I bought the panels from Lowes as well as the special screws with little rubber washers.:
https://www.lowes.com/pd/Tuftex-Actual-26-in-x-120-in-DeckDrain-Opaque-Tan-Under-Deck-Ceiling-Panel/3043409
My joists are perpendicular to the house wall, and the slope of my ceiling went down away from the house. I had to install small strips of treated lumber that went across, under the joists that got taller as I went away from the house to create the drain angle. I made my angle twice what was recommended to promote good drainage.
The ceiling panel was right at the bottom of the joist next to the house and was about three inches below the joist at the farthest point away from the house. I ran a gutter along the bottom edge of the ceiling that ran into a downspout.
I had replaced the deck boards with Trex about five years before I installed this ceiling underneath.
The ceiling worked great for about five years, then I started noticing a few dips in the deck surface.
I pulled back a few ceiling panels to find my joists were rotting, the joist nails were rusting out, there was mold growing on the joists, and roaches had built condominiums at the end of each joist. Not good!
I removed all of the ceiling panels, replaced a few joists, jacked up the others and added new joist hangers, and scrubbed off the mold. I told the roaches to get lost, and painted the joists with stuff that turns rotted wood into plastic.
I have about 6 feet of clearance under the deck, so it is just for storage, not living space.
If I had the vertical space under the deck, I would lower the ceiling about 6 inches or more to allow air to freely circulate between the deck and the ceiling.
I like the idea of replacing the Trex with a waterproof, interlocking decking material, but the Trex was so expensive. Maybe at the next house.