Infrared transmissive concentrated photovoltaics for coupling solar electric energy conversion to solar thermal energy utilization
20180212091 ยท 2018-07-26
Assignee
Inventors
- Matthew David Escarra (New Orleans, LA, US)
- Benjamin Lewson (New Orleans, LA, US)
- Yaping JI (New Orleans, LA, US)
- Qi Xu (New Orleans, LA, US)
- Adam Ollanik (Boulder, CO, US)
Cpc classification
H02S40/44
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/02168
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/0547
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/0693
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/0488
ELECTRICITY
Y02E10/52
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
Y02E10/544
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
Y02E10/60
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
H01L31/0521
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01L31/052
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/0693
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/054
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
The use of photovoltaic (PV) cells to convert solar energy to electricity is becoming increasingly prevalent; however, there are still significant limitations associated with the widespread adoption of PV cells for electricity needs. There is a clear need for a high efficiency solar power system that supplies electricity at a competitive cost and that provides for an on-demand supply of electricity as well as energy storage. By combining aspects of concentrated solar power and concentrated photovoltaics, the present invention provides a device that enables the conversion of sunlight to electricity at very high efficiencies and that enables the transmission of thermal energy to heat storage devices for later use. The disclosed device enables transmissive CPV through the use of a multijunction PV cell mounted on a transparent base. The use of a multijunction cell allows for highly efficient absorption of light above the bandgap of the lowest bandgap subcell. The transparent base permits transmission of a high percentage of the remaining light below the bandgap of the lowest bandgap subcell. The present invention also discloses a method of generating electricity through the use of a transmissive CPV device. Sunlight is concentrated onto one or more surfaces of the device. High energy light is absorbed by a multijunction PV cell and converted directly to electricity, while low energy light is transmitted through the device into a thermal storage device, which may then be coupled to a heat engine to generate dispatchable electricity.
Claims
1. A transmissive concentrated photovoltaic device comprising: a substrate; and at least two photovoltaic subcells, wherein each of said two or more photovoltaic subcells is comprised of materials with an absorption bandgap; wherein said two or more photovoltaic subcells are positioned on said substrate.
2. The device of claim 1 wherein the absorption bandgap of each respective photovoltaic subcell of said two or more photovoltaic cells is different from the absorption bandgap of each of the other respective photovoltaic subcells of said two or more photovoltaic subcells.
3. The device of claim 2, wherein said at least two photovoltaic subcells comprise three photovoltaic subcells.
4. The device of claim 3, wherein said three photovoltaic subcells are comprised of materials with respective bandgaps of about 2.20 eV, about 1.8 eV and about 1.51 eV.
5. The device of claim 4, wherein said about 2.20 eV bandgap subcell is comprised of AlGaInP.
6. The device of claim 4, wherein the about 1.80 eV subcell is comprised of InGaP.
7. The device of claim 4, wherein the about 1.51 eV subcell is comprised of AlGaAs.
8. The device of claim 1, wherein the at least two photovoltaic subcells are arranged in a vertical stack having a top and a bottom.
9. The device of claim 8, further comprising a superstrate, wherein said substrate is positioned on the bottom of said vertical stack and said superstrate is positioned on the top of said vertical stack.
10. The device of claim 1, wherein the at least two photovoltaic subcells are connected to the substrate with an adhesive.
11. The device of claim 10, wherein the adhesive is an optical adhesive.
12. The device of claim 10, wherein the adhesive is selected from the group comprising transparent liquid photopolymer optical adhesives, mercapto-esters, and chalcogenide materials.
13. The device of claim 1, wherein the substrate is connected to the at least two photovoltaic subcells with a direct wafer bond.
14. The device of claim 1, further comprising one or more encapsulant materials positioned either above, below, or above and below the at least two subcells.
15. The device of claim 14, further comprising an anti-reflection coating applied on the one or more encapsulant materials.
16. The device of claim 1, wherein the substrate is transparent to infrared light.
17. The device of claim 16, wherein the substrate comprises high infrared transparency glass.
18. The device of claim 17, wherein the high infrared transparency glass transmits light with at least a range from about 800 nm to about 5 microns.
19. The device of claim 1, wherein the substrate is infrared-grade fused silica.
20. The device of claim 1, wherein the substrate is selected from the group consisting of CaF.sub.2, MgF.sub.2, and ZnSe.
21. The device of claim 1, further comprising an anti-reflection coating applied to either side of, or both sides of, the substrate.
22. The device of claim 1, further comprising a frame, such that the substrate is positioned within, or on top of, the frame.
23. The device of claim 22, wherein the frame is metal.
24. The device of claim 1, further comprising a cooling mechanism.
25. The device of claim 24, wherein the cooling mechanism is selected from the group comprising air cooling, water cooling, passive cooling and fluid cooling.
26. The device of claim 1, further comprising contacts between each of the at least two subcells and the substrate, such that the contacts are recessed in each subcell and are planar with the substrate.
27. The device of claim 1 further comprising interconnects, wherein the at least two subcells are connected with said interconnects to form a module.
28. A transmissive concentrated photovoltaic device comprising: a substrate; a plurality of multijunction photovoltaic cells arranged on the surface of said substrate; a superstrate placed on a side of said plurality of multijunction photovoltaic cells opposite of said substrate.
29. The device of claim 28, wherein each of said plurality of multijunction photovoltaic cells is capable of producing a voltage and a current, and wherein said plurality of multijunction photovoltaic cells are connected such that moving along a first side of said device, the voltage produced by a given multijunction PV cell along said first side is added with the voltage produced by each of the other multijunction PV cells along said first side while the currents produced by said multijunction PV cells along said first side are matched, and that moving along a second, adjacent side of the device, the voltages produced by each multijunction PV cell along said second side are match while the currents produced by each multijunction PV cell along said second side are added together.
30. The device of claim 28, wherein each multijunction photovoltaic cell of said plurality of multijunction photovoltaic cells comprises a triple junction photovoltaic cell.
31. The device of claim 28, further comprising: a plurality of collection fingers, wherein said plurality of collection fingers comprise conductive leads patterned onto a surface of each multijunction photovoltaic cell of said plurality of multijunction photovoltaic cells; a plurality of busbars; a plurality of internconnection leads; and a contact pad; wherein each busbar of said plurality of busbars comprises a conductive path between a collection finger of said plurality of collection fingers and an interconnection lead of said plurality of internconnection leads; and, wherein each interconnection lead of said plurality of internconnection leads comprises a conductive path between a busbar of said plurality of busbars and said contact pad.
32. The device of claim 31, wherein said plurality of multijunction photovoltaic cells are arranged on said substrate in a two dimensional array having a first axis and a second axis.
33. The device of claim 32, wherein said array comprises at least four rows along said first axis and four rows along said second axis.
34. The device of claim 33, wherein at least one of said rows along said first axis includes a number of cells which is less than a number of cells in a different one of said rows along said first axis, and wherein at least one of said rows along said second axis includes a number of cells which is less than a number of cells in a different one of said rows along said second axis.
35. The device of claim 33 further comprising an array center, wherein no cell is located at said array center.
36. The device of claim 28, wherein said plurality of multijunction photovoltaic cells is arranged such that a gap between the respective multijunction photovoltaic cells of said plurality of multijunction photovoltaic cells is sufficient to transmit light through the substrate of the device without that light having passed through any of said multijunction photovoltaic cells.
37. The device of claim 28, wherein said plurality of multijunction photovoltaic cells is arranged such that a gap between the respective multijunction photovoltaic cells of said plurality of multijunction photovoltaic cells is minimized so that minimal to no light can pass through the substrate without first passing through one of said multijunction photovoltaic cells.
38. A photovoltaic system, comprising: a solar concentrator optic; and, a focal point module, said focal point module comprising a concentrated photovoltaic module and a thermal receiver.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0017] The following drawings form part of the present specification and are included to further demonstrate certain aspects of the present invention. The invention may be better understood by reference to one or more of these drawings in combination with the description of specific embodiments presented herein.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0042] Detailed descriptions of one or more preferred embodiments are provided herein. It is to be understood, however, that the present invention may be embodied in various forms. Therefore, specific details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but rather as a basis for the claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to employ the present invention in any appropriate manner.
[0043] Wherever any of the phrases for example, such as, including and the like are used herein, the phrase and without limitation is understood to follow unless explicitly stated otherwise. Similarly an example, exemplary and the like are understood to be non-limiting.
[0044] The term substantially allows for deviations from the descriptor that do not negatively impact the intended purpose. Descriptive terms are understood to be modified by the term substantially even if the word substantially is not explicitly recited. Therefore, for example, the phrase wherein the lever extends vertically means wherein the lever extends substantially vertically so long as a precise vertical arrangement is not necessary for the lever to perform its function.
[0045] The terms comprising and including and having and involving (and similarly comprises, includes, has, and involves) and the like are used interchangeably and have the same meaning. Specifically, each of the terms is defined consistent with the common United States patent law definition of comprising and is therefore interpreted to be an open term meaning at least the following, and is also interpreted not to exclude additional features, limitations, aspects, etc. Thus, for example, a process involving steps a, b, and c means that the process includes at least steps a, b and c. Wherever the terms a or an are used, one or more is understood, unless such interpretation is nonsensical in context.
[0046] For the purposes of this application, where the term CPV module is used, unless a specific reference number is used, such term refers equally to the general category of CPV modules described herein, including without limitation, CPV modules 100, 101, 103, 220, 310, 510, 1310, 1410, 1510, 1810, 2010 and 2118, or any other similar devices described herein. Moreover, the terms CPV module and transmissive CPV module are interchangeable.
[0047] In one embodiment (not shown), the present invention provides a multijunction PV cell with at least two subcells of different bandgaps. Bandgaps for each subcell may range from about 1.4 eV to about 2.3 eV or may be outside this preferred range. In another embodiment, shown in
[0048] In some embodiments, the present invention includes one or more encapsulant materials 140 positioned above and/or below the multijunction PV 105 (see, e.g.,
[0049] In some embodiments, the multijunction PV 105 cell is positioned on a substrate 160. In one embodiment, substrate 160 comprises high infrared transparency glass. In said embodiment, the high infrared transparency glass substrate 160 demonstrates high thermal conductivity and mechanical stability. In some embodiments, the high transparency glass may transmit light in a wavelength range from about 400 nm to about 5 microns. In other embodiments, the high transparency glass may transmit light with at least a range from about 800 nm to about 2.5 microns. As shown in
[0050] In some embodiments, the multijunction PV cell 105 is secured to the substrate with an adhesive 170 (and, optical adhesive 170 can also be considered an encapsulant as discussed above). In an embodiment, the adhesive 170 comprises a transparent liquid photopolymer optical adhesive. In another embodiment, the optical adhesive 170 comprises a mercapto-ester. In other embodiments, the adhesive 170 comprises chalcogenide materials or any other suitable materials with high transparency for out-of-band light, strong and stable adhesion, and high thermal conductivity. In some embodiments, the multijunction PV cell 105 is secured to the substrate 160 via a direct wafer bond (not shown). In an exemplary embodiment, an intermediate optical anti-reflection coating 150 is applied to the multijunction PV cell 105 to work in tandem with the adhesive 170.
[0051] In an alternative embodiment, shown in
[0052] In some embodiments, the CPV module may incorporate passive cooling, with PV cells (such as PV cells 350) spaced a sufficient distance apart such that the substrate (such as substrate 357) dissipates the heat generated in said PV cells 350 without an active or power-consuming cooling method. In other embodiments, the cooling mechanism may be passively integrated into the CPV module at the focal point of a CPV system (such as CPV module 310) by using highly thermally conductive superstrate and substrate materials (such as sapphire) to laterally extract heat to heat sinks attached on either side of the CPV module 310 (such as fins 190 shown in
[0053] In an embodiment, the contacts (such as contacts 390) on the substrate side for each subcell (such as subcells 371, 372 and 373) are recessed in each cell and are planar with the substrate (such as substrate 357). In another embodiment, the contacts (such as contacts 390) are not planar with the substrate (such as substrate 357). In some embodiments, wire bonding (as described below in connection with
[0054] In
[0055] In one embodiment, the smaller multijunction PV cells 210 are triple junction cells. In some embodiments, smaller multijunction PV cells 210 are arranged such that the gap 290 between each cell is sufficient to transmit the full solar spectrum, including in-band (i.e., light within the absorption band of the multijunction PV cells) and out-of-band light (i.e., light outside of the absorption band of the multijunction PV cells), through the substrate 260 of the device. This enables more light to be directed to a thermal receiver and storage system (not shown) mounted behind module 200 and enables easier dissipation of heat generated in the cells 210. In other embodiments, the multijunction PV cells 210 are arranged such that the gap 290 between each cell 210 is minimized so that minimal to no visible light can pass through the module 220 without first passing through one of the cells 210. We speculate that an optical bypass (OB) (i.e., the percentage of the surface area of a given CPV module 220 that is not occupied by a multijunction PV cell 210) in the range of 30% to 50% is preferred.
[0056] In some embodiments, such as that shown in
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[0058] In some embodiments, the reflector 312 is not perfectly smooth or uniform (and, thus is not ideal).
[0059] In an exemplary embodiment, the present invention provides a method of converting some solar energy to electricity while transmitting other solar energy to an energy conversion and/or storage system. Referring to system 300 of
[0060] Experimental
[0061] Fabrication
[0062] One embodiment of the transmissive CPV module (such as CPV module 310) may be fabricated as follows. Multiple junction III-V photovoltaic heterostructures are grown from precursors such as solid or metal-organic column III and column V materials epitaxially on GaAs or Ge substrates using metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD), molecular beam epitaxy (MBE), or related epitaxial growth techniques. These epitaxially grown materials are then processed into PV cells (such as cells 350). First, top metallic contacts (such as contacts 390) are patterned on the surface of the epitaxial growth and the contact layer material in the III-V epitaxy is preferentially removed where there is no contact metallization performed on the epitaxial wafers; in some embodiments, this may require a thermal annealing step to achieve low contact resistance. Next, the cells (such as cells 350) are protected by a photoresist or related material, and the spaces between said cells are etched through to the GaAs substrate underneath. Then, the triple junction cell epitaxial material is removed from the GaAs or Ge substrate via epitaxial liftoff, using a black wax handle or other removable handle. Epitaxial liftoff is accomplished by etching through a release layer (e.g., AlAs) using a highly selective etchant such as hydrofluoric acid. The black wax handle is then removed (a GaAs, glass, or similar handle may also be used).
[0063] The opposing side of the photovoltaic cells 350 are then patterned with a metallic grid (such as contacts 390), again removing the contact epitaxial layer where it is not needed and annealing as necessary. Ideally, the front and back metallic grids on either side of the cells (such as busbars 240) are co-aligned to minimize shadowing of light passing through said cells. An intermediate optical anti-reflection coating (such as coating 150) is applied to this side, which is designed to work in tandem with an optical adhesive or encapsulant (see
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[0065] An array, such as array 385, is formed from a set of isolated cells 350, with appropriate contacts between elements formed via metallic interconnects 360 patterned onto the substrate. Bypass diodes (not shown) are integrated as necessary behind (or near) the photovoltaic cells 350 in order to minimize losses related to partial shadowing of the module 310. Finally, the wiring is completed. An encapsulating layer (such as encapsulant 140) is deposited via spinning or another means onto the array of cells 350 mounted on the substrate 357. An infrared transparent superstrate (such as superstrate 180) is then attached to the top of array 385. An anti-reflection coating 150 may also be applied to the backside of the substrate (see as surface 162) and/or to the topside of the superstrate (see surface 182). The array 385 is then framed as necessary for integration into a larger energy conversion system (for example, see module 318, including CPV module 310, as shown
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[0074] Current Matching and Focal Point Drift
[0075] One of the major challenges in designing compact CPV modules of the type described herein is to maintain current matching between array elements connected in series. Current matching is especially important in situations where the focal point of a reflector that is part of a sunlight concentration system (such as system 300) drifts, thereby causing some PV cell array elements in a series of connected array elements to receive less light than other array elements in that same series of connected array elements. For example,
[0076] An embodiment designed to mitigate the problems caused by focal point drift is shown in
[0077] In an alternative embodiment designed to mitigate the problems caused by focal point drift, active circuit control is employed to regroup array elements contained within a given PV module in order to group cells with similar current outputs into strings with similar voltage and, thus, minimize current and voltage mismatch issues as the focal spot wanders. Specifically, the individual array elements cells are actively rewired into new groups by an array of MOSFET's (see MOSFET's 1931, 1932, 1933 and 1934) activated by an embedded microcontroller running a custom sorting and measuring program. A PSPICE model of an exemplary active control circuit is shown in
[0078] The following algorithm is an example of code used to run a microcontroller as described in the preceding paragraph (where the following code is modified from native microcontroller code to run in Java). In the context of the circuit diagram of
TABLE-US-00001 import processing.core.*; import processing.data.*; import processing.event.*; import processing.opengl.*; import java.util.HashMap; import java.util.ArrayList; import java.io.File; import java.io.BufferedReader; import java.io.PrintWriter; import java.io.InputStream; import java.io.OutputStream; import java.io.IOException; public class ActiveRewireSim_v2_1 extends PApplet { PFont f; int cellCt = 24;//totla number of cells int cellW = 6;//number of columns int cellH = 4;//number of rows int cellR = 40;//cell radius(only for simulation) int [ ]xCell = new int[cellCt];//x values of cells int [ ]yCell = new int[cellCt];//y values float [ ]dCell = new float[cellCt];//distance to sun spot float[ ][ ] distMat = new float[2][cellCt]; //combined distance and number assignment public void setup( ){ size(100*(cellW+1),100*(cellH+1)); background(0); f = createFont(Serif,32,true); for(int i = 1; i < (cellW+1); i++){//create cells/coordinates for(int j = 1; j < (cellH+1); j++){ int cellPos = ((j1)*cellW)+i1; xCell[cellPos] = 100*i; yCell[cellPos] = 100*j; } } } public void draw( ){ background(0); textFont(f,20); fill(255); textAlign(CENTER, CENTER); text(Color indicates current group. Red = HIGH, Black = LOW,width/2,20); text(Mouse indicates center of illumination.,width/2,50); text(Numbers are proximity ranking.,width/2,height-40); for(int i = 0; i < cellCt; i++){//calculate distance to sun spot float xDiffS = sq(abs(xCell[i] mouseX)); float yDiffS = sq(abs(yCell[i] mouseY)); dCell[i] = sqrt(xDiffS + yDiffS); } for(int i = 0; i<cellCt; i++){//create record of distance distMat[0][i] = dCell[i]; distMat[1][i] = i; } float[ ][ ] distSort = sortRowTop(distMat, cellCt);//sort by distance for(int i = 0; i<cellCt; i++){//determine coloring/wiring if(i < cellCt/4){ stroke(255); fill(255,0,0); cellR = 47; } elseif(i < cellCt/2){ stroke(255); fill(255,150,0); cellR = 37; } elseif(i < 3*cellCt/4){ stroke(255); fill(200,200,0); cellR = 32; } else{ stroke(255); fill(25,10,0); cellR = 27; } //Draws cells and colrs/sizes by proximity to sun spot int intTop = PApplet.parseInt(distSort[1][i]); ellipse(xCell[intTop],yCell[intTop],cellR,cellR); fill(255); text(i+1,xCell[intTop],yCell[intTop]); } stroke(255,128,0); fill(255,200,0); ellipse(mouseX,mouseY,25,25);//Draw sun spot
[0079] In another alternative embodiment designed to mitigate the problems caused by focal point drift, a small, two-axis stepper motor could be placed between the transmissive CPV and the support struts such that said motor could automatically realign the CPV module to keep the focal point of the reflector centered on the CPV.
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[0081] Electrical and Optical Physics and Losses
[0082] When a thin multijunction PV cell mounted on high infrared transparent substrate is positioned in the path of concentrated light, the PV cell absorbs all of the high energy light above the bandgap of the lowest bandgap subcell (the in-band light) and transmits most of the remaining low energy light (the out-of-band light) (see, e.g., graph in
[0083] A CPV module could utilize single junction cells, dual junction cells, or triple junction cells. Quadruple junction cells may also be possible. The CPV module may utilize more than four junctions, including both epitaxially grown multijunction cells and multijunction cells that stack non-epitaxial junctions together into a monolithically integrated device stack (for example, by wafer bonding). The determination of which type of cell to use involves a complex optimization that takes into consideration other system losses and the performance and needs of a thermal storage device and a system for deploying the stored thermal energy. The use of additional junctions in the cell minimizes thermalization in the CPV converter.
[0084] III-V cell materials are well established as the highest-performing solar cell material, due to high material quality, direct bandgaps across the solar spectrum, and high external radiative efficiency (ERE). About 2.20 eV is a high yet realistic target for a direct band-gap III-V material lattice-matched to GaAs. The nitride material system is another option to convert high energy photons efficiently, as nitrides can attain much higher energy direct bandgaps.
[0085] A 2.20 eV junction may be formed from AlGaInP lattice-matched to GaAs. To achieve proper current matching and utilize realistic GaAs lattice-matched materials, the other two junctions may be InGaP at 1.80 eV and AlGaAs at 1.51 eV. The energy cut-off at 1.51 eV between light converted by the PV cell and light transmitted to a thermal storage device is an important parameter for system optimization. The expected out-of-band transmission losses are shown in Table 1.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 1 Out-of-band transmission losses Additional losses: Absorption in encapsulant 2.0% Reflection at surface of CPV cell 2.5% Reflection/absorption at front contact grid 4.0% Free carrier absorption in cell 0.6% Reflection/absorption at back contact grid 2.0% Reflection at CPV-glass interface 3.0% Optical adhesive between cell and glass 1.0% (absorption/scattering) Absorption in glass substrate 1.5% Relfection at glass-air interface 3.0% Total transmission of below 1.51 eV light 82%
[0086] Assuming 500 concentration of light directed to the CPV, with 2.5% of incoming light reflected from the front of the cell: [0087] For the 2.20 eV subcell (assuming 90% absorption and 0.1% ERE): P.sub.max=6.79W/cm.sup.2 [0088] For the 1.80 eV subcell (assuming 90% absorption and 10% ERE): P.sub.max=5.29W/cm.sup.2 [0089] For the 1.51 eV subcell (assuming 90% absorption and 1% ERE): P.sub.max=4.15 W/cm.sup.2
[0090] Total power from current-matched subcells: 16.23*0.975=15.82 W/cm.sup.2
[0091] Total power in the solar spectrum above 1.51 eV: Power.sub.1.51 eV=26.41 W/cm.sup.2
[0092] Total in-band efficiency of triple junction cell for light above 1.51 eV:
[0093] CPV.sub.eff=59.9%
[0094] These expected performance values are derived from detailed balance calculations derated using realistic external radiative efficiency (ERE) and percent absorption values for each bandgap. The targeted current density, voltage, and fill factor for each subcell are shown in Table 2a. Table 2b shows the same values for a dual junction cell using bandgaps that are less risky, demonstrating that a high in-band conversion efficiency of 57.1% is attainable.
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 2a High risk triple junction subcell Bandgap (ERE) P.sub.max [W/cm.sup.2] J.sub.sc [A/cm.sup.2] V.sub.oc [V] Fill Factor 2.22 eV (0.1%) 6.39 3.67 1.88 0.927 1.80 eV (10%) 5.35 3.67 1.59 0.917 1.50 eV (1%) 4.08 3.67 1.24 0.899 Total power in-band = 26.62 W/cm.sup.2 Efficiency = 59.4%
TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 2b Medium risk dual junction subcell Bandgap (ERE) P.sub.max [W/cm.sup.2] J.sub.sc [A/cm.sup.2] V.sub.oc [V] Fill Factor 2.05 eV (0.1%) 7.87 4.96 1.72 0.923 1.585 eV (4%) 6.14 4.96 1.36 0.906 Total power in-band = 24.52 W/cm.sup.2 Efficiency = 57.1%
[0095] Temperature and Cooling
[0096] At 500 suns, in-band (above 1.51 eV) incoming solar power density is 26.41 W/cm.sup.2. If the PV cells are 59.9% efficient in-band, heat generated from in-band light is 10.59 W/cm.sup.2. At 500 suns, out-of-band (below 1.51 eV) incoming solar power density is 18.59 W/cm.sup.2. If approximately 15% of this light is absorbed in the CPV device, heat generated from out-of-band light is 2.79 W/cm.sup.2. The total heat from inefficient conversion/transmission of light is 13.38 W/cm.sup.2; for an 18 cm by 18 cm module with close packing of subcells, 4,335 W of heat will be generated in the CPV device. For ease of calculations, it is assumed that approximately 5 kWt of heat needs to be removed in a 5 kWe CPV device.
[0097] Air, water or other cooling systems may be used to dissipate the resultant heat in the CPV device. In one embodiment, an air cooling system may involve an air curtain that efficiently drives air over the CPV device through a linear array of small high-intensity fans. In other embodiments, integrated water cooling in the shadow of the subcell's busbars may be used so as not to obscure the transmission of infrared light through the CPV device. As previously described, a water curtain may be used if the cooling fluid has very low absorption of out of band light. If subcells are spaced sufficiently apart in the module and heat can be dissipated in the substrate, active cooling may not be necessary, and passive cooling will suffice.
[0098] The transmissive CPV device operates at about 110 degrees Celsius or below. This is an important distinction from other technologies that couple CPV with solar thermal energy generation, where the excess heat generated by the CPV is directly harvested, and the CPV operates at much higher temperatures (e.g. 200 degrees Celsius or above), or the thermal energy generation is at much lower temperatures (e.g., 200 degrees Celsius or below). The present invention can attain temperatures approaching 600 degrees Celsius or even higher in the thermal storage medium. In those coupled thermal energy harvesting systems, fluid is directed near the CPV to extract heat directly into the thermal energy generation and storage system. The downside of this approach is that the CPV operates with significantly reduced performance at high temperatures, and the system is much less efficient than the system proposed here. The transmissive CPV of the present invention operates at about 110 C or below and is designed to keep the CPV device thermally isolated from the thermal storage device, which in turn can operate at its preferred, much higher, temperatures for optimal thermal storage and energy conversion to electricity.