ME5521 Chapter3 1 2011
ME5521 Chapter3 1 2011
PV system integration
286
III.1- Photovoltaic Materials and
Electrical Characteristics
Outline
• Overview of solar power
• How photovoltaic (PV) cells work
• Principle of p-n type semiconductor
junctions
• How solar PV cells are made
• Solar PV electric characteristics
• Solar PV system integration Image: Matra Marconi Space
Solar cell
• The Solar Photovoltaic modules are sold on a $/Wp (or €/Wp) basis (Wp
is the power in Watts for Peak sun hours)
• In November 2010, the retail prices for solar photovoltaic module were
for the Us index at 3.51 $/Wp (4.34 $/Wp in Nov. 2009) and the European index
at 3.19 €/Wp (4.24 €/Wp in Nov. 2009)
• Note: As a guide, the industry is looking to drive module prices down to
1.5-2 $/Wp over the next decade (DOE Photovoltaic Goal: $1 per Watt)
289
History Photovoltaic Energy
• Photovoltaic (PV) cells or solar cells, convert solar
radiation (photon energy) directly into electrical current
(DC power)
• The PV effect was first reported by Edmund Becquerel
(French physicist) in 1839. It remained in the laboratory
until 1954, when Bell Laboratories produced the first
silicon solar cell (which converted sunlight with an
efficiency of 6%)
1954: The Birth of Solar Photovoltaic cell
290
History Photovoltaic Energy
• Solar electricity has been a prime
source of power for space
programs for its high power
capacity per unit weight
• It has also been used to power
small electronics and rural and
agricultural applications for three
decades
• During the last decade, a strong solar
electric market has emerged for powering
urban grid-connected homes and buildings
as a result of
advances in solar technology along
with government incentives and global
Photo: Sunlight glints off the Hubble’s
changes in electric industry solar array
restructuring
291
Photovoltaic (PV): Solar Electricity
• Direct conversion of sunlight to
electricity
Advantages
• Modular (mW to many MW). Wide range of
applications.
• Free and abundant resource
• No moving parts in PV cells
• Noise and exhaust free (carbon neutral energy)
• Reliable (>20 years); Low operating costs
• Allow the use of renewable electricity in rural and
remote areas
• Production of convenient DC current for battery
Disadvantages storage
• Doesn't produce power during night and cloudy • Plentiful supply of raw material (silicon)
days
• Reduce utility bills and stop the rise in energy
• Requires south facing for optimal output
• Low efficiency and large areas of PV are needed
prices
for high power output • Can be grid connected
• Very expensive to build solar power stations
• Need inverters for AC appliances use
• Some toxic materials are used in PV production
• Storage needed for remote applications
(batteries)
• PV has variations in energy output (daily and
seasonal)
• Shading dramatically reduces generation
292
Photovoltaic Energy System
• Solar electric systems consist of basically three main items:
Modules that convert sunlight into electricity;
Inverters that convert that electricity into alternating current for
household appliances;
Batteries that store excess electricity produced by the system
The remainder of the system comprises equipment such as wiring,
circuit breakers, and support structures.
294
Photovoltaic (PV) Cell
• A PV cell is a solid-state electrical device that converts light directly into
electricity of voltage-current characteristics that are a function of the
characteristics of the light source, the materials and design of the device
• Solar photovoltaic devices are made of various semiconductor materials
including silicon (Si), cadmium sulfide (CdS), cadmium telluride (CdTe),
and gallium arsenide (GaAs) , and in single crystalline, multicrystalline, or
amorphous forms
* Frequency ν - The number of repetitions per unit time of the oscillations of an electromagnetic wave (Hz=1/S)
296
Photon Energy
• The energy (eV) of the Photons is given by (Planck’s Law):
C
E=h = hν ; C = λν
λ
Where, h is the Planck’s constant and C the speed of the
light. C=299,792,458 m/s in free space
• The most energetic photons are those of high frequency (ν
ν)
and short wavelength (λ
λ)
• This force drives the electrons through a load in the external circuit to
do electrical work
• The effectiveness of a photovoltaic device depends upon the choice of
light absorbing materials and way in which they are connected to the
external circuit
303
Photovoltaic Effect
• Photovoltaic converter are semiconductor materials
• The most common PV cells are made of crystalline silicon (Si)
wafers
• The bond structure of a semiconductor determines the energy
level of the bond (Band Gap) and the degree of freedom of
electrons in the crystal lattice
305
Photovoltaic Effect
• Electrons in solids have bands of allowed energy levels
• Pauli exclusion principle says each allowed energy state can be
occupied by 2 electrons (spin up and spin down)
• At T=0K in a solid structure all available energy states are occupied up
to an energy level called the Fermi Level, EF
• In general, the probability that any given energy
level is occupied is given by the Fermi function:
1
f (E ) =
E − EF
1 + exp
kT
Fermi level for semiconductor
Where, k = 1.38 x 10-23 joule/K= 8.61 x 10-5 eV/K , is the Boltzman’s constant
• At T 0K and E < EF then f(E) = 1 and the level is full
• If E > EF the exponential is infinite f(E) = 0 and the level is empty
• The Fermi energy is the energy at which the probability of a state being
filled is 1/2 306
Photovoltaic Effect
• The Semiconductors are characterized by
two similar electron energy band structures:
The valence band which is completely
filled with electrons and empty
conduction band
The two band are separated by an
narrow energy band gap (<2 eV)
• The number of electrons excited into the
conduction band depends on the energy band
gap width as well as temperature
• The elemental semiconductors, silicon (Si)
and germanium (Ge) have band gap energies
of approximately 1.1 and 0.7 eV, respectively.
Both are covalently bonded
• At absolute 0K temperature, silicon is a Semiconductor occupancy of
perfect insulator (no free electrons) electron states
308
Photovoltaic Effect
• Only photons with a certain level of energy
(band-gap energy) are able to free electrons
in a PV cell from their atomic bonds to
produce an electric current
• The band-gap energy (Eg) of a
semiconductor is the minimum energy
required to dislodge an electron from its
covalent bond state to a free state where it
can be part of an electric circuit Solar cell materials and solar radiation spectrum
1.129 µm
ηs = = 28%
4 µm Photon absorption coefficients of
various semiconductors
Band Gap Energies and Cut-off wavelength above which electron excitation
doesn’t occur
311
Photovoltaic Effect
• To get maximum efficiency when converting solar
power into electricity, we want a solar panel that can
absorb nearly every single photon of light
• Multijunction Cells are developed for better
utilisation of solar spectrum
• The higher band gap must see the light first and the
voltages of the cells add
312
Measured Efficiency vs Time for Various Technologies
• Multijunction: 37.3% efficiency record set by Boeing-Spectrolab in 2004
•New World Record in 2009: 41.1% efficiency reached for multi-junction solar cells
at Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems made out of GaInP/GaInAs/ Ge
The generation of
Crystalline silicon solar cell design electron-hole pairs
by light
314
Solar Cell Structure
• Thisjunction is created by doping the silicon (chemical vapor
deposition method):
On one side of the junction with thin film of Boron (three valence electrons,
supplied in B2H6) to form P-silicon (positively charged), which has a
deficiency of electrons (abundance of holes)
On the other side with phosphorus to form n-silicon (negatively charged,
supplied in PH3), which has an excess of electrons (five valence electrons)
P-type semiconduction (one valence n-type semiconduction (one extra
electron deficiency) bonding electron)
315
Solar Cell Structure
• The PV cell are made by sandwiching together the two silicon
layers to create a p-n junction at their interface and an built-in
electric field (enables the spliting of charges - drift current):
Excess electrons in n-layer (donor) created by absorption of
photons, flow through the external circuit to the p-layer (acceptor)
Excess holes created during the flow process to n-layer
(drift current)
Silicon dioxide
(SiO2)
319
Solar cell materials - Production
• Pure silicon is produced from silica by reduction (using carbon
electrodes) in specially designed furnaces at 1800C:
SiO2 + C → Si + CO2
•The produced material contains 98-99% of pure silicon. The SiHCl3 gas is
synthesized by chlorination of granular silicon in special reactor
Ultrathin Crystalline
Silicon Wafer Solar Cells
Silicon ingots
Silicon Bricks
324
PV cells
• When charged by sun, this basic unit
generates a DC photo-voltage of 0.5 to 1 volt
and, a photo-current of 10 mA/cm2 (which is
directly proportional to cell's surface area) at
25 C and AM1.5 illumination
• In UK, 1 m2 of monocrystalline or
polycrystalline array can supply 100 watts
and generate 90 to 110 kWh per year
(CIBSE), depends on the amount of sunlight
received
326
PV Systems
• Arrays can supply up to several
MW electrical power
•The DC supply from the solar cell
needs to be converted to AC for
residential and commercial uses.
• A 20 to 30 m2 array, can provide
enough power for an entire
household in Southern Europe
Solar power system in Berlin’s government
district
327
Price curve of crystalline Si modules
• The manufacturing costs of a crystalline silicon PV module
are about 2 €/Wp
• For large-scale introduction of solar electricity generation it
is needed to reduce these costs to 1€/Wp, and on the long
term even to below 0.5 €/Wp
328
Outline
• Shockley I-V diode equation (dark and illuminated
PV cell)
• Equivalent circuit for PV cell
• I-V and Power curves
Isc, Voc , Pmax , Imp , Vmp
• Fill factor (FF)
• Efficiency of PV cell
Nominal efficiency
• Impact of Insolation and Temperature on PV cell
electrical characteristics
• Examples
329
III.1-2 PV Electric Characteristics – The p-n Junction Diode
• The voltage-current characteristic curve for the p-n junction
diode (dark) is described by the following Shockley diode
equation:
qVd
I d = I 0 exp − 1
nkT
Where, I0 (A) is the reverse (dark) saturation current (the leakage
current in the absence of light)
331
PV Electric Characteristics – The p-n Junction Diode
• When the light hits the solar cell, the energy of the photons
generates free charge carriers (hole-electron pairs)
• An illuminated photovoltaic cell consists of a diode in parallel
with a power source
•The power source produces the photo-electric current (IL), which
is proportional to the irradiance
•The light has the effect of shifting the I-V curve down where
power can be extracted from the diode
Current-voltage (I-V) curves for dark (no sunlight) and an illuminated cell. The dark curve is
the diode curve turned upside-down. The light curve is the dark curve plus ISC
334
PV Electric Characteristics
The current-voltage equation for the equivalent circuit of the
PV cell can be re-written as
qV
I = I SC − I d = I SC − I 0 exp − 1 ( A)
nkT
The open-circuit voltage, Voc, is the maximum voltage from a
solar cell (it occurs when the leads from the PV cell are left
open, I=0), and is found by setting the net current equal to
zero in the solar cell equation to give:
nkT I SC
Voc = ln + 1 (V )
q I0
• The equation shows that Voc depends on the saturation
current of the solar cell and the short-circuit current 335
PV Electric Characteristics
At PV cell temperature of 298 K, the current-voltage equation
become
I = I SC − I 0 {exp(38.9V ) − 1}
And the open-circuit voltage
I SC
Voc = 0.0257 ln + 1
I0
The short-circuit current ISC is directly proportional to solar
insolation
336
Example 1- The I-V curve for a photovoltaic cell
Consider a 100-cm2 photovoltaic cell with reverse
saturation current I0=10-12 A/cm2. In full sun, it
produces a short-circuit current of 40 mA/cm2 at
25˚C. Find the open-circuit voltage at full sun and
again for 50% sunlight. Plot the results.
Solution
The reverse saturation current I0 is 10-12 A/cm2 x 100
cm2 = 10-10 A. At a full sun ISC is 0.04 A/cm2 x 100 cm2
= 4.0 A. The open circuit voltage is
I SC 4.0
Voc = 0.0257 ln + 1 = 0.0257 ln −10 + 1 = 0.627 V
I0 10
337
Since short-circuit current ISC is proportional to solar
intensity, at half sun ISC = 2 A and the open circuit voltage is
2.0
Voc = 0.0257 ln −10 + 1 = 0.610 V
10
Plotting the current-voltage equation gives us the following:
338
PV Electric Characteristics
• The cell generates no power in short-circuit (when current Isc is
produced) or open-circuit (when cell generates voltage Voc)
• The cell delivers maximum power Pmax when operating at a
point on the characteristic where the product I-V is maximum
(Imp, Vmp)
•The maximum power Pmax is given in units of Watt peak (Wp)
The I-V curve for a typical crystal silicon cell under STC 340
PV Electric Characteristics: Q-Cells
FF = =
I SCVoc I SCVoc
FF=0.45
344
PV Electric Characteristics
• The maximum power point from a solar cell is found for
V=Vmp, by solving:
∂P ∂ (IV ) ∂I
= = I + V = 0
mp
V =V mp V =V mp V = V
∂V ∂V ∂V
• M. Green (1982) give the following empirical expression for
the Fill Factor :
kT VOC
VOC − ln q + 0.72
q kT
FF =
kT
VOC +
q
* M. Green, Solar cells: operating principles, Technology, and System Applications, Chap.5 , Prentice Hall,
Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 85-102 (1982)
345
PV Electric Characteristics
•Another useful parameter in solar cell analysis is the Characteristic
Resistance (RCH)
• The characteristic resistance of a solar cell is the output resistance of
the solar cell at its maximum power point
• If RLoad = RCH, then the maximum power is transferred to the load and
the solar cell operates at its maximum power point, RCH is given by:
VMP VOC
RCH = =
I MP I SC
1
I SC = VOC
RCH
346
Efficiency of Solar Cells and PV Modules
• The efficiency (η
η) is the ratio of the power delivered
by the solar cell to the power of incident solar
radiation (or the fraction of incident power which is
converted to electricity)
• It is calculated from the maximum power Pmax(Wp),
the solar irradiance G(W/m2) and the surface area
A(m2) of the solar cell:
Pmax FF .VOC I SC
η= =
A.G A.G
347
Efficiency of Solar Cells and PV Modules
• InPV modules, the efficiency is always specified under
standard test condition (STC):
η n = η STC
• This
yields the nominal efficiency of the solar cells and
modules: Pmax ( STC )
ηn =
W
A.1000 2
m
• Theefficiency η of the solar cells is dependent on irradiance
and temperature
•The efficiency η at a particular irradiance or temperature is
the result of the nominal Efficiency minus the change in
efficiency:
η = η n − ∆η 348
Impact of Insolation and Temperature on I-V Curves
• The electrical performance and the characteristic curves of the
PV modules are dependent on temperatures and irradiance
Irradiance (Insolation) Effect:
• The irradiance changes most frequently during the course of a
day
• With the irradiance factor S, the change in efficiency with
irradiances deviating from STC can be calculated:
G
S=
W
1000 2
m
The approximate change in efficiency with constant temperature
for crystalline silicon solar cells is given by :
∆η ≈ −0.04η n ln (S ) 349
Irradiance Effect on the Short-Circuit Current, Isc
• The changes in
irradiance affect the
module current the most
as this current is directly
proportional to the
irradiance G (W/m2):
W
I SC (G ) ≅ S .I SC 1000 2
m
(
∆η ≈ − β p 25 C − TC η n o
)
Where βp is the temperature coefficient for the cell efficiency and TC is the
cell temperature, which is dependent on the irradiance, ambient
temperature and solar cell material. For crystalline silicon βp=0.45 [%/C]
∆η ≈ −0.0045 25 C − TC η n ( o
)
Thus
NOCT − 20°
TC = Tamb + G (°C )
800
• And G is the insolation in W/m2. Module temperature will be
lower when wind velocity is high 354
Example 2- Impact of cell temperature on power for a
PV module
Estimate cell temperature, open-circuit voltage, and
maximum power output for 150-W BP2150S module
under conditions of 1 kW/m2 insolation and ambient
temperature 30˚C (see table 3.1 for electrical
specification of the module). The module has a NOCT of
47˚C
Solution
With G= 1 kW/m2, the cell temperature is estimated to be
361
Solution:
A- The maximum power point is determined using the
simplifying assumption that the Fill Factor is independent of
the temperature and irradiance:
I mpVmp 1X 12.5
FF = = = 0.694
I SCVoc 1.2 X 15
And,
W W
I SC 750 2 ≅ S .I SC 1000 2
m m
VOC (G ) = I SC RCH
363
At the maximum power output, the resistance of the load is
equal to the characteristic resistance of the solar cell, thus:
364
Example 4
A typically PV module with 36 cells in series and an
area of 0.633 m2 has the following measured
characteristics at standard conditions: Isc=4.5 A,
Voc=21.4 V, Imp=3.95 A and Vmp=16.5 V. Estimate the
maximum power efficiency at a cell temperature of
67°°C and an incident radiation of 648.3 W/m2 on
June 1st at latitude 39.2°°
Solution:
The maximum power output at the operating
condition (incident radiation 648.3 W/m2 and a cell
temperature of 67.2°°C) is found from the equation of
the efficiency:
365
Pmax FF .VOC I SC
η= =
A.G A.G
The maximum power output is then:
Pmax = η . A.G
•The efficiency η at the operating temperature is
given by:
η = η n − ∆η = [1 + 0.0045(25°C − TC )]η n
•The nominal efficiency ηn of the solar module is
calculated from: 366
Pmax ( STC ) I mpVmp 3.95 X 16.5
ηn = = = = 0.103
W W
A.1000 2 A.1000 2 0.633 X 1000
m m
The efficiency η is then:
η = [1 + 0.0045(25°C − 67.2°C )]0.103 = 0.0834 or 8.34%
367
PV Electric Characteristics
• In the solar cells, a voltage drop occurs as the charge carriers
migrate from the semiconductor to the electrical contact: This is
described by the series resistance Rs
• In addition the leakage currents arise (shading impact), which are
described by the parallel shunt resistance RSH
• The simple equivalent circuit of a string of cells in series suggest
no current can flow to the load if any cell is in dark
••A more accurate equivalent circuit for a PV cell includes both
parallel and series resistances
nkT RSH
q
• Series and parallel
resistance in the PV I SC
1
equivalent circuit slope =
RSH
decrease both
voltage and current
delivered For aacell
For cellto to have
have losses
losses of less
than 1% than
of less : 1% :
• To improve cell 100VOCOC 00.01 VV
RRSHSH>> 100V and S S<<
and RR
.01 OCOC
performance, high I SC
I SC I SC
I SC
RSH and low RS are VOC
needed
369
PV Electric Characteristics
• At PV cell temperature of 298 K, the current-voltage
equation become
I = I SC − I d − I SH
Generalized PV equivalent circuit 370
Rearranging and substituting the Shockley diode equation at
298 K gives:
Vd
I = I SC − I 0 {exp[38.9Vd ] − 1}−
RSH
Voltage cross an individual cell can then be found from
V = Vd − IRS
371