| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6456766 | Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells | 2018 | 9 Pages |
â¢The emissivity of silicon solar cells has been measured in the 350 nm-16 µm range.â¢The first full radiative model including UV/VIS/NIR absorption and MIR emission.â¢C-Si solar cells are found to be good radiative thermal emitters.â¢Emissivity of commercial silicon solar cells has been understated in recent Works.â¢Efficiency of PV-T collectors is significantly limited by radiative losses.
The thermal emissivity of crystalline silicon photovoltaic (PV) solar cells plays a role in determining the operating temperature of a solar cell. To elucidate the physical origin of thermal emissivity, we have made an experimental measurement of the full radiative spectrum of the crystalline silicon (c-Si) solar cell, which includes both absorption in the ultraviolet to near-infrared range and emission in the mid-infrared. Using optical modelling, we have identified the origin of radiative emissivity in both encapsulated and unencapsulated solar cells. We find that both encapsulated and unencapsulated c-Si solar cells are good radiative emitters but achieve this through different effects. The emissivity of an unencapsulated c-Si solar cell is determined to be 75% in the MIR range, and is dominated by free-carrier emission in the highly doped emitter and back surface field layers; both effects are greatly augmented through the enhanced optical outcoupling arising from the front surface texture. An encapsulated glass-covered cell has an average emissivity around 90% on the MIR, and dips to 70% at 10 µm and is dominated by the emissivity of the cover glass. These findings serve to illustrate the opportunity for optimising the emissivity of c-Si based collectors, either in conventional c-Si PV modules where high emissivity and low-temperature operation is desirable, or in hybrid PV-thermal collectors where low emissivity enables a higher thermal output to be achieved.
