I am... asking for a friend.
By partially shaded I mean there would be trees on one side of the panels that will cast a shade on a third or even half the panels in the later hours, near sunset (actually, I --- I mean my friend could place panels on both sides of the trees, so one set of panels will be partially shaded in the first hours of the day, while the other set of panels would be partially shaded in the last hours.
I am not as much concerned about the inevitable drop in power produced, as I am in the life of the panels. I have read skimmed through a few papers and... MPPT is not so easy.
Why I-- this friend of mine is considering this complication?
Because he has a naturally sloped part of his land that looks south and that it will lend itself to place the panels at the right (average) angle. Plus, there is room for at least 2.5 times the panels that can be placed on the roof. Plus, there is the possibility to mount them on a pivoted structure that would make them seasonally tiltable to get the right angle each season. Plus, they can be cleaned every time they are dirty.
Are there people, out there, with panels on their roof that get shadow from nearby buildings or tall trees? Or wishfulthinkers like this friend of mine who have their panels on the ground and have experience with partial shading (and potential remedies to avoid shortening the life of panels)?
Do they use multiple MPPT circuits to track the maximum power for each (subset of) panel(s)? Or is not worth the effort, and we better dig some coal, instead?
EDIT: corrected MMPT to MPPT