Title: Solar%20Electric%20Power%20generation
1Solar Electric Power generation
- Two types
- Thermal -use suns ability to heat (usually
water) to create electricity - Photovoltaic devices- a device which directly
converts the Suns energy to electricity
2Solar Thermal
- Obvious idea would be to use sunlight to boil
water and provide steam to drive a turbine - But what happens when you place a container of
water in the sun-it typically does not boil! - Need to concentrate or focus the suns energy to
achieve this goal - How do we focus sunlight?
3Basic properties of light
- To answer this question, lets look at some basic
properties of light in the wave description of
light. - Refraction-light is bent at the interface between
two media. - Snells law relates the angle
- of incidence and the index
- of refraction of medium 1 to
- the angle of refraction and
- index of refraction of medium
- 2.
- n1sin(angle of incidence)n2sin(angle of
refraction) - n1sin?1n2sin?2
4Focusing light
- If the interface is flat, the light is not
focused. - Example-pencil in a glass of water
- If it is curved in the correct fashion, i.e. the
surface of a convex lens, the light can be
brought to a focus
convex
concave
5Fresnel Lens
- For the most part, lens are very heavy, suffer
from reflection at the surfaces, and are
expensive to construct to the sizes needed to
achieve the desired heating. - There is one type of lens, a Fresnel lens that
can be inexpensively constructed from plastic
6Fresnel Lens
- Seen in lighthouses-used to form a concentrated
beam of light.
7Fresnel Lens at work
- Fresnel lens melting brick
- International Automated Systems Fresnel system
8Reflection
- When light is incident on a surface, it can be
reflected - An interesting result is that the angle of
incidence (incoming angle) equals the angle of
reflection (outgoing angle.
9Reflection from a curved surface
- When the surface doing the reflecting is curved,
the light can be brought to a focus. - The curved surface can be parabolic or spherical.
- Spherical surfaces are cheaper and easier to
construct.
10Power towers
- Use many collectors and focus the light to a
central point. - Achieves high temperatures and high power
density. - Each individual collector is called a heliostat
- Must be able to track the sun and focus light on
the main tower
11How they work
- Light is collected at the central tower, which is
about 300 feet tall. There are on the order of
2000 heliostats. - Used to heat water and generate steam
- Steam drives a turbine which generates
electricity - Often include auxiliary energy storage to
continue to produce electricity in the absence of
sunlight - More costly to construct and operate than coal
fired plants. - Good candidates for cogeneration-waste steam
could be used for space heating
12Solar troughs
- A parabolic shaped trough collects the light and
focuses it onto a receiver. - The receiver has a fluid running through it which
carries the heat to a central location where it
drives a steam turbine - May have more than a hundred separate troughs at
such a facility
13Trough Pictures
14Direct Conversion of sunlight to
energyPhoto-voltaics
- Photoelectric effect
- When electromagnetic energy impinges upon a
metal surface, electrons are emitted from the
surface. - Hertz is often credited with
- first noticing it (because he
- published his findings) in 1887
- but it was seen by Becquerel
- In 1839 and Smith in 1873.
15Photoelectric effect
- The effect was a puzzle
- The theory of light as a wave did not explain the
photoelectric effect - Great example of the scientific method in action.
- Up until this point, all the observations of
light were consistent with the hypothesis that
light was a wave. - Now there were new observations could not be
explained by this hypothesis - The challenge became how to refine the existing
theory of light as a wave to account for the
photoelectric effect
16Photoelectric effect explained
- Einstein in 1905 explained the photoelectric
effect by assuming light was made of discrete
packets of energy, called photons. - Not a new idea, he was building upon an idea
proposed by Planck, that light came in discrete
packets. (in fact, Newton proposed a particle
like explanation of light centuries earlier).
The problem for Planck was his discrete packets
were in conflict with the wave like behavior of
light.
17Photoelectric effect explained
- But now, a behavior of light was observed that
fit Plancks energy packet idea. - So electromagnetic radiation appears to behave as
if it is both a wave and a particle. - In fact, you can think of light as discrete wave
packets-packets of waves which, depending upon
the measurement you make, sometimes exhibit
particle behavior and sometimes exhibit wave
behavior. - Einstein won the Nobel prize for his explanation
of the photoelectric effect.
18Semi conductors
- Devices which have conductive properties in
between a conductor and an insulator. - Normally, the outer (valence) electrons are
tightly bound to the nucleus and cannot move. - If one or all of them could be freed up, then the
material can conduct electricity - Silicon is an example of a semi-conductor.
19Silicon
- Element 14 in the periodic table
- Very common element (sand, glass composed of it)
- 8th most common element in the universe
- Its 4 outer valence electrons are normal tightly
bound in the crystal structure. - However, when exposed to light, the outer
electrons can break free via the photoelectric
effect and conduct electricity. - For silicon, the maximum wavelength to produce
the photoelectric effect is 1.12 microns. 77 of
sunlight is at wavelengths lower than this.
20But its not quite this simple
- You also need to produce a voltage within the
silicon to drive the current. - So the silicon must be combined with another
material. This process is called doping. - 2 types of doping P and N
- If you replace one of the silicon atoms in the
crystal lattice with a material that has 5
valence electrons, only 4 are need to bond to the
lattice structure, so one remains free. The doped
semi conductor has an excess of electrons and is
called an N type semiconductor. - Doping elements can be arsenic, antimony or
phosphorus.
21P-types
- If you dope with an element with only 3 valence
electrons, there is a vacancy, or hole left where
the 4th electron should be. - If the hole becomes occupied by an electron from
a neighbor atom, the hole moves through the
semiconductor. This acts like a current with
positive charge flowing through the semi
conductor, so it appears to have a net positive
charge - Called a P-type semiconductor.
- Doping elements could be boron, aluminum, or
indium
22Creating the solar cell
- To create the solar cell, bring a p-type silicon
into contact with an n-type silicon. - The interface is called a p-n junction.
- Electrons will diffuse from the n material to the
p material to fill the holes in the p material.
This leaves a hole in the n material. - So the n-material ends up with an excess positive
charge and the p material ends up with an excess
negative charge. - This creates an electric field across the
junction.
23Current in the solar cell
- Any free electrons in the junction will move
towards the n type material and any holes will
move toward the p -type material . - Now sunlight will cause the photoelectric effect
to occur in the junction. Thus free electrons and
holes are created in the junction and will move
as described above. - Current flows!
24Solar Cells
- Typically 2 inches in diameter and 1/16 of an
inch thick - Produces 0.5 volts, so they are grouped together
to produce higher voltages. These groups can then
be connected to produce even more output. - In 1883 the first solar cell was built by Charles
Fritts. He coated the semiconductor selenium with
an extremely thin layer of gold to form the
junctions. The device was only around 1
efficient.
25Generations of Solar cells
- First generation
- large-area, high quality and single junction
devices. - involve high energy and labor inputs which
prevent any significant progress in reducing
production costs. - They are approaching the theoretical limiting
efficiency of 33 - achieve cost parity with fossil fuel energy
generation after a payback period of 5-7 years. - Cost is not likely to get lower than 1/W.
26Generations of Solar cells
- Second generation-Thin Film Cells
- made by depositing one or more thin layers (thin
film) of photovoltaic material on a substrate. - thickness range of such a layer varies from a few
nanometers to tens of micrometers. - Involve different methods of deposition
- Chemical Vapor deposition the wafer (substrate)
is exposed to one or more volatile precursors,
which react and/or decompose on the substrate
surface to produce the desired deposit.
Frequently, volatile by-products are also
produced, which are removed by gas flow through
the reaction chamber.
27Thin Film deposition techniques
- Electroplating
- electrical current is used to reduce cations
(positively charged ions) of a desired material
from a solution and coat a conductive object with
a thin layer of the material. - Ultrasonic nozzle
- spray nozzle that utilizes a high (20 kHz to 50
kHz) frequency vibration to produce a narrow drop
size distribution and low velocity spray over the
wafer - These cells are low cost, but also low efficiency
28The Third Generation
- Also called advanced thin-film photovoltaic cell
- range of novel alternatives to "first generation
and "second generation cells. - more advanced version of the thin-film cell.
29Third generation alternatives
- non-semiconductor technologies (including polymer
cells and biomimetics) - quantum dot technologies
- also known as nanocrystals, are a special class
semiconductors. which are crystals composed of
specific periodic table groups. Size is small,
ranging from 2-10 nanometers (10-50 atoms) in
diameter. - tandem/multi-junction cells
- multijunction device is a stack of individual
single-junction cells - hot-carrier cells
- Reduce energy losses from the absorption of
photons in the lattice - upconversion and downconversion technologies
- Put a substance in front of the cell that
converts low energy photons to higher energy ones
or higher energy photons to lower energy ones
that the solar cells can convert to electricity. - solar thermal technologies, such as
thermophotonics(TPX) - A TPX system consists of a light-emitting diode
(LED) (though other types of emitters are
conceivable), a photovoltaic (PV) cell, an
optical coupling between the two, and an
electronic control circuit. The LED is heated to
a temperature higher than the PV temperature by
an external heat source. If power is applied to
the LED, , an increased number of electron-hole
pairs (EHPs) are created.These EHPs can then
recombine radiatively so that the LED emits light
at a rate higher than the thermal radiation rate
("superthermal" emission). This light is then
delivered to the cooler PV cell over the optical
coupling and converted to electricity.
30(No Transcript)
31Efficiency and cost factors
- Average cost per peak watt is 1.00-3.00. Coal
fired plant is 1.00/watt. - Efficiency is not great.
- Recall, 77 of the incident sunlight can be used
by the cell. - 43 goes into heating the crystal.
- Remaining efficiency is temperature dependent
- Average efficiency of a silicon solar cell is
14-17 - The second and third generation technologies
discussed are designed to increase these
efficiency numbers and reduce manufacturing costs
32Novel approaches
- UA astronomer Roger Angel
- Uses cheap mirrors to focus sunlight on 3rd
generation solar cells (triple junction cells)
which handle concentrated light - 1.00 per watt achievable-competitive with coal
plants - Potential 1 solar farm 100 miles on a side could
provide electricity to the whole nation - Does not have to be all in one place