This invention relates generally to field of solar energy and solar collectors and more particularly relates to the efficient spatial and spectral concentration of sunlight throughout daily and seasonal changes.
Communities and individual electrical power users located in cold climates comprise more than twenty-five percent of the North American population. In adverse weather during the months of winter, late fall, early spring months, the availability of electrical power is both a productivity and life-critical requirement and the energy supply chains are vulnerable. Unless long distance power transmission lines are both available and operating, isolated users in northern latitudinal climates depend on fossil fuel generators and stored fuel supplies. Transportation costs for getting fossil fuel into these isolated areas results in high energy costs. Community power organizations and larger end users require installations with continuous average power availability ranging between ten kilowatts for the average single home in the United States in 2006 and ten megawatts representing the legislative limit for many community power distribution cooperatives.
Farmers, small rural communities, local power distribution cooperatives and firms in cold climates have increased regulatory and contractual capability for small-scale, renewable power generation. Industrial and military programs must meet power needs of isolated bases without the dangerous trucking and shipment of high volatility fossil fuels. National Science Foundation (NSF) efforts in Antarctica and comparable places now rely on seasonal fuel deliveries at great expense.
Conventional renewable energy alternatives to fossil fuel generators depend on water flow, wind or solar illumination. Water flow, hydroelectric power, is cost effective when the users are at a reasonable distance from hydro-power generators so that long distance transmission lines are not required. In cold climates, seasonal variations in the sun's angle range nearly ninety degrees from just below the horizon to nearly overhead. A stationary lens with convex optical properties is not able to effectively concentrate light. If wind and solar energy are the primary and not the supplementary source of energy, there is the risk of not being able to meet instantaneous power demands. Wind power, moreover, loses efficiency when scaling down, imposes undesirable noise when sited close to load centers, and takes a toll on avian wildlife, preventing implementation on some migratory routes.
Solar energy using collectors having thin film cells reduce cost but at the expense of efficiency and area required. Techniques for high efficiency solar cells are known in niche industries such as earth-orbiting spacecraft but at significant cost premium.
Communities and electrical power users in cold climates would benefit from solar power systems suited to their climate if the life-cycle cost of continuous power from such renewable sources was cost efficient. Contemporary solar power systems have focused on warm and sunny climates such as the US southwest and Iberia. Such systems lack the conversion efficiency, environmental hardening and long term storage capability needed to provide primary power supply when communities in cold climates most need electrical power.
The embodiments of a solar energy harvesting and storage system incorporates a dual-sided solar cell that efficiently harnesses wide swaths of solar bandwidth with a lithographically integrated DC to AC inverter. The embodiments described herein improve on existing solar collectors on: (1) the energy per unit area; (2) the energy per unit cost; (3) long term system durability; and (4) providing integrated wireless data and telephony capability. Energy per unit area is enhanced by harvesting more of the light spectrum and maximizing conversion efficiency for a given wavelength. Many deployment situations have limited land or roof space. Such situations often benefit from generating maximum energy from the available area. Even where land or roof area is abundant, larger deployments consume more structural elements and longer power cables. Even if area is unrestricted, cost seldom is. Greater energy per unit cost is achieved using techniques including concentration of light, use of dual-sided solar cells and making the most efficient use of expensive III/V compounds. Long term durability is enhanced through techniques such as a robust solar tracker, use of dual-sided steel rather than fragile silicon wafers and integration of the solar cell with the DC to AC inverter on a common substrata electrode. The embodiments described herein achieve long term durability and lower cost of operation/maintenance to make solar energy a more attractive energy option.
Integrated wireless and data telephony within the panel assembly both improves long term maintainability and facilitates use of panel assemblies in areas lacking physical infrastructure, time or experienced installers. Such enhanced functionality reduces the barrier to deployment of solar energy.
These embodiments will best be understood when viewing the FIGS. along with the detail description provided herewith. With reference to
Although two panel assemblies 130 are shown, preferably there are more panel assemblies, up to hundreds or more, in the solar energy harvesting and storage system 80. Each panel assembly 130 comprises a light-to-electrical energy converter 110 connected to the power bus 210 and to a DC to AC inverter 220, also connected to the power bus 210 and the control bus 230. The panel assembly 130 may also have a wireless base station 200, also connected to the power bus 210. The light-to-electrical energy converter 110, the DC to AC inverter 220 and the wireless base station 200 are mounted on a two axis passive solar tracker 100.
Persistent energy storage 160 retains energy during periods where limited solar illumination does not provide sufficient energy from the light-to-electrical energy converter 110. Numerous forms of chemical (battery) and thermal storage are known. However most economical alternatives reported in the literature or in common commercial use suffer from use of expensive, hazardous materials as well as leakage. Leakage reduces the energy stored over time. Current adequate design options for the persistent energy storage exist, but are suboptimal.
Supplementary energy sources 240 are included to reduce dependence on persistent energy storage 160. Examples of supplementary energy sources 240 include wind, geothermal, hydro and even conventional sources such as fossil fuel or nuclear. Hybrid installations may share components such as the persistent energy store 160, DC to AC inverter 220, electrical energy distribution interface 170 and transmission line assets.
The electrical energy distribution interface 170 attaches energy generated by the solar energy harvesting and storage system 80 to local or national scale power grids. The electrical energy distribution interface 170 insures that voltage, frequency and phase of the solar power matches that of the power distribution system; local generation and grid power are isolated from one another; and that the relative flow of energy may be measured and reported for economic reasons. Techniques for implementing such an electrical energy distribution are well understood, commercially available from many vendors and already installed in numerous installations ranging from local fossil fuel generators to alternative energy production facilities.
Digital control 180 is required to coordinate and implement functionality among the components of the solar energy harvesting and storage system 80. Among the functions of digital control 180 are: consistent maintenance of voltage, frequency and phase; ensuring adequate power source; recognition of developing failures and reporting for timely maintenance; partitioning of failed components from the power bus 210 and control bus 230 and economic analysis and reporting. The digital control system 180 is commonly implemented in many situations for industrial control. A wireless control link that could be primary or a backup, requires a wireless base station 200 within the digital control 180.
The solar energy harvesting and storage system 80 has at least three operating modes, whose block diagrams are shown in
An additional operating mode of the solar energy harvesting and storage system 80 is shown in
At the crests of the bent structural element 528 are pads 512 to eliminate or reduce vibration and mechanical stresses on the bent structural element 528. The light-to-electrical energy converter 110 can be assembled in at least three configurations. As a first configuration, the photovoltaic cells 515 are assembled on both sides of the common electrode 536 as shown. A second configuration having two single-sided cells simplifies manufacture. A third configuration is that the photovoltaic element 516 is formed on a single side of a conventional wafer using traditional solar cell mounting technology.
Mounted in the housing and positioned on the pads 512 is a cover glass 504 having an optional plurality of convex lenses 508 that are spaced with respect to each other and positioned above the bent structural element 528 to focus light onto a reflective or focusing element 524 on the angular sides of the bent structural element 528. The convex lenses 508 can be formed by masking, etching, molding or grinding. Light received through the convex lenses 508 is directed to the reflective or focusing element 528 that receives and concentrates the light. The cover glass 504 or other suitable material is selected to have good optical transmission properties throughout the widest range of frequencies at which the sun emits optical and near-optical radiation. An anti-reflective coating 500 may be applied to the cover glass 504. Similarly, an anti-reflective coating, if applied, should have similar optical qualities and may be applied to the cover glass 504 by deposition techniques. In one embodiment, microphotoetched metals can be used instead of a holographic anti-reflective film. In another instance, neither existing wafer technology nor thin films are used.
Use of a double-sided common electrode 536 as shown, however, requires introduction of a reflective or focusing element 524. There are many different ways to fabricate the reflective or focusing element 524. Glass mirrors, although very stable, tend to be fragile and are subject to degradation of the reflective material. Various plastic materials are more robust to physical stress, weigh less but are more subject to degradation over time. When the bent structural element 528 is metallic, forming a grating directly in the structural element 528 reduces material and assembly cost while having the potential for high durability. Filling the solar energy producing void 540 with an inert gas such as nitrogen further reduces degradation of the reflective surface. In addition, plating material may be applied over the reflective or focusing element 524 to inhibit oxidation and retain high reflectivity over time. The reflective or focusing element 524 can either be used directly as a mirror or ruled to construct a grating that will focus as well as reflect the incident light. By focusing the light, the area covered by the photovoltaic cells 516 is reduced. The increased optical concentration, however, also increases heating. Excess heat can degrade the photovoltaic cells 516 or the DC to AC inverters 220 over time.
The spaces 540 above the bent structural element 528 into which the reflective or focusing element 524 and the photovoltaic cells 516 extend may be filled with an inert gas such as dry nitrogen to minimize condensation, corrosion and other degeneration; The spaces 550 below the bent structural element 528 towards the power bus 210 may be void or may be filled other matter useful for wireless base station operation or internal persistent energy storage 532.
Integrated with the array of photovoltaic cells 650 and the common electrode 536 are DC to AC inverters 220 to convert the DC electrical energy generated by the photovoltaic cells 650 into AC energy. The DC to AC inverters 220 connected to the photovoltaic cells 650 provide control and distributed DC to AC conversion to a high frequency multiple of the line frequency and carefully controlled phase. Incorporating DC to AC inverters 220 directly into the photovoltaic cells 650 provides advantages. Because the inverters 220 are distributed throughout the installation, concentrated heat and low-frequency noise generated as with conventional inverters are prevented—an important safety feature, especially in close proximity to human-occupied areas, flammable ground cover or roofing material. The distributed DC to AC inverters 220 yield alternating current output at voltage levels consistent with semiconductor device voltages and frequencies that are a multiple of and in-phase with the power distribution frequencies of the power grids.
The DC to AC inverters 220 are also electrically connected to the power bus 210 and to the control bus 230. The common electrode 516 which extends upward from the trough of the bent structural element 528 is electrically connected to power bus 210 for the transmission of DC electrical energy generated by the photovoltaic cells 516. Control bus 230 is also electrically connected to the light-to-electrical energy converter 110 and/or the internal persistent energy store 160.
Circuit technology for implementing various kinds of DC to AC inverters is known in the literature. Conventional switching regulators, producing a square wave, are efficient and easily implemented but are incompatible with some kinds of equipment using electrical energy. Sine wave and modified sine wave converters are more complex but increasingly required for unrestricted end use compatibility.
Innovatively, the DC to AC inverters 220 are lithographically formed directly on the same substrata as the photovoltaic cells 516. Techniques for lithographically forming resistors, small capacitors, inductors and transistors are well known and commonly implemented by industry, such as monolithic point of load regulators offered by firms such as National Semiconductor and Linear Devices. Integrating the photovoltaic cells 516 with the DC and AC inverters 220 requires additional processing layers but reduces the assembly required, reduces cost and most importantly eliminates solder or other junctions between the common electrode and discrete devices. Large capacitors, insulators and comparable components are also major sources of failure eliminated by this integrative approach. By distributing the DC to AC inverters 220 throughout the array, heat from the inverters helps to melt snow and ice which may otherwise form on the anti-reflective coating during periods when limited solar illumination allows surface temperature to drop.
Each photovoltaic cell 516 further comprises a matrix of wavelength-specific light biased junctions 650 with band-gaps matching frequencies of the incident wavelengths on that cell 516. Each opto-electronic junction is on the order one millimeter. These optoelectronic junctions 650 receive the spatially separated optical output from the optical fill material 638 and convert the optical energy to electrical energy. Thus, particular ones of the opto-electronic junctions 650 are more responsive to particular wavelengths, depending upon the choice of materials comprising the opto-electronic junctions 650, for instance Type III/V semiconductor materials are responsive to different wavelengths than silicon or Type II/VI semiconductor materials. The bandgap relative concentrations of the dopants in the semiconductor material making up the opto-electronic junction 650 changes the output voltage and the conversion efficiency at a particular wavelength. Preferably, the wavelength-specific light-based opto-electronic junctions 650 comprise a P/N semiconductor junction, preferably a Group III/V composition and more preferably indium phosphide, for high bandwidth data transmission using very narrow band, coherent optical radiation. A plurality of electrodes 640 provide for a current path to the common electrode 536.
To begin the formation of the opto-electronic junction 650, in step 716, the planar conductive material, also referred to as the common electrode 536, is inserted with the seeded surface facing downward into a crucible. The crucible contains a purified crystalline material in a liquid, gaseous or other comparable phase that is also compatible with the seed crystal applied in step 708. In block 720, the common electrode 536 is slowly extracted upwards from the crucible to form crystalline towers descending from each seed crystal. This step closely resembles the extraction of a seed crystal to form crystal ingots used in semiconductor wafer production; microscale equivalents of crystal pulling techniques enable formation of the base material for the wavelength-specific light biased opto-electronic junctions 650.
In step 724, the crystalline towers are planarized and otherwise prepared for subsequent processing steps to form the opto-electronic junctions 650, the surface electrodes 640, the optical fill material 630, 634, 638, the DC to AC inverter circuits 220 and/or other interconnects to the power bus 210 and the control bus 230, or other connections and components. In step 728, the common electrodes are turned over once to repeat steps 704 through 724 to form similar crystalline towers on the other surfaces of the planar conductive material.
In step 938 of
The light-to-energy converter assembly 110, the DC to AC inverters 220, and other optional components such as the wireless base station 200, an antenna array 1020, and any matter or components within the space 550 are mounted on a dual axis tracking mount 100 comprising a lower leaf-spring assembly 1000 and an upper leaf-spring assembly 1004. The upper leaf-spring assembly 1004 is mounted on and horizontally rotated ninety degrees from the lower leaf-spring assembly 1000.
The dual-axis tracking mounts 1000 and 1004 of the panel assembly 130 are able to withstand 130 rotational stress, such as tornadic winds and active loading with lift. Electrical damage from lightening can be minimized with careful site placement. In addition, the mounting base 1008 may be pliant to respond to extreme wind loading as well as provide a high current path for lightening discharge.
The solar concentrator and storage system 100 should preferably be incorporated in the initial design or an extensive refit of the entire roof system when installed on a roof to minimize damage and potential liability. Placing the solar concentrator and storage system 100 at ground level reduces the potential for damage resulting from lightening strikes.
Antenna arrays 1020 serve not only to connect with wireless edge devices such as smart phones and wireless enabled laptops but also to provide back-haul connections routing to and from the wireless base stations 200 to other such stations within relay range, cell towers or comparable routing infrastructure. Digital beam forming and other techniques for improving signal strength are well known in the wireless design community.
The wireless base station 200 may either operate at carrier frequencies supporting a wide range of protocols or may mix the wireless carrier frequencies down to base band using additional mixer and local oscillator components in the wireless base station 200, as shown in block 1304 of
Because the panel assembly 130 may be rapidly installed, perhaps by unskilled personnel, it is useful to include an optional global positioning system (GPS) 1312 with the wireless base station 200. This GPS system 1312 is also useful to locate particular panel assemblies 130 during field support. Maintenance operations can be paired with panel health indications to direct field support directly to the right panel assembly. An antenna for the GPS 1312 may be included in one or more of the antenna arrays 1020 for improved signal handling.
Within the panel assembly 130 wired connectivity is provided among the optional antenna array elements 1020 and the signal processing function 1304 and the processing system 1308 of the wireless base station 200. These may most conveniently be located underneath the solar panel assemblies 130 as part of the control bus 230 internal to the panel assembly 130. Power may be derived using AC or DC energy from the power bus 210.
Wireless base stations 200 may be included in some panel assemblies 130 and not others. However this innovative synergy greatly facilitates maintenance, asset tracking as well as providing enhanced wireless communication for other purposes such as data links and telephony. Cost of lower powered base stations such as femtocells makes such integration economically affordable in an increasing application range.
The particular embodiment described herein of the panel assemblies 130 mounted on the dual-axis passive solar tracker 100 satisfies reliability criteria for tracking operations up to twenty-five years in very inclement snow and ice-covering environments and minimal preventative/incident repair. The entire solar collector and storage system 80 has a reliable operation, can be maintained by unskilled workers, and satisfies tight environmental requirements associated with long term operation in close proximity to populated structures. Similarly, during seasons having less than ideal illumination, maximum energy from the sun's daily cycle from sunrise to sunset can be obtained.
Such solar collector and energy storage systems as provided herein can provide power for high performance computer systems, e.g., ranging up to four megawatts each, in such locations and circumstances where there is limited available power and processor power efficiency.
This application is a divisional application of pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/434,837 entitled SOLAR ENERGY HARVESTING AND STORAGE SYSTEM filed on 29 Mar. 2012 and claims priority of and is related to U.S. Provisional Application 61/469,031 entitled SOLAR COLLECTOR AND SYSTEM FOR SPATIAL AND SPECTRAL CONCENTRATION OF SOLAR POWER filed on 29 Mar. 2011, having common inventors and a common assignee, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61469031 | Mar 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13434837 | Mar 2012 | US |
Child | 14547132 | US |