Long-term photovoltaic performance of thin-film solar cells with diffractive microlens arrays on glass substrates
Solar cells should provide efficient and steady long-term electricity generation in environments with heat exposure and abnormal irradiation. Thus, a diffractive microlens array was directly fabricated and employed as an optical micro-ground structure on the glass substrate of a solar panel device....
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doaj-c57f1bf40b754657b53ba2d3b3faad482021-02-13T04:24:28ZengElsevierResults in Physics2211-37972021-02-0121103841Long-term photovoltaic performance of thin-film solar cells with diffractive microlens arrays on glass substratesPing Li0Xiaochu Liu1Qiaoxuan Cheng2Zhongwei Liang3Corresponding author.; School of Mechanical and Electric Engineering, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou 510006, ChinaSchool of Mechanical and Electric Engineering, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou 510006, ChinaSchool of Mechanical and Electric Engineering, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou 510006, ChinaSchool of Mechanical and Electric Engineering, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou 510006, ChinaSolar cells should provide efficient and steady long-term electricity generation in environments with heat exposure and abnormal irradiation. Thus, a diffractive microlens array was directly fabricated and employed as an optical micro-ground structure on the glass substrate of a solar panel device. The objective was to understand how diffractive micro-optic behaviours are related to photovoltaic performance under different working conditions. First, the diffractive microlens array was designed using optics/wave analysis, which was subsequently fabricated via a micro-grinding with a diamond wheel V-tip. It is shown that the diffractive microlens array not only decreases visible light reflectivity by 22.2% but also increases infrared light reflectivity from 16.73% to 22.86%. In contrast, while the ordinary microlens array decreases visible light reflectivity from 8.93% to 5.87%, it cannot increase infrared light reflectivity. This results in a higher electricity generation on cloudy days than sunny days due to infrared light heating. In comparison to ordinary microlens arrays and conventional solar cells, solar panel devices with diffractive microlens arrays increase the average electricity generation by 144% and 288%, respectively, and decrease the solar panel’s surface temperature by 8–10 °C on sunny days. This research demonstrates the value of the proposed approach to enhance selective light collection and conversion using a straightforward and controllable fabrication technique using micro-grinding.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211379721000267Diffractive microlensLong-term photovoltaic performanceInfrared-light filteringMicro-grinding fabrication |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ping Li Xiaochu Liu Qiaoxuan Cheng Zhongwei Liang |
spellingShingle |
Ping Li Xiaochu Liu Qiaoxuan Cheng Zhongwei Liang Long-term photovoltaic performance of thin-film solar cells with diffractive microlens arrays on glass substrates Results in Physics Diffractive microlens Long-term photovoltaic performance Infrared-light filtering Micro-grinding fabrication |
author_facet |
Ping Li Xiaochu Liu Qiaoxuan Cheng Zhongwei Liang |
author_sort |
Ping Li |
title |
Long-term photovoltaic performance of thin-film solar cells with diffractive microlens arrays on glass substrates |
title_short |
Long-term photovoltaic performance of thin-film solar cells with diffractive microlens arrays on glass substrates |
title_full |
Long-term photovoltaic performance of thin-film solar cells with diffractive microlens arrays on glass substrates |
title_fullStr |
Long-term photovoltaic performance of thin-film solar cells with diffractive microlens arrays on glass substrates |
title_full_unstemmed |
Long-term photovoltaic performance of thin-film solar cells with diffractive microlens arrays on glass substrates |
title_sort |
long-term photovoltaic performance of thin-film solar cells with diffractive microlens arrays on glass substrates |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Results in Physics |
issn |
2211-3797 |
publishDate |
2021-02-01 |
description |
Solar cells should provide efficient and steady long-term electricity generation in environments with heat exposure and abnormal irradiation. Thus, a diffractive microlens array was directly fabricated and employed as an optical micro-ground structure on the glass substrate of a solar panel device. The objective was to understand how diffractive micro-optic behaviours are related to photovoltaic performance under different working conditions. First, the diffractive microlens array was designed using optics/wave analysis, which was subsequently fabricated via a micro-grinding with a diamond wheel V-tip. It is shown that the diffractive microlens array not only decreases visible light reflectivity by 22.2% but also increases infrared light reflectivity from 16.73% to 22.86%. In contrast, while the ordinary microlens array decreases visible light reflectivity from 8.93% to 5.87%, it cannot increase infrared light reflectivity. This results in a higher electricity generation on cloudy days than sunny days due to infrared light heating. In comparison to ordinary microlens arrays and conventional solar cells, solar panel devices with diffractive microlens arrays increase the average electricity generation by 144% and 288%, respectively, and decrease the solar panel’s surface temperature by 8–10 °C on sunny days. This research demonstrates the value of the proposed approach to enhance selective light collection and conversion using a straightforward and controllable fabrication technique using micro-grinding. |
topic |
Diffractive microlens Long-term photovoltaic performance Infrared-light filtering Micro-grinding fabrication |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211379721000267 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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