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1 Solar Spectrum. 2 -Black body radiation Light bulb 3000°K Red->Yellow->White Surface of Sun 6000°K.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Solar Spectrum. 2 -Black body radiation Light bulb 3000°K Red->Yellow->White Surface of Sun 6000°K."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Solar Spectrum

2 2 -Black body radiation Light bulb 3000°K Red->Yellow->White Surface of Sun 6000°K

3 3 Solar Spectrum -Black body radiation Light bulb 3000°K Red->Yellow->White Surface of Sun 6000°K

4 4 Solar Spectrum -Black body radiation Light bulb 3000°K Red->Yellow->White Surface of Sun 6000°K

5 5 Solar Spectrum -Atmospheric Absorption and Scattering Light bulb 3000°K Red->Yellow->White Surface of Sun 6000°K

6 6 Solar Spectrum -Atmospheric Absorption and Scattering Light bulb 3000°K Red->Yellow->White Surface of Sun 6000°K

7 7 Solar Spectrum -Atmospheric Absorption and Scattering Air Mass through which solar radiation passes

8 8 Solar Spectrum -Atmospheric Absorption and Scattering Air Mass through which solar radiation passes

9 9

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11 11

12 12 30% lost to Rayleigh Scattering λ -4 (blue sky/orange sunset) Scattering by aerosols (Smoke, Dust and Haze S.K. Friedlander) Absorption: Ozone all below 0.3 µm, CO 2, O 2, H 2 O

13 13 10% added to AM1 for clear skies by diffuse component Increases with cloud cover ½ lost to clouds is recovered in diffuse radiation

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16 16 Direct and Diffuse Radiation Global Radiation = Direct + Diffuse Radiation AM1.5 Global AM1.5G irradiance for equator facing 37° tilted surface on earth (app. A1) Integral over all wavelengths is 970 W/m 2 (or 1000 W/m 2 for normalized spectrum) is a standard to rate PV Close to maximum power received at the earths surface. Appendix A1

17 17 Standard Spectrum is compared to Actual Spectrum for a site Solar Insolation Levels March June September December

18 18 Cape Town/Melbourne/Chattanooga Gibraltar/Beirut/Shanghai

19 19 Appendix B

20 20

21 21

22 22 Need: -Global radiation on a horizontal surface -Horizontal direct and diffuse components of global value -Estimate for tilted plane value Equations given in Chapter on Sunlight Peak sun hours reduces a days variation to a fixed number of peak hours for calculations SSH = Sunshine Hours Total number of hours above 210 W/m 2 for a month Equations in Chapter 1 to convert SSH to a useful form.

23 23 Estimates of Diffuse Component Clearness Index K T = diffuse/total This is calculaed following the algorithm given in the chapter Use number of sunny and cloudy days to calculate diffuse and direct insolation Described in the book

24 24 Tilted Surfaces PV is mounted at a fixed tilt angle

25 25 Sunny versus Cloudy

26 26

27 27 Calculation for Optimal Tilt Angle Given in the Chapter

28 28

29 29 P-N Junctions and Commercial Photovoltaic Devices Chapter 2

30 30

31 31

32 32 Czochralski Process

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37 37

38 38

39 39 Hot Wall CVD

40 40 Plasma CVD

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43 43 Market Share CIS= Copper Indium Gallium Selenide a-Si= Amorphous Silicon Ribbon= Multicrystalline Silicon from Molten Bath CdTe= Cadium Telluride/Cadmium Sulfide Mono = Monocrystalline Silicaon Multi= Muticrystalline Silicon

44 44 Positive ion cores Negative ion cores Depleted of Free Carriers http://www.asdn.net/asdn/physics/p-n-junctions.shtml

45 45 Carrier Generation Carrier Recombination Carrier Diffusion Carrier Drift in Depletion Region due to inherent field On average a minority carrier Travels the diffusion length Before recombining This is the diffusion current Carriers in the depletion region Are carried by the electric field This is the drift current In equilibrium drift = diffusion Net current = 0

46 46

47 47 I–V characteristics of a p–n junction diode (not to scale—the current in the reverse region is magnified compared to the forward region, resulting in the apparent slope discontinuity at the origin; the actual I–V curve is smooth across the origin). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diode

48 48 I–V characteristics of a p–n junction diode (not to scale—the current in the reverse region is magnified compared to the forward region, resulting in the apparent slope discontinuity at the origin; the actual I–V curve is smooth across the origin). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diode

49 49 Electron-hole pair -Generation -Recombination Carrier lifetime (1 µs) Carrier diffusion length (100-300 µm)

50 50

51 51 N=photon flux α=abs. coef. x=surface depth G=generation rate e-h pairs

52 52 N=photon flux α=abs. coef. x=surface depth G=generation rate e-h pairs

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54 54

55 55 I0 is dark saturation current q electron charge V applied voltage k Boltzmann Constant T absolute temperature

56 56 N=photon flux α=abs. coef. x=surface depth G=generation rate e-h pairs At x = 0 G =αN Function is G/Gx=0 = exp(-αx) Electrons absorb the band gap energy

57 57 Diode Equation Photovoltaic Equation Silicon Solar Cell

58 58 Efficiency of Light Conversion to e-h pair

59 59 Short Circuit Current, V = 0

60 60 Inefficiency of the e-h pair formation and collection process

61 61 Voc drops in T because I0 increases Open Circuit Voltage http://pvcdrom.pveducation.org/CELLOPER/TEMP.HTM

62 62 Maximum Power

63 63 Effect of Shunt Resistance on fill factor http://www.pv.unsw.edu.au/information-for/online-students/online- courses/photovoltaics-devices-applications/syllabus-details Fill Factor

64 64 Effect of Shunt Resistance on fill factor http://www.pv.unsw.edu.au/information-for/online-students/online- courses/photovoltaics-devices-applications/syllabus-details Fill Factor

65 65

66 66 Spectral Response Quantum Efficiency = number of e-h pairs made per photon Band gap determines when this is greater than 0 Need band gap between 1.0 and 1.6 eV to match solar spectrum Si 1.1 eV Cd 1.5 eV

67 67 Issues effecting quantum efficiency Absorption spectrum Band Gap Spectral Responsivity = Amps per Watt of Incident Light Short wavelengths => loss to heat Long wavelengths => weak absorption/finite diffusion length

68 68

69 69 Chapter 4 Cell Properties Lab Efficiency ~ 24% Commercial Efficiency ~ 14% Lab processes are not commercially viable C is Cost of Generated Electricity ACC Capital Cost O&M is Operating and Maintenance Cost t is year E is energy produced in a year r is discount rate interest rate/(i.r. + 1)

70 70 C is Cost of Generated Electricity ACC Capital Cost O&M is Operating and Maintenance Cost t is year E is energy produced in a year r is discount rate interest rate/(i.r. + 1) Increased Efficiency increases E and lowers C. Can also reduce ACC, Installation Costs, Operating Costs To improve C For current single crystal or polycrystalline silicon technology Wafer costs account for ½ of the module cost. ½ is marketing, shipping, assembly etc. We can adresss technically only the efficiency E

71 71 Solar Cell Module Efficiency Optical Losses Due to Reflection 1)Minimize surface contact area (increases series resistance) 2)Antireflection coatings ¼ wave plate transparent coating of thickness d1 and refractive index n1 d 1 = λ 0 /(4n 1 ) n 1 = sqrt(n 0 n 2 ) 2) Surface Texturing Encourage light to bounce back into the cell. 3)Absorption in rear cell contact. Desire reflection but at Random angle for internal reflection

72 72 d 1 = λ 0 /(4n 1 )n 1 = sqrt(n 0 n 2 )

73 73

74 74 Dobrzanski, Drygala, Surface Texturing in Materials and Manufacturing Engineering, J. Ach. In Mat. And Manuf. Eng. 31 77-82 (2008).

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76 76 Reduce recombination at contacts by heavily doping near contacts

77 77 Recombination Losses Red Blue

78 78 Recombination Losses

79 79 Recombination Losses

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83 83 Bulk & Sheet Resistivity Sheet Resistivity

84 84 Eglash, Competition improves silicon-based solar cells, Photovoltaics December, 38-41 (2009).

85 85 SunPower San Jose, CA 20% eficiency from Czochralski silicon

86 86 Eglash, Competition improves silicon-based solar cells, Photovoltaics December, 38-41 (2009).

87 87 Suntech, Wuxi, China multi crystalline cast silicon Efficiency 16.5% Cost $1.50 per watt

88 88 Eglash, Competition improves silicon-based solar cells, Photovoltaics December, 38-41 (2009).

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