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Solar Lecture

The document discusses solar energy and its potential. It notes that nearly all energy sources originate from the sun and provides examples. It also discusses concentrating solar power technologies and trends in solar cell efficiency. The document examines silicon solar cells and considerations around their sustainability and supply.

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Rida Hmouda
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
11 views

Solar Lecture

The document discusses solar energy and its potential. It notes that nearly all energy sources originate from the sun and provides examples. It also discusses concentrating solar power technologies and trends in solar cell efficiency. The document examines silicon solar cells and considerations around their sustainability and supply.

Uploaded by

Rida Hmouda
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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SOLAR

SOLAR POTENTIAL
ALL THINGS FROM SOLAR

 Interesting note: nearly all of our energy sources originated


from solar energy:
▪ Bio-mass/bio-fuels: Plants need the sun to grow.
▪ Coal, oil, natural gas: Solar energy used by plants which
became coal after billions of years and lots and lots of
pressure
▪ Wind: Uneven heating of the air by the sun causes some air to
heat and rise. Cool air then comes in and replaces the
warmer air.
▪ Ocean: Dependent partly on winds, which in turn depend on
the sun.
▪ Hydro-Electric: The sun heats up water evaporating it. When it
rains some of that water ends up behind damns.

 Notable exceptions:
▪ Nuclear energy: Uranium or other heavy metal (fission)
▪ Geothermal: Energy from the core of the Earth
THE POWER OF THE SUN (US)

 If 150 sq km of
Nevada was
covered with 15%
efficient solar
cells, it could
provide enough
electricity for the
entire country.

 What’s the
problem?

Source: M. McGehee, Stanford University


J.A. Turner, Science 285 1999, p. 687.
THE POWER OF THE SUN (WORLD)

 Insolation is a measure of solar radiation energy received on


a given surface area in a given time – measured in 𝑚𝑊2 .

On Earth’s sur face,


insolation depends on
location.
 Sahara desert:
250-300 𝑚𝑊2 avg
 United Kingdom:
1 25 𝑊
𝑚2
avg
 Santa Barbara:
200-250 𝑚𝑊2 avg
SNAPSHOTS OF SOLAR ENERGY
THROUGH HISTORY
 Early humans
▪ Sun for warmth, (tans?)
 ~ 5 th Century BC- Ancient Greece
▪ Local supplies of coal and wood dwindled,
rationed
▪ As a result, building of homes to maximize
solar energy (homes oriented towards
Southern horizon) and city planning
 ~ 1 st Century BC- Romans
▪ Transparent glass used as a heat trap—
”solar furnace”; greenhouses for plant
cultivation, Roman baths design
 ~Late 1800s- Augustine Mouchot
▪ First attempts at “solar engines” using
reflectors, mirrors transparent glass
▪ Practicality, economics ultimately doomed
these attempts
SNAPSHOTS OF SOLAR ENERGY
THROUGH HISTORY
 ~1800’s- Becquerel and Fritts
▪ Discovery that sunlight can produce electricity (Becquerel in 1839)
and invention of first solar cells from Selenium ( Fritts in 1884)
 ~1911- Frank Shuman
▪ Glass covered black pipes filled
with low boiling point liquid put at
the focus of trough-like reflectors
▪ Trials in Egypt
▪ Death of Shuman, discovery of
cheap oil ultimately doomed
projects.
 1954- Bell Labs discovery of Si solar cell
▪ 6% efficient initially!
▪ Not cost effective, but space applications breath life into industry
and keep it going.
SNAPSHOTS OF SOLAR ENERGY
THROUGH HISTORY
 1970s - Upsurge of interest in solar energy
▪ OPEC oil embargo causes sharp increase in
oil prices
▪ President Jimmy Carter installs solar panels
on the White House roof.
 1986 - Af ter reduction in oil prices, sharp "In the year 2000, this solar
fall in public interest and political will. water heater behind me, which
▪ Removal of solar panels from White House is being dedicated today, will
by Reagan administration. still be here supplying cheap,
efficient energy.“
 If there was no longer any interest (funding)
Jimmy Carter
in solar energy, why did scientists keep
working on them?
▪ Space Travel?
 Are we again doomed to repeat these
boom/bust cycles of interest in solar? What
would it take for solar to stay interesting?
SOLAR TODAY

Two broad categories

1. Passive Solar
▪ Using sunlight without any
electrical or mechanical systems
▪ Appropriate building design,
heat storage, passive cooling.

2. Active Solar for electricity generation


▪ Concentrating Solar Power (CSP)
▪ Using mechanical/optical means to focus sunlight.
▪ Use heat to drive engine (e.g. steam turbine)
▪ Photovoltaics (PV)
▪ Converts sunlight directly into electricity
CONCENTRATING SOLAR POWER

Parabolic Trough
Fresnel Reflectors

Power Tower Solar Dishes


CONCENTRATED SOLAR POWER

Started
Size Now Who the sell
Project Producing Type
(Proposed) energy to
Electricity
Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating 2014 392 MW Power Tower Edison and SDG&E
System  Total
Solar Energy Generating Systems 1991 364 WM Parabolic Trough Edison Concentrated
(SEGS) (9 sites)
Solar Power:
Mojave Solar Project  2014 280 MW Parabolic Trough PG&E
1.3 GW
Genesis Solar Energy Center  2014 250 MW Parabolic Trough PG&E

Kimberlina  2008 5 MW Fresnel Reflector California


ISO

Ivanpah Kimberlina
CELLS, PANELS, AND ARRAYS

Solar Panel (a.k.a. Module)


Solar Cell

Image credit: JMP.blog, via Dave Horne Photography

Solar Array Solar Farm


SOLAR IN THE US
MINI-LAB: MORE FUN WITH LEDS

ℎ𝑐
𝐸=
𝜆
PN-JUNCTION – NO VOLTAGE APPLIED

holes
electrons

n-type p-type
P-N JUNCTION IN A SOLAR CELL

Photon hits depletion


zone and separates an
electron from a hole.
Electric field sends
electron to n-type side
and hole to p-type side.
n-type p-type
Electron travels through the
circuit and recombines with
hole on p-type side.
PHOTOVOLTAIC CELL

Silicon Solar Cell uses Si doped with Phosphorus for n-type material,
Si dopes with Boron for p-type material.
SOLAR CELL EFFICIENCY

 Insolation is a measure of solar radiation energy received on


a given surface area in a given time – measured in 𝑚𝑊2 .

On Earth’s sur face,


insolation depends on
location.
 Sahara desert:
250-300 𝑚𝑊2 avg
 United Kingdom:
1 25 𝑊
𝑚2
avg
 Santa Barbara:
200-250 𝑚𝑊2 avg
SOLAR CELL EFFICIENCY

Efficiency = percentage of radiant energy (light) used to


produce electricity

𝑈𝑠𝑒𝑓𝑢𝑙 𝐸𝑛𝑒𝑟𝑔𝑦 𝑃𝑟𝑜𝑑𝑢𝑐𝑒𝑑


𝐸𝑓𝑓𝑖𝑐𝑒𝑛𝑐𝑦 = 100%
𝑇𝑜𝑡𝑎𝑙 𝐸𝑛𝑒𝑟𝑔𝑦

𝑃𝑜𝑤𝑒𝑟𝑑𝑒𝑣𝑖𝑐𝑒
𝐸𝑓𝑓𝑖𝑐𝑖𝑒𝑛𝑐𝑦 = 100% 𝑃𝑜𝑤𝑒𝑟 = 𝑉 ∙ 𝐼 (units of power are Watts (W))
𝑃𝑜𝑤𝑒𝑟𝑠𝑢𝑛

 What is the ef ficiency of a solar cell based on the following


measurements?
▪ Insolation = 200 𝑚𝑊2 0.5 m
▪ Panel voltage = 15 Volts
▪ Panel Current = 1 Amp 1m

Note: 1 Watt = 1 Volt * 1 Amp


SOLAR CELL EFFICIENCY

 First Selenium solar cells were about 0.5% efficient.


 1954 Bell Labs – Silicon Solar Cell was 6% efficient.

 Today’s Silicon solar cells are around 20% efficient.


 In 2014 Panasonic broke efficiency record with their 25.6% efficient solar
sell.
 Silicon solar cells have a theoretical limit of about 33% efficiency.
SILICON SOLAR CELLS

 Sustainability/supply of
materials/manufacturability?
▪ Si, 2 nd most abundant element—28% of
the earth’s crust
▪ We get Si from SiO 2 (basically sand) and
purify it in very large, expensive facilities
called foundries.
▪ Supply of purified Si is keeping costs high right now.
▪ until more Si foundries come online in next couple of years

 Other drawbacks
▪ Si is brittle like glass, will break if it falls.
▪ Si is fairly light and thin, but because it’s brittle, needs to be
enclosed in Al framing and casing to provide support → end
result is fairly bulky and heavy.
WHAT’S THE CATCH

 Energy Critical Elements (ECE): e.g. Indium, Gallium, Tellurium


▪ No problem in supply. Problem with availability.
 ECEs are byproducts. Challenge to extract from other mineral.
▪ Gallium is obtained as a by -product of aluminum and zinc processing.
▪ Germanium is typically derived as a by -product of zinc, lead, or copper
refining.
▪ Indium is a by-product of zinc, copper, or tin processing.
▪ Selenium and tellurium are most often by -products of copper refining.
• To recover 1 gram of Te, you need to mine 1 ton of Copper.

 Located in inconvenient places – e,g., China produces the vast


majority of these elements.

▪ Environmental concerns
▪ Social concerns
▪ Political concerns
THE PV CONTENDERS

 Silicon (Si) Solar Cells—90%


of the market
▪ Single Crystalline Si
▪ Multi-crystalline Si

 Thin-film solar
▪ Amorphous Silicon
▪ Cadmium Telluride (CdTe)
▪ Copper-Indium-Gallium-Selenide (CIGS)
▪ Organic solar cells

 Other more exotic materials, more


advanced designs
▪ Limited to space applications because
of high expense ~$50,000 / sq m.
▪ Record is 47.1% efficiency in the
laboratory.
AMORPHOUS SI/CDTE/CIGS

MC Si
Thin Film Si
CIGS
CdTe (cheapest)

 Efficiency is around 10 – 20%.


 Cheaper than Si and multi-crystalline solar cells.
 Light, thin, and durable.
AMORPHOUS SI/CDTE/CIGS

CIGS

Amorphous Si CdTe (cheapest)


ORGANIC

 Printable
 Efficiency is around 6%.
 Very Cheap (experts estimate they can reduce cost by ~15%)
 Light, thin, and durable.
A BRIEF LOOK AT ADVANCED METHODS
+ -
Grid

Solar radiant energy: visible light (44.6%), infrared (46.3%) light, n GaAs
AlInP n
and some UV (9.1%) light n
p
Material
GaInP (1.90 eV) 1
Exotic materials and advanced construction methods used to
AlGaInP Absorbs best p
make solar cell with 47% efficiency (in the laboratory). p++
at 650 nm n++
GaInP n
n
p

GaAs (1.42 eV)


Material 2
GaInP p
Absorbs best p++

GaAs:N:Bi
at 870 nm n++
n
n
p
Material 3
GaAs:N:Bi (1.05 eV)
Best at 1181 nm p
GaAs:N:Bi
p++
n++
Material 4 n
p
Absorbs best
Ge Substrate (0.67 eV)
Goal is 50% efficiency in the next few years! at 1850 nm
THE GRID TODAY

From www.gridwise.org
ELECTRICIT Y SUPPLY AND DEMAND

 In the power grid, supply must match


demand at all times or the grid will
become unstable.
▪ There is no way to store extra electricity for later.

 How to meet changing demand?

 How does solar complicate the grid?


T YPE OF POWER GENERATED

 Electricity in the power grid is alternating current.

 Solar cells generate direct current.

 When solar cells are hooked up to the grid,


direct current must be converted to alternating
current using an inverter.

 Phases of different AC power sources must be


synchronized.
WHEN THINGS GO WRONG…
THE SMART GRID

From www.gridwise.org

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