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This PDF file contains the front matter associated with SPIE
Proceedings Volume 7407, including the Title Page, Copyright
information, Table of Contents, Introduction (if any), and the
Conference Committee listing.
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This paper discusses the concentrating solar technologies used for utility-scale solar power. Specifically, it explains the rationale
behind the use of concentration for photovoltaic modules, and how concentrating photovoltaic technologies compare with
concentrating solar thermal technologies. It describes innovations in both areas, and how they are addressing the cost challenges
to meet the needs of the utility scale market.
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After twenty years of commercial deployments of concentrator photovoltaic systems using silicon cells, Amonix has
built a new generation of systems designed for III-V multijunction cells. The resulting 7th-generation systems yield a
considerable performance dividend in the field-proven system design. The first systems, operating in Las Vegas, NV,
achieve AC efficiencies in excess of 25%. Detailed modeling of the cell and system parameters provides a prediction of
energy generation that is within 3% of the measured energy after seven months of operation. The predicted annual yield
in this location is over 2600 kW-hr/kW.
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The Boeing Company Phantom Works has
developed three different prototype photovoltaic
concentrator arrays since March 2007. Identified as
Prototype A, B and C, the experimentally proven technical
characteristics of each design are presented. The
concentrator designs utilize a 1 cm2 multi-junction solar
cell assembly in conjunction with SMS non-imaging optical
designs [1, 2] manufactured with low-cost mass-producible
technologies. Prototype A is an on-axis XR optical
concentrator with a 733x geometrical concentration
demonstrating a ± 1.73° acceptance angle and 23.7%
conversion efficiency. Prototype B is an off-axis free-form
XR optical concentrator with a 810x geometrical
concentration demonstrating a ± 1.32° acceptance angle
and 25.3% conversion efficiency. Prototype C is the most
recent off-axis free-form XR optical concentrator with a
801x geometrical concentration and a theoretical ±1.80°
acceptance angle demonstrating a conversion efficiency
greater than 27.0%. Prototype C is also the basis for the
Boeing Proof of Design (POD) module, demonstrating an
acceptance angle of ±1.48° and a conversion efficiency of
29.4% (as of May 8, 2009). Manufacturability has been
paramount during the design process, resulting in high
performance concentrating photovoltaic modules using
production quality components.
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Soliant Energy, Inc. is producing 500X CPV systems for commercial rooftop applications. Our unique application
requires an accurate method for comparing CPV panel performance to silicon and thin-film flat panel performance. The
true metric for comparing rooftop CPV to flat panel can only be kWh/m2/yr. It is possible to calculate module level
temperature coefficients for the output power and calculate a power rating comparable to an STC rating for this module.
However, the best comparison is to measure outside, side by side with a flat panel. This paper presents performance data
collected at Sandia National Laboratories from November 2008 to January 2009, and at Soliant's Monrovia facility in
March and April 2009, showing the enhanced performance of our CPV system under real world conditions.
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In order to generate key knowledge on CPV technology, ISFOC has already installed 1,4MW of CPV and is executing
3MW of power plants incorporating seven different technologies which will be finished in 2009. The objective of these
pilot plants is to assist the industries in the setting up of pilot production lines and to obtain very valuable information
such as reliability, suitability and production.
In collaboration with the various suppliers, ISFOC has followed in detail all the qualification tests and their results.
Therefore a great body of knowledge and experience is being built up.
After the completion of the plants, ISFOC has started the campaign of measurements, following its own methodology. It
is based on the equations of the Shockley model and only one measurement is needed to establish the nominal power of
the CPV system. Heat-sink temperature to calculate the cell temperature through the thermal resistance, DNI with a
pyrheliometer and the I-V Curve are measured in this procedure. But, ISFOC will also test other rating procedures, like
the ASTM 2527-E or the IEC draft for CPV modules. The results will be shown in this paper.
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Skyline Solar Inc. has developed a novel silicon-based PV system to simultaneously reduce energy cost and improve
scalability of solar energy. The system achieves high gain through a combination of high capacity factor and optical
concentration. The design approach drives innovation not only into the details of the system hardware, but also into
manufacturing and deployment-related costs and bottlenecks. The result of this philosophy is a modular PV system
whose manufacturing strategy relies only on currently existing silicon solar cell, module, reflector and aluminum parts
supply chains, as well as turnkey PV module production lines and metal fabrication industries that already exist at
enormous scale. Furthermore, with a high gain system design, the generating capacity of all components is multiplied,
leading to a rapidly scalable system. The product design and commercialization strategy cooperate synergistically to
promise dramatically lower LCOE with substantially lower risk relative to materials-intensive innovations. In this paper,
we will present the key design aspects of Skyline's system, including aspects of the optical, mechanical and thermal
components, revealing the ease of scalability, low cost and high performance. Additionally, we will present performance
and reliability results on modules and the system, using ASTM and UL/IEC methodologies.
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The results of thermal analysis and experiments are presented for a 1-kW brand new medium-level (8X) concentration
photovoltaic (CPV) unit that is cooled by evaporation and built as an elongated floating solar unit. The unit keeps the
silicon PV elements at low and stable temperature around the clock, significantly outperforms competitors' systems in
terms of the power output and the life span of identical PV elements. It is demonstrated theoretically and experimentally
that the PV element temperature level exceeds the temperature level of water in the water basin (used as a heat sink) by
just a few degrees.
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High-efficiency, low-cost InGaP/GaAs dual-junction epitaxial liftoff (ELO) solar cells have been fabricated on full
4" GaAs substrates. These dual-junction solar cells exhibited an efficiency of 28.69% at AM1.5D, one-sun
illumination. This is the highest reported efficiency for dual-junction ELO solar cells to date. After application of
antireflection coating, the dual-junction ELO cells also exhibited fill factor >85%, open circuit voltage = 2.37 V, and
short circuit current density = 13 mA/cm2. An external quantum efficiency >85% was measured for both the GaAs
and InGaP sub-cells. An ELO dual-junction solar cell wafer typically weighs less than 1.7 g and has a total
semiconductor thickness <5 μm. Reclaim and reuse of the GaAs substrate after the ELO process has been
successfully demonstrated.
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Tunnel diodes constitute an essential part of multi-junction concentrator photovoltaics. These tunnel junctions exhibit a
transition from low-resistance tunneling to high-resistance thermal diffusion, commonly at current densities of the order
of 102-103 mA/mm2. Experimental evidence of a fundamentally new effect is reported and confirmed in distinct cell
architectures: the dependence of the threshold current density on the extent of localized irradiation. It is also shown that
photovoltaic cells with a non-uniform metal grid can possess an additional spatial dependence to the threshold current
density. These new phenomena should be observable in all solar cell tunnel diodes subjected to inhomogeneous
illumination, and are posited to stem from the lateral spreading of excess majority carriers (similar to current spreading
in LEDs). The implications for concentrator solar cells are also addressed.
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Conventional CPV systems focus sunlight directly onto a PV cell, usually through a non-imaging optic to avoid hot
spots. In practice, many systems use a shared tracking platform to mount multiple smaller aperture lenses, each
concentrating light into an associated PV cell. Scaling this approach to the limit would result in a thin sheet-like
geometry. This would be ideal in terms of minimizing the tracking system payload, especially since such thin sheets can
be arranged into louvered strips to minimize wind-force loading. However, simply miniaturizing results in a large
number of individual PV cells, each needed to be packaged, aligned, and electrically connected. Here we describe for the
first time a different optical system approach to solar concentrators, where a thin lens array is combined with a shared
multimode waveguide. The benefits of a thin optical design can therefore be achieved with an optimum spacing of the
PV cells. The guiding structure is geometrically similar to luminescent solar concentrators, however, in micro-optic
waveguide concentrators sunlight is coupled directly into the waveguide without absorption or wavelength conversion.
This opens a new design space for high-efficiency CPV systems with the potential for cost reduction in both optics and
tracking mechanics. In this paper, we provide optical design and preliminary experimental results of one implementation
specifically intended to be compatible with large-scale roll processing. Here the waveguide is a uniform glass sheet, held
between the lens array and a corresponding array of micro-mirrors self-aligned to each lens focus during fabrication.
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Holographic elements have several unique features that make them attractive for solar collector and concentrator
systems. These properties include the ability to diffract light at large deflection angles, Bragg selectivity, grating
multiplexing, and angle-wavelength matching. In this presentation we review how these properties can be applied to
solar collection and concentrator systems. An algorithm is presented for analyzing the energy collection properties of
holographic concentrators in specific geometries and is applied to a planar collection format. Holographic elements are
shown to have advantages for low concentration ratio solar concentrator systems.
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A spectrally selective reflector (SSR) can be fabricated by depositing a transparent conducting oxide on a reflective
substrate. SSRs can be incorporated in concentrating solar cells in order to minimize the heating. We deposited
TiO2:Nb thin films on glass by DC magnetron sputtering, extracted optical constants, and used those to model an
optimized SSR. Corresponding films were then successfully produced. The best wavelength-integrated reflectance
values were 79 % and 31 % in the ranges 300 < λ < 1100 nm and 1100 < λ < 2500 nm, respectively. These data are
better than those previously achieved using SnO2:F.
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Reliability of Concentrator Optics: Joint Session with Conference 7412
Concentrated photovoltaics (CPV) has recently gained interest based on its scalability and expected low levelized cost of
electricity. The reliability of materials used in CPV systems, however, is not well established. The current qualification
test for photodegradation of CPV modules includes only real-time ultraviolet (UV) exposure, i.e. methods for
accelerated UV testing have not been developed. Therefore, the UV and infrared (IR) spectra transmitted through
representative optical systems is evaluated in this paper. The measurements of concentrating optics are used to assess
expected optical performance as well as to understand how to quantify damaging optical exposure. Optical properties
(transmittance, refractive index, reflectance, and absorptance) of candidate materials are identified. The dose and flux
analysis here identifies the increased significance of IR (as opposed to UV) exposure for CPV systems, particularly for
the most concentrating systems. For these, the UV dose may not greatly exceed the unconcentrated global solar
condition, but the thermal load scales nearly directly with the geometric concentration.
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Skyline Solar has developed a novel Concentrated Photovoltaic (CPV) architecture design called High Gain Solar based
on a reflective trough design with optimized Si panels. This design provides a distinct separation between the
functionality of key components enabling parallel development and optimization as well as very rapid deployment. A
predictive tool has been developed to link component characteristics to overall energy production to accurately predict
the performance and degradation of the system in time, as a function of weather patterns and system architecture. This
predictive tool is based on empirical and analytical models combining accelerated stress tests, on-sun performance tests,
finite element analysis and manufacturing variability analyses.
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The emergence of high efficiency photovoltaic cells is leading the industry into using solar concentrators in order to
reduce costs by decreasing the number of cells used. In this paper Optics department of Universidad Complutense de
Madrid has designed a multifocal Fresnel lens of PMMA and has studied the main parameters that have influence on its
final function. This has been done by taking into account its manufacturing tolerances.
The lens is square shaped with sides measuring 270 mm and it is composed of three different zones based on three
different criteria: The central zone has been designed by using paraxial formulation, the intermediate one has been
designed based on Fresnel classical formula while the marginal zone's purpose is to deflect the light by total internal
reflection on prism faces. All three zones have different focal areas and different optical axis so the energy distribution
will be more uniform whilst avoiding cell damage caused by hot spots. The design stage is feedback through simulations
using a ray tracer software.
In order to characterize the lens operation a measure of optical concentration was first taken on different lens areas using
an integrating sphere. Finally, the lens performance in terms of concentration and in terms of uniformity at the focal spot
was studied by processing the images taken with a CCD camera on a screen placed at the focal plane of the lens.
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A new reflector surface and geometry using low-concentration mirror boosting of flat-plate photo voltaic
devices is described. The overheating effects that have previously been seen using non-uniform, high
reflectivity side mirrors have been reduced. The new high-stability reflector material has lower UV
reflectivity that reduces panel ageing and over heating. A moderate reflectivity in the violet wavelength
further cuts the level of overheating while sacrificing only minimally in electrical power output efficiency.
The new surface maintains high, uniform reflectivity at green, yellow, red, and IR wavelengths. Mass-produced
panels are undergoing tests, and some preliminary results are presented. Surface self-cleaning of
hydrophilic and hydrophobic coating over the reflecting surface is also discussed. Other applications of the
same mirror in the solar thermal field are briefly discussed. Some improved tracking PV geometry versions
using the new material are presented.
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