Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
79218 Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells 2011 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Temperature control of solar cells at high concentrations is a key issue. Short-term efficiency drop and long-term degradation should be avoided by effective cooling methods. Liquid immersion cooling eliminates the contact thermal resistance of back cooling and should improve cell performance. A 250X dish concentrator with two-axis tracking was utilized to evaluate a new CPV system using de-ionized water for immersion cooling. Time-dependent temperature distributions of the PV module of high power back point-contact cells were measured, as well as the I–V curves. The cooling capacities of the liquid immersion approach are very favorable. The module temperature can be cooled to 45 °C at a 940 W/m2 direct normal irradiance, 17 °C ambient temperature and 30 °C water inlet temperature. The temperature distribution of the module is quite uniform, but the electrical performance of the cell module degrades after a fairly long time immersion in the de-ionized water.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Catalysis
Authors
, , , , ,