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2018 | Buch

Concentrating Photovoltaics (CPV): The Path Ahead

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Über dieses Buch

This book is a concise review of the current status and future prospects of concentrating photovoltaic (CPV) technology. Starting with a summary of the current technical and economic status of CPV technology, it identifies the factors that hold CPV back in the commercial market. The main technical areas considered are solar cells, tracking and optics. The solar cells section focuses on spectrum splitting systems, which offer potentially higher efficiency than multi-junction cells with reductions in the manufacturing constraints that lead to high costs. It also offers a brief survey of the latest developments in spectral splitting alongside a discussion of the advances in solar cell manufacturing that aid the development of such systems. Further, it examines electrical design principles for spectral splitting systems that can improve the spectral stability of these systems’ performance. The section on tracking includes a description of tracking integration with an update of the review published in Nature, presenting the latest advances in the field and focusing on surveying conceptual approaches rather than providing an exhaustive description of the literature. The optics section explores 3D printing and other emerging methods of fabricating optics for both prototype and large-scale production, as well as new classes of concentrators, particularly those based on novel photonic materials such as angular filters. Lastly, the authors consider the impact that environmental factors have on the performance of CPV in non-standard environments before concluding with a discussion of the combinations of technologies that they anticipate will most effectively boost CPV in the commercial market.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. What Went Wrong with CPV?
Abstract
For decades, green-energy advocates and solar power researchers struggled with a simple problem: nearly endless energy, freely available from the sun, and no economical way to collect it. With solar cell costs higher by an order of magnitude than conventional energy generation at the turn of this century, a straightforward solution presented itself: get a single solar cell to generate a large amount of energy by using cheap optical devices to funnel light from a large area into a small cell. By circumventing the cost issue in this way, these “concentrator photovoltaics,” or CPV, were hailed as the most promising pathway to low-cost solar electricity.
Harry Apostoleris, Marco Stefancich, Matteo Chiesa
Chapter 2. The Case for CPV
Abstract
The energy-generating potential of photovoltaics is huge—but it does suffer from some practical challenges, particularly related to the required size of generating installations. The solar resource is quite dilute, which means that a photovoltaic power plant needs to occupy a very large area compared to conventional power plants to generate a given amount of output.
Harry Apostoleris, Marco Stefancich, Matteo Chiesa
Chapter 3. High-Efficiency Solar Cells
Abstract
One idea that we will return to throughout this book is that CPV, as configured today, is an “overconstrained” system from an engineering standpoint. Too many design elements and environmental factors must be controlled too precisely to make a system that is simple and cheap enough to compete economically.
Harry Apostoleris, Marco Stefancich, Matteo Chiesa
Chapter 4. New Approaches to CPV Optics
Abstract
We first discussed the constraints imposed by using concentrator optics in the first chapter, where we noted that a fundamental, thermodynamic limit to concentration exists.
Harry Apostoleris, Marco Stefancich, Matteo Chiesa
Chapter 5. Tracking Integration for Rooftop CPV
Abstract
The last unique part of the CPV system that we have not discussed yet, and the part that most directly constrains CPV, is the sun tracker. The need for sun tracking is a direct consequence of the optical principles discussed in the last chapter: since a concentrator necessarily has a restricted acceptance angle, and the sun’s apparent position in the sky varies over the course of the day, and with the seasons, tracking is the only way to keep a system operating for more than, in most cases, a few minutes per day.
Harry Apostoleris, Marco Stefancich, Matteo Chiesa
Chapter 6. What Comes Next for CPV?
Abstract
We have kept returning to the question throughout this book of how we can leverage the developments that we have described in Chaps. 3, 4, 5, to relax the constraints on CPV that were described in Chap. 2, which have prevented it from being competitive with the ultra-cheap flat-plate PV described in Chap. 1. Here we try to provide an answer.
Harry Apostoleris, Marco Stefancich, Matteo Chiesa
Metadaten
Titel
Concentrating Photovoltaics (CPV): The Path Ahead
verfasst von
Harry Apostoleris
Marco Stefancich
Matteo Chiesa
Copyright-Jahr
2018
Electronic ISBN
978-3-319-62980-3
Print ISBN
978-3-319-62979-7
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-62980-3