Apparatus for the industrial wiring and final testing of photovoltaic concentrator modules, consisting of a module frame, a lens disc, a sensor carrier disc and an electrical line routing arrangement.
In photovoltaics, for many years, there have already been approaches for working with concentrated solar radiation. In this case, the radiation from the sun is concentrated by means of mirrors and/or lenses, and directed onto specific concentrator solar cells. Corresponding systems of concentrating photovoltaics (CPV) are currently being tested in the Spanish Solar Research Institute (Instituto de Sistemas Fotovoltaicos de Concentracion (ISFOC)) in Castile at Puertollano. They concentrate the sunlight using lenses or mirrors to four hundred- to thousand-fold intensity before it impinges on small solar cells, which are significantly more efficient than traditional silicon solar cells.
In this respect, the following prior art is cited from the patent literature.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,834,805 discloses a photovoltaic power module, substantially comprising the following features:
An arrangement of photovoltaic semiconductor crystal cells, distributed in individual cell locations in a layered substrate, wherein these are enclosed by two electrically conductive layers and separated by means of an insulating layer. Furthermore, this module consists of a light-conveying layer composed of lenses, which is arranged at a distance from the layered substrate, wherein incident radiation is focused into the substrate in the light-conveying layer by means of the lens, and wherein the total thickness of the lens layer, of the substrate layer and of the space therebetween is approximately 2 inches.
DE 10 2006 007 472 A1 discloses a photovoltaic concentrator module comprising a lens plate and a baseplate, on which solar cells are accommodated, and a frame, wherein the frame connecting the lens plate and the baseplate is arranged circumferentially along the edge of the lens plate and the baseplate.
This known concentrator module is intended to be improved to the effect that it can be produced cost-effectively, has a long service life, and allows simple and flexible integration of additional components that cannot be accommodated, or can be accommodated only with difficulty, on the lens plate or the baseplate. Furthermore, the intention is to develop a method that makes it possible to produce such concentrator modules.
The problem stated here is solved by virtue of the fact that along the frame between the lens plate and the frame and/or the baseplate and the frame firstly at least one first sealing compound and/or adhesive compound and secondly at least one second sealing compound are arranged circumferentially at least on part of the length of the frame, wherein the two sealing and/or adhesive compounds differ with regard to their curing time and/or gas permeability.
Claim 57 claims a method for producing a photovoltaic concentrator module according to any of the preceding claims, which is characterized by the following features:
Namely, that a frame connecting a lens plate and a baseplate is arranged along the edge of the lens plate and the baseplate, and that between the frame and the lens plate and/or the frame and the baseplate firstly at least one first sealing compound and/or adhesive compound and secondly at least one second sealing compound are introduced circumferentially along the frame over at least part of its length, wherein the two sealing and/or adhesive compounds differ with regard to their curing times and/or gas permeabilities.
The fact that one of the adhesive compounds serves for fixing a plate during the production process by means of UV light cannot be inferred here.
DE 10 2010 016 675 A1 describes a photovoltaic module, a method for electrically connecting a plurality of photovoltaic cells and a device for electrically connecting a plurality of photovoltaic cells.
In accordance with Claim 11, a method for electrically connecting a plurality of photovoltaic cells is claimed here, wherein the method comprises the following features:
1) applying a first plurality of contact wires on a front side of a first photovoltaic cell,
2) applying a second plurality of contact wires on a rear side of the first photovoltaic cell,
3) applying the first plurality of contact wires on a rear side of a second photovoltaic cell, and
4) applying the second plurality of contact wires on a front side of the second photovoltaic cell, wherein
5) the first plurality of contact wires and the second plurality of contact wires are arranged in a manner offset with respect to one another.
As an indication similar to the problem, it can be inferred from DE 10 2010 016 675 A1 that the intention is to create an improved photovoltaic module, that is to say, that the contact structure of the photovoltaic cell and the number and dimensioning of the contact ribbons (contact wires) are optimized in combination.
The CPV solar cell array according to the invention addresses the problem of optimizing the electrical connection between solar cell assemblies (SCAs).
This problem is achieved with the CPV cell array according to claim 1 and the CPV solar cell module according to claim 7. Further advantageous embodiments are described in the dependent claims.
With the electrical connections as established in the CPV cell array according to the invention, the amount of necessary connections can be reduced and their respective lengths optimized to reduce power losses in the electrical connections between SCAs.
The apparatus according to the invention is described in greater detail below. In this case, in the figures specifically:
a shows a partial area of a sensor carrier disc;
b shows a partial area of the sensor carrier disc in more detail;
c shows a partial area of
However, only that part of the entire manufacturing installation that is provided with reference signs will be considered here. The manufacturing process until the time of wiring a concentrator module is not part of the invention.
At the time of wiring such a module, the sensor carrier disc 13 is already connected to the frame of the module and undergoes, in the next processing step after wiring, the connection to the lens disc 16 situated opposite and parallel to the sensor carrier disc 13. A laser gantry 2 carrying a laser head 1 is situated at the contact-making station 3 depicted in
The testing station 5 for the tightness test and the testing station 6 for the final electrical test will be described later.
The stacking stations 4 enable classification according to quality levels that are substantially determined by the results on the testing station 5 for the tightness test and the testing station 6 for the final electrical test.
The cross-section reveals a concentrator module with its carrying module frame in cross-section in an enlarged illustration. Here, it is respectively possible to discern a lens disc 16 with a lens 15 on the top side and a sensor carrier disc 13 on the underside. In this case, the module frame is illustrated in a manner interrupted in its transverse extent on each side, in order to be able to show the details shown in the true size relationships. In the lens disc 16, indications of the Fresnel lenses 15 used are found on the right-hand side, and in the sensor carrier disc 13, there are the corresponding contact points 14 of the CPV sensors 11 and the associated contact points 12 with the cooling and contact plate 10. In addition, in this region, it is possible to discern a connecting line between a contact point 14 of the CPV sensor illustrated on the right and a contact point 12—separated by the double scribed line—on the cooling and contact plate 10 of another CPV sensor 11, situated to the left of the first CPV sensor. It goes without saying that these two CPV sensors are not directly connected to one another in practice, since they are separated by the double scribed line. The collective line 8 having negative polarity and the collective line 9 having positive polarity are illustrated in the region of the central web 7 of the concentrator module shown.
a shows one of the 12 partial areas of a sensor carrier disc 13, such as can be seen overall in
In the topmost row of the numerically 19 CPV sensors 11 illustrated, by way of example, a cooling and contact plate 10, a contact point 12 on such a contact plate 10 and a contact point 14 of a CPV sensor on a sensor carrier disc 13 as seen from above are designated separately. On the right-hand side of the sensor carrier disc 13, a collective contact plate 19 having positive polarity can be discerned at the top and a collective contact plate having negative polarity can be discerned at the bottom. For obtaining current, as a basic structure in each case, five CPV sensors are connected in parallel and these parallel circuits are in turn connected in series, such that the voltages of the parallel circuits add up. In the illustration shown in
b illustrates the partial area 12 as illustrated in
The SCAs 35 are interconnected with each other in a parallel and serial manner.
Toward SCA 35_3, a parallel connection is established by linking the cooling and contact plates 10_5 and 10_3 with each other and thus the poles of opposite polarity, in this embodiment the plus poles, using connection 43_5. According to the invention, the connection between the first poles 37_5 and 37_3 of the first polarity, here the minus poles of the CPV cells 33_5 and 33_3, is not achieved via a direct connection but via a connection using the neighboring SCAs 35_4 and 35_6 and, in particular, the cooling and contact plates 10_4 and 10_6. The electrical connection of the first poles 37_5 and 37_3 is achieved via the electrical connection 44_5 of the first pole 37_5 with the cooling and contact plate 10_6, the electrical connection 43_6 between the cooling and contact plates 10_6 and 10_4, and the electrical connection 44_3 between the cooling and contact plate 10_4 and the first pole 37_3 of CPV cell 33_3.
The connecting schema as described above is repeated like this for most of the SCAs. Like already described above, the 190 SCAs are arranged such that five SCAs are connected in parallel, thereby forming two times nineteen series of five parallel connected SCAs.
In this embodiment, each series of parallel connected SCAs comprises one SCA with a bypass diode to prevent damaging of the solar cells in case of malfunctioning of one SCA or a series of parallel connected SCAs. In
The two times nineteen parallel connected SCA series are connected such that the collective contact plates 19 of opposite polarity 19_1 and 19_2 are positioned on one side, here the short side 47 of the rectangular-shaped CPV array 31. Therefore, the two parallel connected series 49 and 51 on the other side, here the other short side 53 of the CPV array, are connected in series. To take into account the increasing currents, the connections 55_1, 55_2, 55_3, 55_5 but also 57_5, 57_4, 57_3, 57_2, 57_1 become thicker and thicker, which is achieved by increasing the number of connections or by using a different conductor diameter or a different material.
Using the combination of parallel and series connection and, in particular, the parallel connection via the cooling and contact pads of the neighboring SCAs, the amount of electrical connections can be reduced, while at the same time, the connections between SCAs can be kept short. Thus, power losses can be reduced and a more cost-effective design is achieved.
In the concentrator CPV module of
The terminals 19_61_1 and 19_66_2 at the extremities of the first group of CPV solar arrays 61 to 66 are brought into contact with a connection box 77 serving as the connector toward the exterior of the CPV module. The two groups of six CPV cell arrays are interconnected in parallel as can be seen from
The terminals 19_71_1 and 19_76_2 at the extremities of the second group of CPV solar arrays 71 to 76 are also brought into contact with the connection box 77 via the collective lines 8 and 9. The collective lines 8 and 9 collect the current essentially in the center of the module from the terminals 19_71_1 and 19_76_2.
The lower half of the drawing in
The cross-section B-B shown underneath correspondingly reveals a connecting element 17 with its bridge-shaped course, rotated by 90 degrees, in cross-section.
For mounting the contact-making elements or contact-making partners to be connected by the laser contact-making device, corresponding holding means are provided, which are oriented to specific markings of the concentrator module in a laser-controlled manner. Their use is not illustrated separately.
After contact has been made with all required electrical connections and a lens disc 16 has been applied, the concentrator modules fabricated to that extent are fed to a device for testing electrical properties, wherein a specific voltage is applied to CPV sensors (11) themselves and the light emitted by them via the lenses (15) is detected and evaluated. If manufacturing faults are discovered in this region, repair can be effected manually or automatically.
After the final completion of a concentrator module, the concentrator modules are fed to a device for testing tightness (5), wherein compressed air is applied to them in the interior and the emission of compressed air is checked.
The control of the complex movement processes and the signal processing of the sensors used require a special closed-loop control.
1 Laser head
2 Laser gantry
3 Contact-making station
4 Stacking stations
5 Testing station (tightness test)
6 Testing station (electrical)
7 Central web of a concentrator module
8 Collective line (negative pole)
9 Collecting line (positive pole)
10 Cooling and contact plate
11 CPV sensor (absorber)
12 Contact point on the plate 10
13 Sensor carrier disc of a concentrator module
14 Contact point of a CPV sensor (absorber)
15 Lens
16 Lens disc
17 Connecting element (ribbon or cable)
18 Transverse carrier
19 Collective contact plate
20 Gripper
21 Laser
22 Receiving shaft for gantry carrier head
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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202011108836.0 | Dec 2011 | DE | national |
202011109424.7 | Dec 2011 | DE | national |
This application is a national phase entry under 35 U.S.C. §371 of International Patent Application PCT/EP2012/005069, filed Dec. 7, 2012, designating the United States of America and published in English as International Patent Publication WO 2013/083283 A1 on Jun. 13, 2013, which claims the benefit under Article 8 of the Patent Cooperation Treaty and under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) to German Patent Application Serial No. 20 2011 109 424.7, filed Dec. 23, 2011, and to German Patent Application Serial No. 20 2011 108 836.0, filed Dec. 8, 2011, the disclosure of each of which is hereby incorporated herein in its entirety by this reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2012/005069 | 12/7/2012 | WO | 00 | 5/28/2014 |