the inverter architecture — determines how the system responds to shading, panel mismatch, and individual panel failures. This is often the most consequential technical decision in residential solar system design, particularly on roofs with partial shading or multiple orientations. These specifications are handled extremely routinely and similarly across installers.

C. Inverter Architecture: The Three Common Configurations String Inverters

In a string inverter configuration, panels are wired in series — a “string” — with the combined DC output fed to a single central inverter. String inverters are the most common configuration in residential installations and carry the lowest equipment cost of the three architectures.

The primary technical limitation of string inverter design is that production across the entire string is constrained by the lowest-performing panel in that string. A panel that is partially shaded, oriented differently from others, or experiencing reduced output due to soiling or manufacturing variation will reduce the output of every panel connected to it in the same string.

String inverters are well-suited for roofs with uniform orientation, minimal shading, and consistent panel conditions. In those installations, they perform reliably and cost-effectively.

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D. Where Meaningful Differences Exist Shading response

The most material performance difference between architectures is how each handles partial shading. On a roof with no shading, a well-designed string inverter system and a microinverter system will perform within a narrow range of each other. On a roof with partial shading from trees, dormers, or neighboring structures — conditions common across Maryland’s suburban and rural housing stock — module-level electronics (power optimizers or microinverters) will typically produce measurably more electricity than a standard string inverter by preventing production losses from propagating across a string.

The degree to which this difference is material depends on the specific shading conditions. A shading analysis using production modeling software is the appropriate tool for quantifying the expected impact on a given roof.

Single point of failure

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E. Where Differences Are Often Overstated

Conversion efficiency differences between architectures, in residential applications, are typically marginal. The gap between a 97% efficient microinverter and a 98% efficient string inverter translates to a small fraction of total system output annually — not a material driver of system economics.

Brand differentiation within architecture categories is similarly incremental for mainstream manufacturers. SMA and Fronius string inverters, for example, operate within a comparable performance range for most residential applications. The choice between them is unlikely to produce a measurable difference in long-term production.

Monitoring platform features — dashboard design, app interface, alert configurations — are frequently emphasized in sales presentations. These features affect the homeowner’s visibility into system performance but do not affect the system’s electricity production.

What to Look At

Inverter architecture relative to roof shading conditions. This is the most consequential specification decision in most residential system designs.

Warranty length and structure, or specifically whether the product warranty covers the full 25-year panel warranty period or requires a planned replacement.

Manufacturer financial stability and U.S. market presence: relevant to warranty support over a multi-decade horizon.

Battery compatibility: if storage is anticipated, confirming inverter compatibility before installation avoids retrofit complications.

Monitoring capability: panel-level versus system-level, and what the manufacturer’s monitoring platform provides.

What Often Gets Overemphasized

Fractional efficiency differences between architectures in unshaded or minimally shaded applications.

Monitoring platform aesthetics and interface design relative to underlying production performance.

Brand prestige within a given architecture category where mainstream manufacturers perform comparably.

Upgrade features that are not relevant to the specific installation — grid export controls, advanced grid services functions, or commercial-grade capabilities offered in residential equipment.

In Most Maryland Residential Systems

Inverter architecture selection is most consequential on roofs with partial shading or complex geometry. For unshaded, simple roofs, a well-sized string inverter from an established manufacturer performs reliably and cost-effectively. For roofs with shading from trees, dormers, or multiple orientations, module-level electronics — whether power optimizers or microinverters — typically provide a measurable production advantage that warrants the additional equipment cost.

Overall project economics are influenced more heavily by total system size, roof orientation, shading profile, utility rate structure, and financing model than by inverter brand selection within a given architecture category.

Inverter selection should be evaluated within the context of the full system design.

→ See also: System Design — Performance Modeling — Panels — Batteries