Solar Cells and Their Applications: Second Edition
Solar Cells and Their Applications: Second Edition
Solar Cells and Their Applications: Second Edition
THEIR APPLICATIONS
Second Edition
Edited by
LEWIS FRAAS
LARRY PARTAIN
Copyright 2010 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved
Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey
Published simultaneously in Canada
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
Solar cells and their applications / [edited by] Lewis Fraas, Larry Partain.2nd ed.
p. cm.(Wiley series in microwave and optical engineering)
ISBN 978-0-470-44633-1 (cloth)
1. Solar cells. I. Partain, L. D. II. Fraas, Lewis M.
TK2960.S652 2010
621.31'244dc22
2010000196
Printed in Singapore
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Contents
Preface
ix
Contributors .
xiii
17
43
PART I
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
67
111
Chapter
113
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
137
159
171
v
vi
Chapter
CONTENTS
207
219
251
271
Chapter 12
273
Chapter
293
313
337
361
377
Chapter
Chapter
10
11
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
Chapter
PART IV
Chapter
13
14
15
16
17
395
397
CONTENTS
vii
PART V
Chapter
19
425
427
463
Chapter
20
Chapter
21
483
497
499
22
Chapter
23
511
Chapter
24
533
Chapter
25
559
PART VII
Chapter
Index .
SUMMARY
26
581
583
613
Preface
This Second Edition is intended to be a comprehensive survey, review, and analysis
of all the major factors related to the continuing technical development of solar
cell electricity and its market development into a major worldwide source of
electric power in response to powerful political and economic influences. It is
divided into six major sections plus a Summary section including conclusions and
recommendations.
In contrast to the First Edition, Part I contains three initial chapters written
so that nonspecialists and the more general readers and investors and policy makers
can follow their contents without the need for specialized training or understanding.
The goal is to allow a broad spectrum of readers to at least comprehend the market
history, the influence of public policy, the likely costs of solar cell-generated electricity, and the special role that near-perfect, single-crystal semiconductor fabrication materials can have on overall performance. Chapter 4 in this part, on Solar
Cell Device Physics (like the First Edition), is again aimed at advanced undergraduate and graduate college courses and other technical professionals involved in
teaching, research, and commercial development. It not only covers the traditional
abrupt p/n junction configuration of the First Edition but also expands into the very
non-abrupt p-i-n geometries that characterize a whole new class of high-performance solar cells including interdigitated back-contact cells, point-contact cells,
and heterojunction-with-intrisinsic-thin-layer (HIT) cells. It further addresses the
special resistive restrictions that can limit p-i-n-type device performance as well
as proposed paths to performance levels well beyond 50% efficiency levels.
However, to maintain a reasonable length, this physics chapter does use the First
Edition as a reference.
Part II addresses the current state of terrestrial solar cell electricity technology
and development programs. This includes the dominant crystalline silicon abrupt
p/n junction devices and their large-scale fabrication and the emerging thin-film
amorphous and polycrystalline semiconductor cells and modules. The amazing
recent growth of the Chinese terrestrial solar cell program is presented in some
detail. The potential advantages of tracking the sun are explored along with a
detailed description of 3 years of field experience with fixed-axis crystalline silicon
modules of 12% efficiency (under standard test conditions) in the Arizona desert.
The emerging utility-scale installations are summarized along with their important
cost-determining characteristics.
Part III attempts to present a comprehensive overview of the terrestrial concentrator approach to solar cell electricity production and its special advantages
ix
PREFACE
and challenges. This includes both low and high sunlight concentration levels with
various system approaches as well as early results of small field tests at the
University of Nevada and of substantial utility-scale field tests of multiple and
varied concentrator systems in Spain.
Part IV takes a broad look at space systems and all of the unique approaches,
needs, accomplishments, plans, and future needs for space.
Part V contains a chapter giving precise descriptions of the solar resource
both terrestrially and in space. It also contains a chapter describing a sophisticated
and detailed cost and performance model from the National Renewable Energy
Laboratory (NREL). This Solar Advisor Model is reviewed and summarized.
Finally, the special challenges of large-scale solar electricity production are
explored.
Part VI is a special four-chapter addition of the Second Edition that discusses
how thin-film solar cells can be transformed into X-ray imaging devices when
devices are reduced to submillimeter sizes and are aligned in columns and rows
that are covered by a scintillator film that converts X-ray photons into visible light
photons. If these are then attached to an array of the thin-film transistor switches,
a flat-plate X-ray imager is produced. The market analysis of this whole X-ray
imager field shows that its current market size of $2 billion per year should
continuously evolve into a $15 billion per year wholesale market over the
next 10 years or so as these devices continually improve in performance and drop
in price.
The final chapter summarizes the amazing growth of this solar cell electricity
technology and market over the 15 years since the publication of the First Edition.
It provides recommendations for how major countries and unions can play major
roles from both technology and public policy perspectives and how continuing cost
reduction and improved performance demands should be met under both near- and
medium-term time frames.
In summary, this book describes todays baseline planar solar cell power
systems as well as innovations in high-efficiency solar cells and concentrated
sunlight systems that have occurred in the last 15 years, which now promise lower
cost electricity competitive with other mainstream electric power sources.
In addition to describing these technical breakthroughs in clear and simple
terms, this book also describes the path from research breakthrough to high-volume
production, emphasizing the cooperation required between government and private
enterprise. Given this cooperation, solar cells can be a major contributor to the
electric power production mix within the next 10 years.
This book has been written for a large audience, not just a technical audience.
It is hoped that any educated reader will find this book interesting, especially any
reader who seeks to understand how the worlds energy supply problems can be
increasingly addressed by exploiting direct solar energy resources available within
a countrys borders. It further describes how most countries can start moving away
from increasingly intense competition for decreasing depletable energy supplies
and how they can continue moving toward a long-term, sustainable solution with
inherently positive attributes.
PREFACE
xi
The thesis of this book is that solar energy can be cost competitive with other
forms of electric power production and that the technical innovations required for
this have already been made. Incentives for investment are needed to bring these
innovations into high-volume production. It is hoped that this book will help
educate the public, possible investors, as well as policy makers worldwide about
the potential for a bright sunny energy future.
Lewis Fraas
Issaquah, WA
Larry Partain
Mountain View, CA
Contributors
Sheila Bailey, NASA Glenn Research Center at Lewis Field, Space Environments
and Experiments Branch, Cleveland, OH; email: sheila.g.bailey@nasa.gov
Pedro Banda, Instituto de Sistemas Fotovoltaicos de Concentracin (ISFOC) S.A.,
Puertollano (Ciudad Real), Spain; email: pbanda@isfoc.com
Andreas Bett, Fraunhofer Institut fr Solare Energiesysteme (ISE), Freiburg,
Germany; email: olandreas.bett@ise.fraunhofer.de
Robert Birkmire, Institute of Energy Conversion, University of Delaware,
Newark, DE; email: rwb@udel.edu
Nathan Blair, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO; email: Nate_
Blair@nrel.gov
Chuck Blouir, Varian Medical Systems, Cleveland, OH; email: chuck.blouir@
varian.com
Robert Boehm, Center for Energy Research, Department of Mechanical
Engineering, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV; email: rboehm@unlv.
nevada.edu
Christopher Bunner, Spire Corporation, Bedford, MA; email: cbunner@spirecorp.
com
Christopher Cameron, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM; email:
cpcamer@sandia.gov
Matthew Campbell, Utility Power Plant Products, SunPower Corporation,
Richmond, CA; email: Matt.Campbell@sunpowercorp.com
Richard Colbeth, Varian Medical Systems, Mountain View, CA; email: richard.
colbeth@varian.com
Elmer Collins, Sandia National Laboratories, Microsystems Science & Technology,
Albuquerque, NM; email: ewcolli@sandia.gov
Ron Corio, Array Technologies, Inc., Albuquerque, NM; email: rcorio@wattsun.
com
David Faiman, Department of Solar Energy and Environmental Physics, Jacob
Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev,
Israel; email: faiman@bgu.ac.il
Lewis Fraas, President, JX Crystals Inc., Issaquah, WA; email: lfraas@jxcrystals.
com
Paul Gilman, Consultant, Chicago, IL; email: paulgilman@earthlink.net
Christian A. Gueymard, Solar Consulting Services, Colebrook, NH; email:
Chris@SolarConsultingServices.com
xiii