Core idea
Rotor airflow acts as both carrier and working flow: it transports ions toward the surface, then becomes the near-wall shear and wall-jet flow that can move loosened residue.
Why ions
Fine mineral dust can be influenced by charge-sensitive adhesion, image-charge effects and surface fields. Ion delivery is used to alter that contact state rather than to brush, wash or collect the dust.
Why airflow
Airflow remains the mechanical release and transport medium. It supplies tangential drag, shear, turbulent bursts and surface-parallel clearance without contact or liquid application.
Surface-state fit
The most relevant target is residual fine mineral dust before it has become wet, cemented, oily, biological or salt-crusted. Humidity, dew, brine and ageing can shift the mechanism window.
Non-contact pass
The technology is intended to act through rotor flow and ion delivery in the same pass, without brushes, water jets, wiping elements, attractor electrodes or a separate collection head.
How to read the animation
The animation is a compact force map. It shows airflow, ion delivery, adhesion terms, charge-state effects and near-wall particle transport as interacting parts of one surface-treatment footprint.
Coupled outputs
Downwash cone: rotor airflow accelerates downward, merges into a turbulent jet/wall-jet interaction near the panel, then spreads radially across the glass. This creates drag, shear, turbulence, a pressure gradient, and edge roll-off. The exact stand-off is treated as a controlled operating envelope, not a fixed physics constant.
Ion plume: the emitter injects ions into the rotor flow so the airflow that transports the ions is also the airflow that later may transport particles. The emitter can be a corona discharge element or a dielectric-barrier-discharge device; both are shown as ion sources riding inside the aerodynamic wake.
Particle-size regimes
Adhesion forces holding dust down
FvdW is the molecular adhesion baseline and can govern micrometre-scale residual fine-dust contact. Fimg is an image-charge contribution for charged dust near a field-bearing or conducting boundary; because it scales with particle charge, partial neutralisation may reduce this component. Fes is shown in crimson as a surface-field-dependent contribution that can matter under particular module, surface-potential, moisture and contamination conditions. Fcap appears when local surface moisture, dew, brine or humidity is high enough to form meniscus bridges.
High-value target: in arid regions, the visible loose upper dust layer may move while a finer bound film remains. That residual fine film is the regime AIr·ION is designed to address, provided it is still loose/fresh mineral dust rather than cemented gypsum, salt crust, biofilm or oil-bound contamination.
Mobilisation forces moving and clearing dust
Faero,t and τ are interpreted primarily as surface-parallel wall-jet drag and boundary-layer shear acting on rolling or sliding thresholds. Re represents turbulent bursts and disaggregation. ∇P is treated as a pressure-gradient and wall-flow transport contribution. FEHD is an optional ionic-wind / EHD contribution to be measured or bounded, not assumed to dominate rotor flow. Fg helps only after mobilisation, especially on tilted panels.
Bipolar vs unipolar ionisation
Bipolar mode emits both polarities and is used to reduce net particle charge across mixed-polarity dust. Because image-charge adhesion depends strongly on net charge, partial neutralisation may reduce the adhesion budget.
Unipolar mode is sign- and boundary-condition-dependent: one selected polarity may create a favourable Coulomb assist state relative to the local surface field, or it may be ineffective or adverse. The separate violet Fcoul arrow is therefore a conditional diagnostic path, not a guaranteed release mode.
Surface-state window
Humidity remains a useful anchor variable, but it is not the whole operating model. AIr·ION is most relevant when the dust is dry to weakly water-mediated: fine mineral particles, weak capillary bonding, no brine film, no cemented crust, and charge effects still relevant. Relative-humidity bands are only heuristics. Panel temperature, dew-point margin, wet–dry history, wind, dust chemistry, surface coating and electrostatic memory can shift the effective boundary.
Environmental surface-state variables
The useful site question is not only “what is the average RH?” but “what is the particle–surface state during cleaning?” Log panel temperature, dew/fog/rain history, wind at panel height, dust chemistry, particle size, coating/roughness, tilt/tracker state and live/off/grounding preconditioning. Phoenix- or Bikaner-type arid conditions are plausible candidates for favourable surface states, while local dust chemistry, dew history and panel condition determine the actual response.
Dependency chain shown by the animation
Bipolar ions may reduce charge-sensitive adhesion; unipolar operation is shown only as a conditional assist path.
Turbulent bursts may disturb agglomerates or wall-flow patterns, but are not shown as guaranteed normal lift-off.
EHD/ionic-wind forcing and local surface fields may contribute and should be treated as coupled, condition-dependent effects.
Tangential wall-jet drag plus shear mobilise particles if the residual adhesion threshold is crossed.
Pressure gradients, panel tilt and gravity influence post-mobilisation transport and redeposition.
Four charge reservoirs
Useful variables to think in
What happens when ions arrive
Bipolar operation mainly reduces net particle charge. Because the image-charge term depends strongly on particle charge, even partial neutralisation can collapse a large part of the electrostatic adhesion without requiring perfect discharge.
Unipolar operation mainly drives the particle toward a selected charge state. If the selected polarity and local field are favourable, the particle experiences a conditional favourable Coulomb term. This is why the figure separates the purple neutralisation arrow from the violet conditional Coulomb assist arrow.
Not all ions survive. Some recombine in the plume, some attach to other particles, and some are diluted by turbulence. That is why delivered ion flux at the surface matters more than nameplate emitter voltage alone.
Can the charge be “overcome”?
The right question is not whether the system overwhelms every force in absolute terms. The practical target is whether ion exposure changes the residual-response metric relative to matched airflow-only treatment under the same airflow, standoff, exposure time and surface state.
Most relevant regime: fresh or moderately adhered dry mineral dust, especially the measured residual fine-dust fraction where airflow alone may struggle. Conditional regime: mixed dust in a weakly water-mediated surface state, with RH used only as a heuristic anchor. Limitation regime: high-RH capillary states, hygroscopic coastal salts, cemented gypsum crusts, biofilm/EPS and oily contamination.
The term “how much charge the wind can entail” is better translated as how much ion current / ion flux the rotor-carried plume can deliver to the panel. Air itself is not a charge reservoir in the same way a conductor is; the actionable quantity is charge transported per unit time to the surface.
Operational reading of the charge budget
The live PV surface and the dust particle already form an adhesion system through vdW contact, image-charge attraction and, on powered modules, additional panel-field adhesion.
The emitter creates an ion plume. Rotor downwash determines how much of that plume reaches the panel before ions recombine or disperse.
Bipolar exposure may reduce net particle charge; unipolar exposure may create a favourable or unfavourable Coulomb assist state depending on sign and boundary conditions.
The effective adhesion budget may drop. If it drops below the local mobilisation threshold, drag and shear can move the particle.
Radial wall flow, tilt and gravity may transport the mobilised particle away. If dew, brine, salts, cementation, biofilm or oily binders control the state, the ion effect may be smaller and another cleaning regime may be needed.
The stubborn arid fine layer
Yes — this is the intended target. If a loose upper dust layer moves but a finer grey/brown film remains, that residual film is usually the small-particle regime where Van der Waals, image-charge and surface-field and image-charge adhesion can matter over gravity and inertia.
The caveat is material state. AIr·ION is most relevant for fresh or moderately aged mineral dust. It is less likely to solve cemented gypsum, salt crusts, EPS/biofilm or oily organics without another cleaning mode.
Panel and string configuration
Panel type and wiring are relevant only when they change the local electric field or leakage behaviour at the glass surface. Important variables include string voltage, module bias, frame grounding, inverter topology, leakage/PID tendency, glass/ARC dielectric properties, residual charge after shutdown, and whether the panel is live during cleaning.
They do not replace the basic dust-adhesion physics: Van der Waals contact still exists even on an unpowered panel. But they can materially change Fes, field-assisted ion drift and the polarity choice for unipolar mode. Treat Es as a measurement variable, not a fixed assumption.
Ion plume / footprint
The rotor wake does not carry a perfectly collimated “beam”. It entrains, dilutes and spreads the ions. The important quantity is the delivered ion footprint at the panel plane, at the real standoff distance and rotor throttle.
Ion plume control
The system should not rely only on nameplate emitter voltage. Control logic can estimate delivered ion current density or surface response at the panel plane, then adapt ion current, polarity, duty cycle, standoff, traverse speed or repeated passes to maintain a target delivered dose.
A useful control target is Di ≈ Jpanel · Wion / vt. If delivered flux is low, the system can slow down, reduce standoff, increase duty cycle, repeat a pass or switch mode rather than simply increasing high voltage.
Charge numbers: order of magnitude
For a small isolated dust particle, a rough capacitance estimate is Cp ≈ 4πϵ0r. This is only a scaling aid: small particles can shift potential with very small absolute charge, but real PV dust is irregular, multi-contact and affected by humidity, surface potential and dielectric boundaries.
This is why small particles can be electrostatically important even with tiny absolute charge. The bottleneck is usually not whether charge can be generated, but whether enough useful ions reach and attach to the right particle-surface interfaces.
Formula caution
The image-charge square relationship should be treated as scaling intuition, not a narrow exact model for every panel. In the ideal conductor case, the image-charge component is strongly dependent on particle charge and often written as proportional to qp2. Real PV modules add glass thickness, dielectric layers, ARC coatings, panel stack geometry, humidity, dew-point margin, wet–dry history, particle shape, roughness and contact state.
A careful technical statement is: ion exposure reduces a charge-dependent electrostatic adhesion component until the remaining adhesion can fall below the aerodynamic removal force.
Wall-jet drag
Adhesion
Electrostatic
Capillary
Ion Wind
Image-Chg
Surface Field