The subject matter described herein relates generally to the field of photovoltaic systems. More particularly, the subject matter disclosed herein relates to receivers for photovoltaic systems and methods for fabricating such receivers.
Photovoltaic cells convert solar energy into electrical energy. One category of solar photovoltaic collectors is unconcentrated collectors, which directly intercept solar radiation for conversion into electrical energy. Because such systems receive the solar energy directly without any magnification, they are sometimes referred to as “one-sun” systems. The conventional method for assembling photovoltaic cells into rigid panels for power production using unconcentrated sunlight involves multiple steps. First, individual cells are strung into a linear circuit by soldering flexible flat wire (ribbon) to them. The cell strings are then assembled into a series or series-parallel two-dimensional array. The wired array is placed into a sandwich of backing material, fusible polymer (e.g., EVA), and transparent cover plate, and this sandwich is then vacuum laminated and mounted in a frame. A junction box with a bypass diode is then attached to the rear of the assembly. This process is labor-intensive and exposes the fragile cells to the risk of damage during each handling step. Some stages of the process, such as the cell stringing, can be automated, but the automation equipment is generally specialized to the task and can thus be quite expensive.
In contrast, concentrating photovoltaic systems seek to reduce at least some of these costs by reducing the total area of photovoltaic cells through the use of low-cost optics (e.g., mirrors or lenses) to focus sunlight. For systems employing concentration there is a need to develop alternative solar panels (typically referred to as “receivers” in concentrating photovoltaic applications) that incorporate smaller cells and better heat dissipation systems than those employed in panels fabricated for “one-sun” use. Smaller cells can manage the higher current densities generated by concentrated sunlight, and better thermal management systems are often used to dissipate the high levels of waste heat. It is possible to construct such smaller receivers for concentrating photovoltaic systems using the same methodology as employed in “one-sun” panels. The stringing operation can be applied to smaller cells and backing material in the fused sandwich could be replaced with a passive or active heat sink of adequate proportions.
However, despite these savings due to the smaller scale of receivers for use in concentrating systems, such methods can require even more specialized equipment than that employed in the fabrication of “one-sun” panels and often can not provide optimum thermal contact between the cells and the heat sink. Moreover, some conventional fusible polymers degrade rapidly under exposure to concentrated sunlight, so substitute materials are commonly employed. The combination in a photovoltaic receiver of smaller components, more sophisticated materials, and greater heat dissipation risks the necessity of higher fabrication costs that would negate some or all of the savings realized by reduction in cell area.
Accordingly, there exists a need for receivers for concentrating photovoltaic systems and methods for fabricating such receivers that reduce the material and assembly costs of photovoltaic receivers to a level below that of “one-sun” panels.
The subject matter described herein includes receivers for concentrating photovoltaic systems and methods for fabricating such receivers. In one aspect, a receiver for a concentrating photovoltaic system is provided. The receiver can comprise a substrate, at least a portion of which is thermally conductive, a plurality of electrical contact pads located on a first surface of the substrate, and a plurality of photovoltaic cells. Each of the photovoltaic cells can have a first surface for exposure to a light source during use and a second surface opposite the first surface. The second surface can includes a plurality of electrically conductive traces that extend across the second surface for conduction of electric current generated by the photovoltaic cells when illuminated, wherein at least a portion of each of the electrically conductive traces is electrically coupled to one of the electrical contact pads.
In another aspect, a method for fabricating a receiver for a concentrating photovoltaic system is provided. The method can comprise positioning a plurality of electrical contact pads on a first surface of a substrate, applying solder paste to the electrical contact pads, placing a plurality of photovoltaic cells on the electrical contact pads, applying heat to re-flow the solder paste, and removing application of the heat to solidify the re-flowed solder paste. Each of the photovoltaic cells can have a first surface for exposure to a light source during use and a second surface opposite the first surface. The second surface can include a plurality of electrically conductive traces that extend across the second surface for conducting electric current generated by the photovoltaic cells when illuminated, wherein the solder paste connects a portion of each of the electrically conductive traces to one of the electrical contact pads.
In yet another aspect, a receiver for a concentrating photovoltaic system is provided. The receiver can comprise a substrate, at least a portion of which is thermally conductive, a plurality of first electrical contact pads on a first surface of the substrate, a plurality of second electrical contact pads on the first surface of the substrate, the second electrical contact pads being spaced apart from the first electrical contact pads, a plurality of photovoltaic cells each including a plurality of first electrically conductive traces that extend across a first surface of the cells and a plurality of second electrically conductive traces that extend across a second surface of the cells, and microetched conductive tabs electrically connecting the first electrically conductive traces to the second electrical contact pads. The first electrically conductive traces can have a first polarity and the second electrically conductive traces can have a second polarity opposite the first polarity, wherein the first and second electrically conductive traces conduct electric current generated by the photovoltaic cells when illuminated, and wherein a portion of each of the second electrically conductive traces is electrically coupled to one of the first electrical contact pads.
In still another aspect, a method for fabricating a receiver for a concentrating photovoltaic system is provided. The method can comprise positioning a plurality of first electrical contact pads and a plurality of second electrical contact pads on a first surface of a substrate, applying solder paste to the first and second electrical contact pads, placing a plurality of photovoltaic cells on the first electrical contact pads. Each of the photovoltaic cells have a plurality of first electrically conductive traces that extend across a first surface of the cells and a plurality of second electrically conductive traces that extend across a second surface of the cells, wherein the first electrically conductive traces have a first polarity and the second electrically conductive traces have a second polarity opposite the first polarity, wherein the first and second electrically conductive traces conduct electric current generated by the photovoltaic cells when illuminated, and wherein the solder paste connects a portion of each of the second electrically conductive traces to one of the first electrical contact pads. The method can further comprise placing microetched conductive tabs on the second electrical contact pads extending toward the first electrically conductive traces, applying heat to re-flow the solder paste, removing application of the heat to solidify the re-flowed solder paste, which can connect the second electrically conductive traces to the first electrical contact pads and connect the conductive tabs to the second electrical contact pads, and soldering the conductive tabs to the first electrically conductive traces.
Although some of the aspects of the subject matter disclosed herein have been stated hereinabove, and which are achieved in whole or in part by the presently disclosed subject matter, other aspects will become evident as the description proceeds when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings as best described hereinbelow.
The features and advantages of the present subject matter will be more readily understood from the following detailed description which should be read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings that are given merely by way of explanatory and non-limiting example.
The present subject matter provides receivers for concentrating photovoltaic systems and methods for fabricating such receivers. It is noted that the physical scale of the components in a receiver for a concentrating photovoltaic system can be similar to the scale of electronic circuit boards and circuit elements. In this regard, because the fabrication methods for electronic circuitry are highly advanced, comparatively inexpensive, and well-understood, it is believed that photovoltaic receiver fabrication can incorporate the advantages of this well-developed industry to reduce the material and assembly costs of the receiver to a level below that of “one-sun” panels, thereby enhancing rather than negating the cost savings inherent to concentrating photovoltaic systems.
For instance, in one aspect shown in
Regardless of the material selected for circuit board 102, the entire back surface of circuit board 102 can be copper coated and thermally connected to the front surface by plated through holes (“vias”). These holes can be isolated from the circuits on the front surface so that they provide a thermal path without shorting power to the back surface of circuit board 102. Circuit board 102 can further be thermally coupled to a heat-spreading backplane 103. Referring to
Endcaps 106 can be attached at ends of backplane 103 to create a tray. This tray formed by backplane 103 and endcaps 106 can be filled with a layer of weather-sealing encapsulant 109 on top of photovoltaic cells 101 as illustrated in
Referring to
The positioning of both positive contacts and negative contacts 101A and 101B on a back surface of photovoltaic cells 101 can provide a number of advantages. For instance, creating these connections entirely on a back surface of photovoltaic cells 101 avoids the need for straps on the edges of photovoltaic cells 101 to join together, separately, the positive and negative interdigitated traces. Also, creating these connections at or near a central region of the back surface can reduce series resistance in positive contacts and negative contacts 101A and 101B by as much as factor of four. Further, these connections at the back surface can serve a dual purpose of providing the electrical connection and increase thermal conduction from photovoltaic cells 101 into circuit board 102 and/or backplane 103.
In an alternative embodiment of the presently disclosed subject matter shown in
Positive contacts 201A of each of photovoltaic cells 201 can be located on a back surface of photovoltaic cells 201, these positive contacts 201A being electrically connected to a corresponding positive trace 202A on the printed circuit board. In contrast to the previous configuration, however, negative contacts 201B of photovoltaic cells 201 can be located on a front surface of photovoltaic cells 201. These negative contacts 201B can be electrically connected to corresponding negative traces 202B on the printed circuit board by means of electrical connectors 203, which can be copper tabs that are etched or micro-machined. Because photovoltaic cells 201 and circuit board 202 can be composed of different materials, electrical connectors 203 can be designed to provide some degree of strain relief to account for differences in thermal expansion of the different materials. In particular, for instance, electrical connectors 203 can have a plurality of individual connector arms extending from a center portion 203A having strain-relief geometry shown in
Regardless of the specific configuration of components, the fabrication of receiver 100 or 200 can be performed using industry standard soldering techniques often used in the electronics industry. Discussion of an exemplary fabrication process below will make reference to the components described above with respect to receiver 100 except where otherwise indicated, but it should be understood that the same fabrication methods can be used with respect to receiver 200. Copper circuit traces can be printed on circuit board 102 and covered with a dielectric except at exposed copper soldering pads, which can function as traces 102A and 102B where photovoltaic cells 101 and other receiver components can make contact. A solder paste can be applied to these pads, such as by using electronics industry standard screening equipment. Photovoltaic cells 101 and other components can be placed on the pads using standard “pick and place” equipment developed for circuit board manufacturing (e.g., vacuum pick-and-place).
Once the desired components are assembled, circuit board 102 can be passed through a reflow oven to fuse contacts 101A and 101B on the back of photovoltaic cells 101 to the exposed traces 102A and 102B on the circuit card. In the configuration discussed above with respect to receiver 100, photovoltaic cells 101 can have both positive contacts 101A and negative contacts 101B on a back surface of photovoltaic cells 101, with can provide complete electrical connection of photovoltaic cells 101 after passage through the reflow stage. In contrast, in the configuration discussed with respect to receiver 200, a front connection can also be provided, which can be accomplished by a second step in which electrical connectors 203 are placed so that they bridge from the busbars on the front surface of photovoltaic cells 201 (i.e., negative contacts 201B) to separate exposed pads on the circuit board (i.e., negative traces 202B). Electrical connectors 203 can be placed and reflow-soldered using the same standard equipment. Separate circuit elements, including bypass diodes, pigtail or surface-mount power connectors, light sensors, and surface mount technology (SMT) resistors can be placed and soldered at the same time as photovoltaic cells 201.
In addition to the relative ease of fabrication that can be achieved by this process over conventional receiver fabrication methods, the disclosed methods can also improve the attachment of photovoltaic cells 101 to other components, such as circuit board 102. Specifically, there is a tendency of differential thermal expansion of crystalline photovoltaic cells and their metal back contacts to warp during the reflow process. Depending on how the components are secured together, this differential expansion can lead to strains that can result in damage to photovoltaic cells 101. For instance, if positive and negative contacts 101A and 101B are connected to corresponding traces 102A and 102B at different edges of photovoltaic cells 101, the differences in the expansion of photovoltaic cells 101 relative to circuit board 102 can cause photovoltaic cells 101 to buckle and potentially crack.
To help avoid such issues, the arrangement of contacts can be selected to anticipate the differential expansion of the components. For instance, in the configuration discussed above with respect to receiver 100, positive and negative contacts 101A and 101B can both be provided at or near a center region of a back surface of photovoltaic cells 101. In this configuration, the warping of photovoltaic cells 101 in the reflow oven can cause the edges of photovoltaic cells 101 to lift away from underlying substrate (e.g., circuit board 102), which can provide clearance for the soldered connection to create a solid bond between the components. Additionally, upon thermal relaxation and cooling of the components, the edges of photovoltaic cells 101 can press back against circuit board 102, which can induce mechanical stress to hold the cantilevered cell edges flat on circuit board 102.
Likewise, in the configuration discussed above with respect to receiver 200, positive contacts 201A can both be provided at or near a center region of a back surface of photovoltaic cells 201. This arrangement can allow thermal expansion and contraction of photovoltaic cells 201 during reflow bonding of positive contacts 201A with corresponding positive traces 202A. Once photovoltaic cells 201 are secured to circuit board 202 by this electrical connection, electrical connectors 203 can be attached to electrically connect negative contacts 201B with corresponding positive traces 202B.
The final product can be encapsulated for durability and weatherability, for instance by depositing an encapsulant 109 on photovoltaic cells 101, such as a transparent liquid silicone-based compound. Again, printed circuit board fabrication techniques can provide a ready solution for this problem. For instance, circuit board 102 can be assembled to a backplane 103 (e.g., an extruded or machined metal housing), with the back surface of circuit board 102 being coupled thermally to backplane 103 with a thermally conductive compound. Power and light sensor connection to circuit board 102 can be made via NEMA connectors passing through backplane 103. Liquid silicone (potting) encapsulant can be poured to cover and seal all of photovoltaic cells 101 and electronic components, while providing a transparent optical coupling to photovoltaic cells 101 and their anti-reflective surfaces.
Alternatively, the same spray equipment used to apply conformal insulating coatings to electronics can be used to apply a thick layer (e.g., about 0.030 inch thick) of a transparent conformal encapsulation to the entire front side of the cell assembly while in said housing. By way of specific example, this coating can be Dow 1-2620 conformal coating. As with many of the process steps discussed herein, the equipment that can be used for spray or pour dispensing is usually available in the same kinds of facilities that fabricate and populate the circuit card, allowing end-to-end production in a single electronics fabrication plant.
As discussed above, backplane 103 can further be assembled to a heat sink 110 using a thermally-conductive grease, epoxy, or adhesive film. Alternately, heat sink 110 can be integral to backplane 103, eliminating the thermal resistance in the joint between heat sink 110 and backplane 103. Alternatively, heat sink 110 can be integral to circuit board 102 itself, with traces 102A and 102B being patterned on to a front surface of heat sink 110, eliminating thermal transfer junctions between circuit board 102 and backplane 103 and between backplane 103 and heat sink 110. In yet a further alternative, circuit board 102 can be assembled directly to a front surface of heat sink 110, eliminating backplane 103 and one thermal transfer junction and utilizing spray encapsulation of circuit board 102 without potting.
In addition, electronics industry standard X-ray inspection equipment can be used to check hidden connections (e.g., solder joints) between contacts of photovoltaic cells 101 and traces of circuit board 102 for development and quality assurance. Accordingly, the method for fabricating solar receiver 100 for low-to-intermediate concentration photovoltaic systems not only leverages the fabrication materials and methods developed over decades for the electronics industry, it also allows testing and evaluation of the final product using standard test equipment usually available at the fabrication site. Numerous other advantages in handling, packaging, quality assurance, production yield, and documentation will be apparent to those with experience in the electronic industry, or skilled in the art of solar panel production.
The present subject matter can be embodied in other forms without departure from the spirit and essential characteristics thereof. The embodiments described therefore are to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive. Although the present subject matter has been described in terms of certain preferred embodiments, other embodiments that are apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art are also within the scope of the present subject matter.
The presently disclosed subject matter claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/119,681, filed Dec. 3, 2008, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61119681 | Dec 2008 | US |