The present document relates to photovoltaic solar panels. In particular, the present document relates to designs of roof-integrated photovoltaic solar panels facilitating simple module-to-module, row-to-row, and panel-to-panel connections.
Current practice in the solar industry in general as well as for roof-integrated solar panels is to use a single junction box with two cables coming out of it where the combined length of the cables exceeds the longer length of the solar panel.
This extra cable management is a small issue for conventional rack-mounted solar panel installations, but is a larger issue for roof-integrated solar panel installations. The reason is that since the roof-integrated panel is attached directly to the roof's decking or battens and successive rows overlap each other, there is limited space to properly stow the cables and once the roof-integrated panels have been secured to the roof it is very difficult to determine if the cables have not been pinched between the roof deck and the solar panel or between separate solar panels. This is very critical since a pinched cable is a potential fire hazard as it can lead to arcing if the cable becomes frayed or damaged over time. This is a major issue, actual damaging field failures have actually occurred for which the likely cause was exactly the issue explained above.
To solve this issue, a different design approach is necessary for the roof-integrated solar panel which includes the solar panel's circuit design, the type of junction box used, and a new installation method for wiring together an array of roof-integrated solar panels
A principal object of the present disclosure is to achieve solar panel circuit design which enables use of a junction box with short cables and connectors at opposite corners of the solar panel in a way that the panel's circuit is still protected by a bypass diode.
A further object of the present disclosure is to achieve solar panel circuit design which enables use of a junction box with short cables and connectors at opposite corners of the solar panel when in a landscape orientation in a way that the panel's circuit is still protected by a bypass diode.
A further object of the disclosure is to achieve simple panel to panel connection with no cable management required.
A further object of the disclosure is to make panel-to-panel and row-to-row connections shorter and with less I2R electrical losses.
A further object of the disclosure is to connect groups of roof-integrated panels into DC to DC power optimizers or DC to AC microinverters.
A further object of the disclosure is to enable an easy installation of the solar panels without the risk of pinching cables.
In accordance with the objects of this disclosure a solar panel capable of roof integration with short cables and connectors at opposite ends has been achieved, The solar panel design disclosed comprises: a number of solar cells deployed in one or more rows, wherein the solar cells of each row are interconnected, a positive and a negative junction box located each in an opposite corner on the same side of the solar panel wherein each solar panel has a positive voltage terminal and a negative voltage terminal with short cables and connectors on the same side, wherein a positive junction box is connected to the positive voltage terminal and the negative junction box is connected to the negative voltage terminal. Furthermore the solar panel comprises a bypass diode and a number of busbars located at top and at both sides of the solar panel configured to enable a current flow starting at the positive terminal, ending at the negative terminal wherein the current flows through all solar cells unless the bypass diode diverts incoming current past the solar cells due to shading of a particular solar panel, wherein the deployment of busbars differs between solar panels having an even number of rows of solar cells and solar panels having an odd number of rows of solar cells.
In accordance with the objects of this disclosure a solar panel array capable of roof integration of a number of solar panels with short cables and connectors and junction boxes at a same side at opposite ends has been achieved. The solar panel array disclosed comprises: a number of solar panels each solar panel comprising: a number of solar cells deployed in one or more rows, a positive and a negative junction box located each in an opposite corner on a same side of each solar panel, wherein each solar panel has a positive voltage terminal and a negative voltage terminal with short cables and connectors at the opposite corners on the same side, wherein a positive junction box is connected to the positive voltage terminal and the negative junction box is connected to the negative voltage terminal, a bypass diode; and a number of busbars located at top and at both sides of each solar panel enabling a current flow starting at the positive terminal, ending at the negative terminal wherein the current flows through all solar cells unless said bypass diode diverts incoming current past the solar cells due to shading of a particular solar panel, wherein the deployment of busbars differs between solar panels having an even number of rows of solar cells and solar panels having an odd number of rows of solar cells. The connectors at each end of the short cables provide directly connection from one solar panel to a neighboring solar panel to form a row of solar panels.
In accordance with the objects of this disclosure a method to achieve roof-integrated solar panels with short cables and connectors at opposite ends has been achieved. The method disclosed comprises the steps of: (1) providing solar panels configured for roof integration, wherein each solar panel comprises one or more rows of solar cells, wherein the solar cells of each row are interconnected, and wherein each solar panel includes a positive and a negative junction box, (2) minimizing pinching of cables by enabling using short cables by placing each of the two junction boxes in opposite corners on the same side of each solar panel wherein each solar panel has a positive voltage terminal and a negative voltage terminal connected to the correspondent positive or negative junction box with each terminal having said short cable with a connector at the end, and (3) deploying busbars configured to enable a current flow starting at the positive terminal outlet, ending at the negative terminal outlet, wherein the current flows through all solar cells, wherein a bypass diode diverts incoming current past the solar cells of a particular solar panel in case the cells of the particular solar panel are shaded, wherein the deployment of busbars differs between solar panels having an even number of solar cell rows and solar panels having an odd number of solar cells rows. Furthermore the method comprises the steps of (4) laying the cables into integrated hooks, laying the solar panels down and attaching them to a roof deck or battens wherein the integrated hooks keep cables from getting pinched between the solar panel and roof deck or battens during installation and (5) taking positive or negative connectors of one solar panel out of the hooks and connect them to neighboring positive or negative connectors of an adjacent panel.
The invention is explained below in an exemplary manner with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein
a prior art shows a back view of a standard solar panel having a single junction box with long cables and with connectors.
b prior art illustrates a standard roof-integrated solar panel with also one single junction box with 2 cables of different length, wherein the combined length of both cables still exceeds the longer length of the solar panel.
c shows a back view of a solar panel circuit design disclosed with two junction boxes located in the corners, where one junction box includes a bypass diode.
a shows a front view of a roof integrated solar panel disclosed with corner J-boxes (not shown in front view) and with an even number of rows, e.g. 2 rows, of solar cells.
b shows a perspective side view of the solar panel having two rows.
a shows a front view of a roof integrated solar panel disclosed with corner J-boxes (not shown in front view) and with an odd number of rows, e.g. 3 rows, of solar cells.
b shows a perspective view of a solar panel having an odd number of rows, namely 3 rows.
c shows a front view of a specialized busbar design which absorbs thermal expansion and contraction of the long horizontal busbar length across the top of the solar panel circuit by e.g. meandering of the busbar.
Methods and circuits are disclosed for roof integrated solar panels. The solar panels disclosed may be installed either in “landscape mode”, in “portrait mode” or in other orientations.
“Landscape mode” means the longer side of each solar panel is installed approximately parallel to the top and bottom edges of the roof, or other surface, on which the panels are mounted. “Portrait mode” means the shorter side of each solar panel is installed approximately parallel to the top and bottom edges of the mounting surface.
It should be noted that the following disclosed solar panels are applicable to ‘tile’ and ‘shingle’ versions of solar panels. These solar panels integrate with shingle and tile types of roofing materials.
Shingles or especially asphalt shingles are commonly used on many roofs. Concrete, ceramic or other material tiles are more used in hot areas due to better cooling, and durability.
Shingle-based solar panels would be attached to the roof decking over a layer or layers of roof underlayment, while tile-based panels would be typically mounted either directly to the decking over a layer or layers of underlayment or onto standard wooden battens or elevated battens depending on the preference of the builder/roofer or regional code requirements.
It should be noted that the present disclosure is applicable to solar panels in landscape mode, in portrait mode or in other modes/shapes as e.g. potentially in quadratic shape. For example, the solar modules of the disclosure could be used on the side of a building or in the trough of a standing seam metal roof, in portrait mode
c shows a simplified back view of a roof integrated solar panel circuit design disclosed with a positive junction box 1a and a negative junction box 1b deployed each in a separate corner of the solar panel. A bypass diode 24 is included e.g. in the negative junction box 1b. Furthermore each junction box (J-box) is connected via a short cable to a correspondent connector 2, 3. In a preferred embodiment of the disclosure the length of the cable is about 165 mm, i.e. the distance from the base of the J-box to the base of the connector. The length from base of the J-box to the end of the connector may be may be about 225 mm.
Junction boxes are preferably mounted on the back side of each solar panel. It should be noted that Junction box 1a may be larger than Junction box 1b because J-box 1a houses additionally a bypass diode 24. Furthermore a bypass diode can also be integrated into the solar panel independently of a corner junction box.
It has to be noted that in the solar panel designs, shown in the following
a shows a front view of a roof integrated solar panel 20 disclosed with corner J-boxes 1a and 1b mounted on corners of the back side of the solar panel (shown by dashed lines) and with 2 rows R1/R2 of solar cells. The negative terminal of the solar panel is connected via the negative junction box 1b, mounted on back of the solar panel, and short cable 21 to its negative outlet connector (not shown); the positive terminal of the solar panel is connected via the positive junction box 1a, mounted on another corner of the back of the solar panel, and short cable 22 to its outlet connector (not shown).
A long busbar 26 connects the positive junction box 1a in a first branch 260/27a with an utmost solar cell 200 of the second row on the side of the negative outlet 21 of the solar panel. A second branch 261 of the busbar 26 connects the positive J-box 1a with the negative J-box 1b, wherein a bypass diode 24 diverts incoming current past the solar cell circuit in case the cells of a particular solar panel are shaded. The busbar branch 261 is used only during a bypass event, i.e. when via bypass diode 24 incoming current is diverted past the solar cells.
In order to avoid curling of the busbar or strain on the busbar to busbar or busbar to J-box connections at either end of long busbar connection, the design of this busbar must be able to accommodate the thermal expansion and contraction of busbar material, especially during high lamination temperatures. This may be addressed by forming a specialized busbar so that the horizontal expansion is minimized to any particular busbar length and/or joint by e.g. meandering of the busbar. The meandering can be applied to any busbar of the disclosure. This meandering busbar can be soldered together from several different busbars or can be formed from by stamping out of a thin sheet of tinned copper or similar metal. An example of a meandering busbar is shown in
The busbar 35 of
A second busbar 25 connects both rows of solar cells on the side of the positive terminal of the solar panel. A third busbar 27b connects a first cell 215 of the first row R1 on the side of the negative outlet of the solar panel with the negative junction box 1b through busbar branch 262. This busbar branch 27b is stacked over the busbar 27a and separated from the busbar 27a by an insulating membrane. Deployment of the busbars 27a and 27b/262 is shown in
The arrow tips illustrate the flow of current through the solar panel 20. The current flows from the positive cable 22 port through the positive J-box 1a along busbar 26 via branch 260/27a to solar cell 200 and across solar cells 206, 207, then the current follows the busbar 25 to solar cell 208 and then flows across solar cells 209, 210, ff. to solar cell 215 and then via the busbar 27b/262, the negative J-box 1b to the negative cable outlet 21.
The solar cells 200-215 and accompanying busbars form an electrical circuit which is encapsulated between two substrates to form a solar laminate, which, when mounted onto a plastic frame, makes a solar module, or solar panel.
It should be noted that the solar panel of
b shows a perspective side view of the solar panel having two rows R1-R2. Dashed lines in
It should be noted that busbar 27b262, connecting the utmost cell 215 on the side of the negative terminal 21 of the first row R1 with the negative J-box 1b, is stacked over the busbar 27a, wherein both busbars 27b/262 and 27a are separated by an insulating membrane.
In the example of
It should be noted that other ways for the current flow would be possible as well. It has to be ensured that the current flow starts at the positive cable connection 22, ends at the negative cable connection 21, and that the current flows through all solar cells in the right direction once.
a shows a front view of a roof integrated solar panel 30 disclosed with corner J-boxes, which are deployed on the back side of the solar panel (illustrated by dashed lines), and with 3 rows, of solar cells. The current flow in the solar panel 30 is similar to the current flow in the solar panel 20 shown in
The negative polarity of the solar panel is again connected via a short cable 21, which is connected to the negative J-box 1b at a corner of the backside of the solar panel to its connector (not shown); the positive polarity of the solar panel is connected via a short cable 22 to the positive J-box 1a at a neighboring corner on the back of the solar panel shown by dashed lines.
A first busbar 31a and 31b connects the solar cell 300, located on the top row R1 of solar cells on the side of the positive terminal 22, via the positive J-box 1a to the positive cable connection 22. A second busbar 32 connects on the side of the positive terminal 22 of the solar panel the utmost solar cell 315 on the side of the positive terminal 22 of the middle row R2 of solar cells with the utmost solar cell 316 on the side of the positive terminal 22 of the bottom row R3 of solar cells. A third busbar 33 connects the utmost solar cell 307 of the first row R1 of solar cells on the side of the negative terminal with the utmost solar cell 308 of the middle row of solar cells on the side of the negative terminal, wherein a fourth busbar 34a is stacked under the third busbar 33 separated by an insulating membrane from the third busbar 33.
This fourth busbar 34 connects the utmost solar cell 323 on the side of the negative terminal of the bottom row of solar cells with the negative Jbox 1b. The long busbar 35 is used only during a bypass event, i.e. when via bypass diode 24 incoming current is diverted past the solar cells, usually due to shading of one or more solar cells in that particular solar panel. In'order to avoid curling of the busbar or strain on the busbar to J-box connections at either end of long busbar connection 35, the design of this busbar must be able to accommodate the thermal expansion of busbar material, especially during high temperature lamination. This may be addressed by forming a meandering busbar so that the horizontal expansion is minimized to any particular busbar length and/or joint, i.e. the meandering can be applied to any busbar of the disclosure. This meandering busbar can be soldered together from several different busbars or can be formed from by stamping out of a thin sheet of tinned copper or similar metal.
An example of the meandering busbar 35 is shown in
The arrow tips illustrate the flow of current through the solar panel 30. The current flows from cable 22 through the positive J-box 1a along busbar 31a and 31b to solar cell 300 and across solar cells 300, 301 ff. to solar cell 307, then the current follows the busbar 33 to solar cell 308 and then flows across solar cells 308, 309 ff. to solar cell 315 and then via the busbar 32 to the solar cell 316 and across solar cells 316, 317 ff. to solar cell 323 and from there via the busbar 34a and 34b and via the negative J-box 1b to the negative cable outlet 21.
b shows a perspective side view of a solar panel having an odd number of rows, namely 3 rows in the case of
Furthermore it should be noted that solar panels having one row of solar panels can be built following the same principles as, outlined above in regard of solar panels having two or three rows, i.e. these solar panels have also J-boxes deployed on opposite corners on a same side of the solar panel, have short cables as the other solar panels disclosed and can be connected to other solar panels the same way.
On top of
On the bottom of
Furthermore the string inverter concept is characterized by using jumper cable 50 to run from a positive terminal 55 of an utmost front end cell 52 of a row via a mechanical cable tie-down 53 deployed at the same row to a negative terminal 51 of an utmost back end cell 54 of the next row. The tie-down 53 is a mechanical, not electrical cable connection. A jumper cable would be laid down in plain sight before the next panels are installed with an overlap that will cover the jumper and the top part of the panels in the row below. The jumper cable can be tied to the hook 40 of a same-row panel before it is bent and laid down over the next row batten or area of roof deck which will receive the first panel of the next row. As the first panel of the next row is being laid down, the installer can take the back end of the jumper cable and insert it into the hook 40 so that the jumper cable is also not pinched between the roof deck and or battens and the solar panel which is being installed.
It is important to note that by using the jumper cable there is no need to twist or stow excess cable.
A power optimizer is a DC to DC conversion technology developed to maximize the energy harvest from solar photovoltaic panels or arrays. They do this by individually tuning the performance of each panel or set of panels through maximum power point tracking (MPPT), and delivering a set voltage from the panel or group of panels to the inverter. Power optimizers are wired together in parallel, so even the failure of one of the panels or power optimizers will not lead to a loss of power from the string.
Microinverters convert solar panel DC power directly to AC power for a specific panel or set of panels. This allows the microinverter to provide MPPT for each panel or group of panels and directly output AC power that matches the grid to a grid interconnection point. Microinverters are wired together in parallel, so even the failure of one of the panels or micro inverters will not lead to a loss of power from the string.
A roof-integrated solar panel ‘mini-string” can also be formed with a microinverter 60 in a similar manner to that of a power optimizer, with the main difference being that the solar panel's DC power is converted to AC by the microinverter and that the string of microinverters are then connected directly to a grid interconnection point. Furthermore
The jumper cable and power optimizer or microinverter can be attached to the roof deck in plain sight prior to the next row's mini-string being laid down. The use of one or more jumper cables per “mini-string” enables the solar panels of each “mini-string” to be arranged in a variety of shapes.
The elements 60 shown in
A first step 70 shows providing solar panels configured for roof integration, wherein each solar panel comprises a number of rows of solar cells, wherein the solar cells of each row are interconnected, and wherein each solar panel includes a positive and a negative junction box. The following step 71 describes minimizing pinching of cables by enabling using short cables by placing each of the two junction boxes in opposite corners on the same side of each solar panel wherein each solar panel has a positive voltage terminal and a negative voltage terminal with each terminal having said short cable with a connector at the end. Step 72 illustrates deploying busbars configured to enable a current flow starting at the positive terminal, ending at the negative terminal wherein the current flows through all solar cells, wherein a bypass diode diverts incoming current past the solar cells of a particular solar panel in case the cells of a particular solar panel are shaded, wherein the deployment of busbars differs between solar panels having an even number of solar cell rows and solar panels having an odd number of solar cell rows. Step 73 depicts laying the cables into integrated hooks, laying the solar panels down and attaching them to a roof deck or battens wherein the integrated hooks keep cables and connectors from touching the roof deck. Step 74 shows taking positive or negative connectors of one solar panel out of the hooks and connect them to neighboring positive or negative connectors of an adjacent panel. Step 75 teaches running jumper cables to run back to start a next row wherein the jumper cable is laid down in plain sight before the next row panels are installed with an overlap covering the jumper cable and a top part of the panels of the row below.
Thus the jumper cable can be tied to the hook of a same-row panel before it is bent and laid down over the next row batten or area of roof deck which will receive the first panel of the next row and as a first panel of the next row is being laid down, the installer can take the end of the jumper cable and insert it into the hook so that the jumper cable is also not pinched between the roof deck and or battens and the solar panel which is being installed and thus there is no need to twist or stow away excess cable.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to the preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application is related to docket no. IS14-002, Ser. No. ______, filed on ______, titled “Advanced Frame Design for Roof-Integrated Solar Panels”, assigned to a common assignee, and which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.