The disclosure of Japanese Patent Application No. 2009-103105 filed on Apr. 21, 2009 including the specification, drawings and abstract is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a light gathering solar cell module that includes a reflector.
2. Description of the Related Art
Japanese Patent Application Publication No. 2001-119054 (JP-A-2001-119054) describes a solar cell module that includes a plurality of bifacial solar cells arranged separately in a transparent member made of ethylene-vinyl acetate resin (EVA resin). A front surface of the transparent member is provided with a glass transparent member, and a back surface of the transparent member is provided with an aluminum or stainless substrate (reflector). The reflector that specularly reflects the light is formed in the surface of the substrate that abuts on the transparent member and has a continuous V shape cross section. Some of the sunlight that enters through the transparent plate of the module directly hits the front surface of the solar cell. The rest of the sunlight that passes through a gap between the neighboring solar cells and reaches the substrate is reflected by the reflecting surface onto the back surface of the solar cell. In the solar cell module with such a structure, the sunlight that enters the gaps between the neighboring solar cells may be efficiently used, so that the power generation efficiency is improved.
However, in the solar cell module described above, depending on the angle of incidence, the light that is specularly reflected by the reflecting surface of the substrate may again pass through the gap between the solar cells and travel to the front surface side of the module. In this case, the indirect light that reflected by the reflecting surface of the substrate escapes from the module without hitting the solar cell, which creates a problem that power generation efficiency worsens.
The present invention provides a solar cell module that utilizes sunlight more efficiently and that has improved power generation efficiency.
An aspect of the present invention relates to a solar cell module. A solar cell module includes: a solar cell; a reflector that reflects incident light toward the solar cell. The reflector has a corrugated reflecting surface and is made of a diffuse reflective material. Because the light is diffusely reflected by the reflector in the above structure, the amount of reflected light that enters the solar cell may be increased and the power generation efficiency improved in comparison with structures that utilize the a reflector that specularly reflect the light.
According to the present invention, the solar cell module that can utilize sunlight more efficiently and that has improved power generation efficiency is provided.
The foregoing and further features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following description of example embodiments with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein like numerals are used to represent like elements and wherein:
Hereinafter, embodiments of the solar cell module according to the present invention are described in detail with reference to accompanying drawings.
A light gathering solar cell module 1, shown in
A back surface substrate 5 is fixed to a back surface of the encapsulant 3 so as to face the front substrate 2 arranged on a front side of the encapsulant 3. The back surface substrate 5 includes: a flat surface 5a that is fixed to the encapsulant 3; and a V-shaped surface 5b that faces the flat surface 5. The corrugations of the V-shaped surface 5b are arranged continuously, and each corrugation is generally identical. The back surface substrate 5 is made of a transparent member, which may be for example glass, a transparent plastic (such as polycarbonate and acrylic), EVA resin, etc. The back surface substrate 5 may be formed through processing such as grinding, polishing, injection, vacuum heat press, or direct rolling, etc.
A diffuse reflector 6, in which generally identical V-shaped surfaces 6a are arranged, is fixed to the V-shaped surface 5b of the back surface substrate 5. The corrugations of the back surface substrate 5 and those of the diffuse reflector 6 correspond to each other, and the both members contact each other. The diffuse reflector 6 may be made of various materials such as a multi-layer film of polyester resin or a substrate in which a highly reflective plastic film is attached to a metal substrate, as long as the material enhances the diffuse reflection of the reflector. Because the diffuse reflector 6 includes a multi-layered structure or single-layered structure made of resin, the diffuse reflector 6 is easily formed by the press bending process. Also, material and processing costs are reduced in comparison with the case where the reflecting surface is formed by depositing aluminum or silver on the metal surface.
As shown in
As shown in
The protective layer may be formed from silicon dioxide. The metal layer and the metal substrate may be made of aluminum or stainless steel. The polyester layer and the plastic layer may be made from polyethylene terephthalate, polytrimethylene terephthalate, polybutylene terephthalate, polyethylene naphthalate, and polybutylene naphthalate. The cover layer may be made from a mixture of polyethylene terephthalate resin and titanium dioxide particles.
By forming the diffuse reflectors 61 to 64 as a multi-layered structure, the incident light is efficiently and diffusely reflected by interfacial reflection. A single-layer diffuse reflector 6 may be formed with, for example, one sheet of PET material.
Next, the method of manufacturing the solar cell module will be described.
As shown in
In this state, laminating process is performed so as to integrate each member to make the solar cell module 1. The laminating process is carried out under the condition of, for example, vacuuming for 15 minutes and pressing for 25 minutes, and at temperature of 145° C.
When the back surface substrate 5 that is made of EVA resin is press-formed, a sheet of the diffuse reflector 6 may be set on the die, and then the lamination of the diffuse reflector 6 and the EVA resin that is placed above the diffuse reflector 6 may be heat-pressed. By the above method, an integrated back surface member of the back surface substrate 5 and the diffuse reflector 6 are fabricated. Thus, the manufacturing processes and cost may be further reduced.
If the back surface substrate 5 is made of a material other than EVA resin, a transparent bonding layer (such as EVA resin) is interposed between the back surface substrate 5 and the diffuse reflector 6 so as to connect them together.
With the solar cell module 1 constructed as described above, the light is diffusely reflected by the diffuse reflector 6, and an increased amount of reflected light may be introduced to the solar cell 4, as shown in
The relationship between the ratio between the detector width and the module width of the solar cell 4 and the output of the solar cell module will be described below.
Here, the detector width is the width of the detection area of the solar cells 4 and 14. The module width is a width of the single V-shaped surface 6a that faces the solar cells 4 and 14. The single V-shaped surface 6a is a reflecting surface that contributes to light incidence towards the opposite solar cells 4 and 14. In
As shown in
As shown in
Here, in
In this case, the output P of the specular reflection module reaches the maximum value before the diffuse reflection module P=g(X) and when the ratio X is close to the origin 0. The maximum output value P of the diffuse reflection module g(X) is larger than the maximum output value P of the specular reflection module f(X). The graphs of P=f(X) and P=g(X) cross each other when the ratio X is “0”, “a”, and “1”. When the ratio X is larger than “a”, the solar cell module 1 with the diffuse reflector 6 produces higher output. The graphs P=f(X) and P=g(X) shown in
The following equations are specific examples of the functions P=f(X) and P=g(X) that are used in the optical simulation: g(X)=1.40X−X2; f(X)=9.97X6−28.94X5+27.57X4 −5.56X3−5.89X2+3.18X; and P=f(X)=g(X), where the values of X that satisfy these equations are 0, a=approximately 0.4, and 1.
As described above, if the reflector has a continuous and generally equal V shape, and the ratio X between the detector width and the module width is larger than or equal to “a”, the photovoltaic efficiency of the solar cell module with the diffuse reflector is higher than that of the module with the specular reflector.
Next, the output of the solar cell module that is provided with a diffuse reflector that is shaped to further increase the light gathering capacity of the diffuse reflector 6 will be described. “The shape to increase light gathering capacity” means that the single V shaped surface 6a shown in
The output P of the solar cell module shaped to increase light gathering capacity increases along with increases of the ratio X as shown by the graph P=g(X) of the diffuse reflection module in
Accordingly, if the solutions that satisfy P=g(X)=f(X) are only X=0 and X=1, regardless of the detector width, the high efficiency photovoltaic solar cell module can be obtained by using the diffuse reflector as a reflecting surface.
In the above embodiments, a solar cell module that is provided with bifacial solar cells, which receive light on two surfaces, has been described. However, as shown in
Among the sunlight that enters the solar cell module 21, the indirect light that is diffusely reflected by the V-shaped surface 26a travels to the front surface of the encapsulant 23. The indirect light is then interfacially reflected by the surface of the encapsulant 23, and again travels to the solar cell 24. Because the light is diffusely reflected by the V-shaped surface 26a, it increases the amount of the light that enters the solar cell 24 among the light interfacially reflected by the surface of the sealing part 23, and thereby increases the power generation efficiency of the solar cell module 21. In this way, the power generation efficiency of a mono-facial solar cell module may also be increased by using a diffuse reflector.
Next, the solar cell module output and the light-use efficiency at various incident light angles of bifacial solar cell modules that respectively incorporate a diffuse reflector and a specular reflector will be compared.
As show in
The solar cell module 31 that uses a diffuse reflector 36 shows the output P as represented by P=g(X) in
As the incident light angle changes from the vertical line that extends above the solar cell, the light-use efficiency decreases for both the solar cell module 31 with the diffuse reflector 36 and the solar cell module with the specular reflector. However, for any incident angle, the solar cell module 31 with the diffuse reflector 36 exhibits the light-use efficiency about 2% higher than a solar cell module with a specular reflector. Therefore, use of a diffuse reflector instead of a specular reflector improves the light-use efficiency at all incident light angles.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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JP2009-103105 | Apr 2009 | JP | national |