PHOTOVOLTAIC SOLAR CONVERSION
20200127602 ยท 2020-04-23
Inventors
Cpc classification
F24S23/31
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24S23/71
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H01L31/054
ELECTRICITY
H02S40/425
ELECTRICITY
F24S2030/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24S40/55
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H01L31/0547
ELECTRICITY
F24S23/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24S80/40
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02E10/40
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
F24S23/79
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H01L31/02325
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L31/054
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/0232
ELECTRICITY
F24S80/40
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24S23/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A photovoltaic chip is designed to receive light energy from a light box arranged above it. The light can be sunlight guided by optical-fibers. For ease of replacement the photovoltaic chips can be supported in a carrier which is movably housed in a block. The blocks are housed on racks and are movable for ease of repair and replacement.
Claims
1. A photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus comprising: at least one photovoltaic chip arranged to convert sunlight into electrical energy; and at least one coupling device operable to secure one or more optical fibers in a configuration with a light transmission end-face arranged to couple sunlight transported by the optical-fiber onto a photosensitive surface of the at least one photovoltaic chip.
2. A photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus according to claim 1 comprising a carrier on which the at least one photovoltaic chip is supported.
3. A photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus according to claim 2 comprising a thermally conductive casing in which the carrier is supported.
4. A photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus according to claim 2 wherein the carrier comprises a projecting member configured to be received in a slot within the casing to thereby removably retain the carrier with respect to the casing.
5. A photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus according to claim 3 comprising a component upon which the thermally conductive casing is movably mounted.
6. A photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus according to claim 3 wherein the thermally conductive casing comprises a handle for moving the casing relative to the component for ease of access to the carrier.
7. A photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the coupling device comprises a light box arranged to receive at least one or more optical fibers, the light box comprising a means to evenly distribute sunlight from the light transmission end-face onto the at least one photovoltaic chip.
8. A photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus according to claim 7 comprising a carrier which supports a plurality of photovoltaic chips, and a corresponding plurality of coupling devices, each coupling device arranged to couple sunlight transported by one or more of the optical fibers to its corresponding photovoltaic chip.
9. A photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus according to claim 8 comprising a rack having at least one rack mounting wherein the coupling device is mounted on the rack with respect to the rack mounting, and the carrier is movably mounted in alignment with the coupling device with respect to the rack mounting for ease of replacement.
10. A photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus according to claim 8 wherein the coupling devices are arranged adjacent to one another, each aligned with at least one photovoltaic chip in the carrier.
11. A photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus according to claim 9 wherein the light cabinet comprises multiple racks, each rack having at least one coupling device oriented with respect to at least one respective carrier on its associated rack mounting.
12. A photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus according to claim 9 wherein the rack has at least one optical fiber intake associated with each rack mounting for guiding the one or more optical fibers to the coupling devices from a remote location.
13. A photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus according to claim 3 wherein the casing comprises a cooling system for receiving a coolant.
14. A method of replacing photovoltaic chips in a photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus comprising: at least one photovoltaic chip, arranged to convert sunlight to electrical energy; and a light coupling device associated with the at least one photovoltaic chip operable to secure one or more optical fiber in a configuration with a light transmission end-face arranged to couple sunlight transported by the optical fiber to a respective photosensitive surface of the at least one chip, the method comprising: providing the at least one photovoltaic chip on a carrier which is movable with respect to the at least one coupling device; removing the carrier from the photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus while leaving the coupling device in place; and inserting a new carrier in the photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus while leaving the coupling device in place.
15. A method according to claim 14 wherein the step of removing the carrier comprises sliding a casing in which the carrier is supported out of a rack in the photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus wherein the coupling device is fixed with respect to the rack.
16. A method according to claim 14 wherein the step of removing the carrier comprises rolling a casing in which the carrier is supported out of a rack in the photovoltaic solar conversion apparatus wherein the coupling devices are fixed with respect to the rack.
17. A replaceable cell bank comprising: a carrier on which is formed electronic circuitry for connecting at least one photovoltaic chip to one or more output terminals for the electricity generated by the photovoltaic chips; at least one photovoltaic chip supported on the carrier with a surface exposed to receive illumination from a light source external to the carrier, wherein the carrier is movable with respect to the light source, wherein the carrier comprises a means for removably coupling it to a casing.
18. A replaceable cell bank according to claim 17 wherein the coupling means comprises a tongue adapted to slide in a slot set within the casing.
19. A replaceable cell bank according to claim 17 wherein an upper surface of the at least one photovoltaic chip is exposed.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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[0039]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0040] The present embodiments provide a mechanism that facilitates a quick and easy replacement of photovoltaic semiconductor devices that convert light to electricity. They are discussed in the context of a system in which sunlight is harvested and transported using optical fibers.
[0041]
[0042] In the present description, the term optical-fiber is used interchangeably with fiber-optic waveguide to denote a long cylindrical silica glass core surrounded by a cladding whose index of refraction is smaller than that of the core. The cladding in turn is surrounded by a protective polymer coat. The entire structure is encapsulated in a hard but flexible protective outer polymer layer called the jacket. The term fiber strand is used herein to denote a single optical-fiber waveguide. The phrase optical-fiber (or fiber-optic) cable is used to denote a tough protective thermoplastic housing with multiple optical-fibers for the purpose of light transport. Super cables can be provided for carrying multiple cables over long distances.
[0043] The revolutionary arrangement described herein thus enables sunlight to be collected at a location where sunlight is plentiful (a collection location), and transported to a location separated from the collection location. The distance of separation could be small or large, and is limited only by the possible length of fiber-optic cables and management of absorption losses. Once coupled into fiber-optic waveguides, sunlight can be transported safely by routing the fiber-optic cables to any desirable location where the sunlight energy can be further processed or manipulated into a desired form (electrical or thermal). The distances over which sunlight might be transported can be as short as tens of meters away from where it is collected, or the distances can span a city, a country or even a continent as long as most fiber absorption losses and coupling losses can be minimized.
[0044] The embodiments of the invention described make use of a radical new approach that separates the process of harvesting sunlight from its immediate utilization or conversion to other forms of energy. Instead of the integrated approaches which have been developed in the past, the present approach separates the processes involved in solar energy harvesting and the use of that energy.
[0045]
[0046] Each collector module 200 may be designed to securely fit inside a holding substructure 103 in a manner to allow simple removal and replacement. Alternatively, a complete array of collector modules can be fabricated as a single structure which can easily be removed and replaced from the rack 105.
[0047] A single collector module 200 is shown in
[0048] Such a structure can be easily manufactured by casting from a single paraboidal mold. Alternatively, a large array of them arranged in the shape of the designed collector array 100 of
[0049] While a paraboloid collector module 200 is described herein, it will readily be appreciated that different shapes may be utilized. What is required is a collector module that is capable of receiving solar radiation, with optical components that guide the solar radiation to a light receiver in the form of an optical-fiber. In the present embodiment, a concave collection surface is provided which is reflective and which is configured to collect sun rays and to reflect them towards a location at which a mirror is mounted. The mirror receives sun rays reflected from the collection surface and redirects them to a light collection point where a light receiver such as an optical-fiber can be coupled. Any shape which satisfies these criteria, with any suitable optical guiding components may be utilized in accordance with the principles described herein.
[0050] In the embodiment described herein the solar collector apparatus comprises collector modules which utilize reflection to collect and guide the sunlight onto the light receiver. Once the principle of separately harvesting the sunlight at a collection location, and guiding it using optical fibers to a utilization location is understood, it will readily be appreciated that other alternatives may be available for collecting the sunlight. For example, sunlight may be collected using refractive rather than reflective optics. Refractive optics involves use of lenses alone. It would be possible to use arrays of convex lenses or Fresnel lenses to focus the light to a point where a fiber can be placed to capture it. Having said that, there may be advantages to utilizing reflective optics. Achieving the right precision on a large array of lenses involved in refractive optics may be harder than achieving the same precision using mirrors.
[0051] Furthermore, some lenses have a defect called chromatic aberration that may be unavoidable, while mirrors do not suffer from this. Another important consideration is weight. Conventional lenses need to have a thickness to refract light, which adds weight. A mirror on the other hand may be as thin as required. Unless, however, the lens is a meta-lens, which may be comprised of microscopically engineered surface features that permit fabrication of a flat lens for focusing of a certain wavelength band; full spectrum meta-lenses are still challenging to fabricate.
[0052] To enhance proper functioning, the concave inner lining of each module 200 in the collector array 100 should desirably be coated with a broadband high reflectivity film 209 or stack of films. The reflectivity for the inner lining 209 for each module 200 in the array could be 100% for sunlight wavelengths spanning the spectral range from 350 nm to 2500 nm. Most energy (about 95%) from the sun reaching earth is concentrated within this spectral band. The energy is distributed non-uniformly in the solar spectrum. It is estimated that about 4% is contained between 300 nm and 400 nm; 42% between 400 nm and 700 nm, and 52% between 700 nm and 2500 nm. In a fully assembled collector array, each module 200 in the array has a thin transparent glass cover 203 extending over the open area defined by the rim 211 of the dish; this may be made from lightweight, durable, and ultraviolet-resistant plastic material. The cover 203 serves the dual role of protecting the concave inner lining 209 of the module from the elements as well as acting as an input port for parallel incident solar radiation rays 204 and 205 into the collector module. Solar radiation rays, such as 204 and 205, are reflected from the inner lining 209 and, because of the particular parabolic curvature of the module, redirected toward the focal point 213 of each dish in the vicinity of the center of the cover glass. A perfect hyperboloid mirror reflector 202, attached to the center of the cover 203 and positioned in the vicinity of the dish focal point, retro-reflects and refocuses the light to the bottom of the dish to the collection region 207, below which is attached a fiber-optic waveguide 210 with an appropriate numerical aperture. Here, numerical aperture is defined as a dimensionless parameter that characterizes the range of angles of incident light rays that are successfully captured by the fiber and are thus readily transported along its length.
[0053] The fiber-optic waveguide 210 may be attached by any suitable mechanism. In one embodiment, a screw thread around a ferrule can be created at the fiber tip 230, and a corresponding threaded body 232 can be provided at the collection point 207 of the collector module such that the tip 230 of the fiber-optic strand can be screwed into the threaded region at the bottom of the module. Technology for securing optical-fibers to curved and planar surfaces is known and may be adapted for use herein.
[0054] The fiber-optic waveguide 210 may have a circular cross-section core waveguide 234 whose diameter may range from a minimum of 100 microns to 1 millimeter and whose cladding thickness can range between 150 microns and 1 millimeter. It will readily be appreciated that other dimensions may also be appropriate, depending on the context. In some examples, a fiber-optic waveguide for a single collector module could be capable of transporting a minimum of 10 W of sunlight for a distance of at least 1 km with minimal loss (<10 dB/km) over most of the spectral band in which the majority of solar energy is contained. Greater distances may be enabled depending on the context. Over the majority of the spectrum, the loss should be below 5 dB/km. For good performance and to maximize efficiency, the fiber-optic waveguides 210 should exhibit broadband transmission of sunlight beginning from the wavelength of 350 nm and ending at the wavelength of 2500 nm. The inventor has recognized certain spectral features of sunlight when considering the transportation requirements which have not hitherto been studied in depth; they have recognized that it is desirable that the sunlight transmission capability of the fiber between the wavelengths of 350 nm and 450 nm be greater than 20%, and between 450 nm and 700 nm, it should be greater than 85%, and between 700 nm and 1700 nm it should be 90% or greater, except for a narrow band of about 20 nm centered around the atmospheric water vapor absorption line at the wavelength of 1430 nm, where the transmission may dip to almost zero. This dip is of no consequence because there is little to no incident solar radiation at this wavelength due to atmospheric absorption of sunlight. The inventor has recognized that this is because the same absorption mechanisms (water molecules and hydroxyl ions) in the atmosphere are also present in the manufacture of glass fibers (from humidity in the air). Between the wavelengths of 1450 nm and 1900 nm, the fiber transmission should preferably be greater than 85%, and between 1900 nm and 2000 nm, it should preferably be better than 30%. For the remainder of the solar spectrum between 2000 nm and 2500 nm, the fiber transmission is expected to be between 15% and 20%. Low transmission in the last spectral region should not be a problem because the amount of solar energy carried in this portion of the spectrum is less than 1%. What is critical is that the spectral transmission characteristic of the fiber should closely follow the distribution of solar energy reaching earth as described above. This means that where there are dips in the solar energy spectrum reaching earth, the fiber may have similar dips in transmission since there is little energy to transmit. Overall, however, the delivery of sunlight through a fiber-optic waveguide should incur very little loss of light, certainly no more than 10 dB/km at worst but below 5 dB/km at best, over the spectral band in which most solar energy is contained.
[0055] There are a number of possible uses of sunlight transported in the manner described above. Reference will now be made to
[0056] This approach removes constraints of existing photovoltaic panels which integrate the sunlight gathering surface onto the conversion substrate, making it impossible to contemplate other uses of the collected sunlight or replacing any of the components when it is technically necessary.
[0057]
[0058] Details of how the light box interfaces with the solar cell chip are shown in the expanded view 400 of
[0059] While this might typically be a square or rectangle (for ease of manufacture), any suitable geometric shape could be utilized. Indeed, it is not essential that there is a precise match between the output surface of the diffuser and the active area of the solar chip, but it will readily be understood that it is much more efficient in terms of usage of the sunlight which has been transported through the fibers if this is the case.
[0060] In another embodiment, the diffused light from the fiber-optic waveguides 210 may be used to illuminate a panel of photovoltaic cells, such as is currently in use in external environments for the conversion of solar energy to electricity. The advantage derived from use of the apparatus described herein is that such a panel may be utilized indoors and therefore is not subject to environmental wear, as is currently the case. The current expectation is that illuminating photovoltaic panels of the known type may be less efficient than providing solar chips to capture the output of each light box, but that might not necessarily be the case.
[0061] Reverting back to the embodiment described herein,
[0062]
[0063] As shown in
[0064]
[0065] As shown in
[0066]
[0067] A ceramic carrier populated with a bank of solar cell chips is shown in
[0068] Some of the advantages of the scheme described in this invention should now be apparent to those skilled in the art. By separating the function of light collection from light transport, and the light collection process from the conversion process, one effectively makes the photovoltaic system future-proof. Technology advances and developments that impact performance improvements in new solar cell chips can be readily taken advantage of. All that is required is removal of the old cell bank 514 on which solar cells are carried. New chip carriers (with new solar cells of higher performance) can then be readily swapped in to replace the old ones.