7 research outputs found

    Temperature coefficients and crystal defects in multicrystalline silicon solar cells

    Get PDF
    The paper VIII is not published yet.The conversion efficiency of a photovoltaic device is strongly dependent on the operating temperature. For most devices, the efficiency, and hence the power production, decreases with increasing temperature due to fundamental, material, and process-related factors. Therefore, understanding the thermal behavior of photovoltaic devices is essential to accurately forecast the power production of photovoltaic installations and to optimize devices for different climatic conditions. The thermal behavior of crystalline silicon-based devices is of special interest because of the importance of the technology for industrial applications. This thesis expands the knowledge about temperature dependent performance by investigating how crystal defects influence the thermal behavior of multicrystalline silicon solar cells. Two parameters are given special attention: The temperature coefficient of the open-circuit voltage, which provides information about the temperature sensitivity of the device performance, and the so-called recombination parameter, containing information about the underlying physical mechanisms. In this thesis, temperature dependent performance is studied locally across multicrystalline silicon wafers and solar cells. The temperature sensitivity of grain boundaries, dislocations, and intra-grain regions is investigated at various processing steps, using a novel temperature dependent photoluminescence imaging tool developed during the PhD project. Significant variations in temperature sensitivity is observed for the various crystal defects. Dislocation clusters exhibit an especially interesting thermal behavior, which is discussed in detail. Brick position is found to significantly affect the average temperature sensitivity of wafers and cells, with reduced temperature sensitivity generally observed towards the top of the brick. This is found to arise mainly from the presence of dislocation clusters, because of associated low values, and a typically increasing density towards the top of a multicrystalline silicon brick. Finally, the influence of impurity atoms is investigated using a temperature and injection dependent numerical model, relating the recombination parameter to impurity recombination in crystalline silicon. The model is used to predict for various impurity atoms. Additionally, the temperature coefficient of the open-circuit voltage is predicted without a temperature dependent measurement, enabling more accurate temperature coefficient modeling.publishedVersio

    Analytical Modeling of the Temperature Sensitivity of the Maximum Power Point of Solar Cells

    Get PDF
    Author's accepted manuscriptAbstract—This article presents new analytical expressions for the temperature coefficients of the voltage, current, and power of a solar cell at its maximum power point MPP). A new analytical expression of the temperature coefficient of the fill factor is also derived. The new expressions are written as functions of photovoltaic (PV) metrics that can be obtained from i-V measurements. Nonideal diode behavior is partially accounted for through a temperature dependent ideality factor. The recombination parameter γ, which has been shown to account for the thermal sensitivity of all mechanisms determining the open-circuit voltage, appears to play a role also for the temperature coefficient of theMPP. The expressions are tested against experimental data, which covers measurements from 18 multicrystalline silicon solar cells with different bulk resistivities and cell architectures. It is found that the new model captures the essence of the temperature variation shown by the investigated PV metrics.acceptedVersio

    Temperature coefficients and crystal defects in multicrystalline silicon solar cells

    No full text
    The conversion efficiency of a photovoltaic device is strongly dependent on the operating temperature. For most devices, the efficiency, and hence the power production, decreases with increasing temperature due to fundamental, material, and process-related factors. Therefore, understanding the thermal behavior of photovoltaic devices is essential to accurately forecast the power production of photovoltaic installations and to optimize devices for different climatic conditions. The thermal behavior of crystalline silicon-based devices is of special interest because of the importance of the technology for industrial applications. This thesis expands the knowledge about temperature dependent performance by investigating how crystal defects influence the thermal behavior of multicrystalline silicon solar cells. Two parameters are given special attention: The temperature coefficient of the open-circuit voltage, which provides information about the temperature sensitivity of the device performance, and the so-called recombination parameter, containing information about the underlying physical mechanisms. In this thesis, temperature dependent performance is studied locally across multicrystalline silicon wafers and solar cells. The temperature sensitivity of grain boundaries, dislocations, and intra-grain regions is investigated at various processing steps, using a novel temperature dependent photoluminescence imaging tool developed during the PhD project. Significant variations in temperature sensitivity is observed for the various crystal defects. Dislocation clusters exhibit an especially interesting thermal behavior, which is discussed in detail. Brick position is found to significantly affect the average temperature sensitivity of wafers and cells, with reduced temperature sensitivity generally observed towards the top of the brick. This is found to arise mainly from the presence of dislocation clusters, because of associated low values, and a typically increasing density towards the top of a multicrystalline silicon brick. Finally, the influence of impurity atoms is investigated using a temperature and injection dependent numerical model, relating the recombination parameter to impurity recombination in crystalline silicon. The model is used to predict for various impurity atoms. Additionally, the temperature coefficient of the open-circuit voltage is predicted without a temperature dependent measurement, enabling more accurate temperature coefficient modeling
    corecore