This application claims priority to foreign French patent application No. FR 1601087, filed on Jul. 12, 2016, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The invention relates to a photovoltaic cell and to an associated layout.
The present invention relates to photovoltaic electrical networks and cells.
A photovoltaic cell, also called a solar cell, is an electronic component that, exposed to light (photons), produces electricity via the photovoltaic effect.
The electrical power obtained is proportional to the radiant power incident on the photovoltaic cell and to the area of the cell.
The most used photovoltaic cells are based on semiconductors, and mainly based on gallium arsenide (GaAs).
Photovoltaic cells are produced on a substrate or wafer, i.e. a crystal structure that is originally circular but then cut to the desired geometry, this structure also being referred to as a raw cell.
The photovoltaic cells are then equipped with interconnectors; covered with a cover glass; and equipped with a bypass diode, which is placed beside the photovoltaic cell in most technologies.
A photovoltaic network is an assembly or layout of photovoltaic cells that are tiled side-by-side. An optimal network is therefore constructed from elementary shapes that are able to tessellate (squares, rectangles, hexagons, etc.) in order to prevent space from being wasted and to obtain the best packing factors, or in other words the best ratios of the area of the photovoltaic cells to the area of the supporting structure, or the most compact layout.
Raw cells, i.e. circular cells, are the most economical because they do not generate cutting losses or waste, but the layout thereof is far from optimal and leaves many empty zones in the panel or layout or assembly, leading to additional costs being incurred in the production of the extra or larger panels required for a given power.
The networks or layouts generally chosen by present-day manufacturers often use square cells 1, as illustrated in
For square photovoltaic cells 1 or half-square photovoltaic cells 2, 63% of the circular raw cell 3 is used and thus 37% thereof is lost; however, the packing factor obtained is 100%.
These cells are used when the bypass diode is integrated. In the case of use of discrete diodes, which are placed beside the cells, the solution is to use a square or half-square shape with a bevelled corner.
In the end, the compromise made is generally to use square cells 4 or half-square cells 5 with bevelled corners, as illustrated in
Such photovoltaic cells 4, 5 allow loss of the circular raw cell 3 to be limited, typically to a loss of 10 to 18%, and allow a layout with a good packing factor, typically about 83 to 94%, to be obtained. The portions left free by the bevelled corners are generally used to accommodate bypass diodes, which make it possible to prevent cells that are not exposed to light or that have malfunctioned from behaving as load cells and dissipating the power generated by other cells.
The bypass diodes make it possible to avoid this and are connected in parallel to each cell.
It is also known to use moon-shaped cells 6 or half-moon-shaped cells 7 (as shown in
Such photovoltaic cells allow loss of the circular raw cell to be limited, typically to a loss of 2%, but tile with a limited packing factor, typically about 91%. The portions left free are generally used to accommodate bypass diodes.
One aim of the invention is to optimize not only the losses made cutting raw cells or wafers but also the compactness with which the cells obtained may be tiled.
Thus, according to one aspect of the invention, what is proposed is a network of photovoltaic cells that are aligned in at least one row so that, in one row of cells, the base of a cell is alternately on one edge of the row then on the other edge of the row, the photovoltaic cells being the shape of a half regular hexagon the environs of the vertices of which are truncated so that the truncation corresponds to a section of a semicircle the base and diameter of which is superposed and centred on the base of the half-hexagon, the base of the half-hexagon being comprised between 1 and
times the diameter of the semicircle.
Such a layout of such a cell optimizes not only the losses made cutting raw cells or wafers but also the compactness with which the cells obtained may be tiled.
Specifically, such a layout allows loss of the circular raw cell to be limited, typically to a loss of 3%, and allows a layout with a good packing factor, typically about 95%, to be obtained. The portions left free are generally used to accommodate bypass diodes.
Such a photovoltaic-cell shape makes it possible to optimize not only the losses made cutting raw cells or wafers of circular shape but also the compactness with which the cells obtained may be tiled.
Furthermore, a single photovoltaic-cell design is enough to produce such a network, thereby limiting costs.
According to one embodiment, the base of the half-hexagon equals 161.1 mm for a substrate of 150 mm diameter.
This value is optimal.
In one embodiment, the diameter of the semicircle is 100 mm or 150 mm.
Such a diameter corresponds to a diameter that is conventional for raw photovoltaic cells or wafers and that is therefore accessible at limited cost.
In one embodiment, the network comprises bypass diodes placed between cells of the network in portions corresponding to said truncated portions.
The truncated corners therefore allow both the utilization of the wafer to be increased and the bypass diodes to be accommodated.
For example, the arrangement of the bypass diodes forms a regular pattern.
The invention will be better understood on studying a few embodiments, which are described by way of completely nonlimiting example and illustrated by the appended drawings, in which:
In the various figures, elements referenced with identical references are identical.
times the diameter of the circular raw photovoltaic cell 3. Thus, in the end, each of the two photovoltaic cells according to one aspect of the invention is the shape of a half regular hexagon the environs of the vertices of which are truncated so that the truncation 9 corresponds to a section of a semicircle the base and diameter of which is superposed and centred on the base of the half-hexagon, the base of the half-hexagon being comprised between 1 and
times the diameter of the semicircle of the circular raw photovoltaic cell 3.
times the diameter or the circular raw photovoltaic cell 3, respectively.
The spaces corresponding to the truncations 9 allow bypass diodes 14 to be accommodated.
In the present case, the bypass diodes 14 are accommodated in the truncated portion 9 of a vertex so that their arrangement forms a regular pattern.
In the example illustrated in
The rounded-vertex half-hexagon geometry of these photovoltaic cells 8 makes it possible to obtain an associated network or layout that maximizes the size of the cell with respect to the circular raw cell while also ensuring the associated network has an excellent packing factor.
The invention consists in cutting the photovoltaic cell into round-cornered half-hexagons in order to optimize the packing factor of the layout or network of cells and the cutting of the cell and makes it possible not only to benefit from the ability to cut to the edges of the wafer, which in any case are passivated, but also to permit a small loss of area for installation of a bypass diode.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1601087 | Jul 2016 | FR | national |