Model
for Characterization and Optimization of Spectrally Selective Structures
to Reduce the Operating Temperature and Improve the Energy Yield of
Photovoltaic Modules
posted on 2019-04-16, 00:00authored byIan M. Slauch, Michael G. Deceglie, Timothy J Silverman, Vivian E. Ferry
Many existing commercially
manufactured photovoltaic modules include a cover layer of glass,
commonly coated with a single layer antireflection coating (ARC) to
reduce reflection losses. As many common photovoltaic cells, including
c-Si, CdTe, and CIGS, decrease in efficiency with increasing temperature,
a more effective coating would increase reflection of sub-bandgap
light while still acting as an antireflection coating for higher energy
photons. The sub-bandgap reflection would reduce parasitic sub-bandgap
absorption and therefore reduce operating temperature. This reduction
under realistic outdoor conditions would lead to an increase in annual
energy yield of a photovoltaic module beyond what is achieved by a
single layer ARC. However, calculating the actual increase in energy
yield provided by this approach is difficult without using time-consuming
simulation. Here, we present a time-independent matrix model which
can quickly determine the percentage change in annual energy yield
of a module with a spectrally selective mirror by comparison to a
baseline module with no mirror. The energy benefit is decomposed into
a thermal component from temperature reduction and an optical component
from increased transmission of light above the bandgap and therefore
increased current generation. Time-independent matrix model calculations
are based on real irradiance conditions that vary with geographic
location and module tilt angle. The absolute predicted values of energy
yield improvement from the model are within 0.1% of those obtained
from combined ray-tracing and time-dependent finite-element simulations
and compute 1000× faster. Uncertainty in the model result is
primarily due to effects of wind speed on module temperature. Optimization
of the model result produces a 13-layer and a 20-layer mirror, which
increase annual module energy yield by up to 4.0% compared to a module
without the mirror, varying depending on the module location and tilt
angle. Finally, we analyze how spectrally selective mirrors affect
the loss pathways of the photovoltaic module.