Valerie Thompson – pv magazine USA https://pv-magazine-usa.com Solar Energy Markets and Technology Fri, 28 Jun 2024 12:42:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 139258053 Sinovoltaics updates North American solar module manufacturing map https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/06/28/sinovoltaics-updates-north-american-solar-module-manufacturing-map/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/06/28/sinovoltaics-updates-north-american-solar-module-manufacturing-map/#respond Fri, 28 Jun 2024 13:00:40 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=105789 The latest North American manufacturing hub report from Sinovoltaics maps current and planned capacity for 95 plants in the region’s PV module supply chain. The report tracks announcements of current and future capacities at plants producing PV modules, cells, wafers, ingots, polysilicon, and metallurgical-grade silicon.

From pv magazine Global

The latest supply chain report from Sinovoltaics, the Hong Kong-based technical compliance and quality assurance company, covers the North American manufacturing hub, tracking factory size, location, owner, current and planned capacity. It provides details on 95 factories producing PV modules, cells, wafers, ingots, polysilicon, and metallurgical-grade siliconin the region, up from 81 in the first quarter.

The Sinovoltaics Supply Chain Map (SSCM) – North America for Q2 2024 notes 42 GW of total module production capacity spread across Mexico, Canada, and the United States, which manufacturers plan to double to 84 GW in the coming 3 to 6 years. A Sinovoltaics spokesperson told pv magazine that the figures represent “nameplate capacity.”

The report presents data from publicly available sources, as well as Sinovoltaics contacts with manufacturers. “The report gives insights into the theoretical capacity if the factories are running at 100%,” a spokesperson from the company said. “Our data are based on the press releases that we’ve received from different manufacturers and different research, and marketing analysis documents that we’ve seen.”

There are ten more manufacturers included in the second quarter report than the previous one, a mixture of thin film, TOPCon, and perovskite tandem technology companies. The additions are Ascent SolarAstronergyBoway AlloyCaelux, Great Lakes Solex, NanoPV, Prism Solar, RunergySolaria, and Ubiquity Solar.

The analysts noted constraints in the region’s supply chain at the cell and wafer nodes. Cell production is at 8 GW and growing to 55 GW in the coming 3 to 6 years, while wafer production is to grow from 3.2 GW to 24.5 G.

The Sinovoltaics team noted the CubicPV decision to halt silicon wafer production to focus on tandem perovskite technology and REC Silicon’s plant closure in Butte, Montana, observing that the market had not moved yet to fill the void.

Sinovoltaics has been tracking the development of PV manufacturing hubs and began publishing a series of free quarterly reports this year, mapping production in India, North America, Southeast Asia, and Europe

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Startup launches online platform for residential PV system purchase https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/06/11/startup-launches-online-platform-for-residential-pv-system-purchase/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/06/11/startup-launches-online-platform-for-residential-pv-system-purchase/#respond Tue, 11 Jun 2024 14:24:23 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=105152 Two-year old Monalee developed an online platform for homeowners looking to buy solar PV and storage systems. Its software enables the process from quotes to financing, installation and after-sales support.

From pv magazine Global

Monalee, a U.S.-based software company has developed a web-based platform to enable investing in residential rooftop PV and related home energy systems. The company serves consumer solar PV markets in the states shown on the map.

The software provides estimates, quotes, financing, permitting, installation, and interconnection services after the homeowner enters their address, current bill, and choice of PV or battery, or both. It also calculates savings, a subsidy or credit calculator, and after-sales support via an app.

“Ordering and completing solar purchases must move online because that is what consumers want. They are used to it, even for major purchases such as buying a car,” Monalee CEO and co-founder Walid Halty, told pv magazine, adding that the challenge with solar is the need for site visits to be able to develop the project.

Monalee solved the site visit challenge by tapping into geographical information system (GIS) data and imagery from Google Maps via an application programming interface (API), known as Solar API.

“But the Solar API covered only half of the U.S.,” said Halty, describing how the company partnered with earth imaging specialists that provided photogrammetry LIDAR and drone imagery data for wider coverage.

Deep learning techniques were applied to enable the software to detect roof edges, for example, or to identify building features, such as a chimney or air conditioning units.

Monalee is a licensed general contractor and master electrician in 24 U.S. states. It works with small to midsize installers as sub-contractors, as well as other partners, such as equipment suppliers and finance providers to supply the services sold via its platform, according to Halty, who said that the company has served 1,900 homeowners since its founding in 2022. He attributes it to the service being “less time-consuming” and “more economical” compared to conventional methods.

Monalee reports that it uses Mitrex 405 solar panels and Tesla inverters. It is also a Certified Tesla dealer and uses the Tesla Powerwall for residents who opt for energy storage.

Offering lower prices has led to some unexpected results. “We were surprised to see demand in parts of the country, like Georgia, Alabama, and Kentucky, that are not typically big solar markets due to lower electricity prices. The largest market by volume are Florida and California, as expected,” said Halty.

Monalee has raised a total of $10 million in venture capital, with the most recent round closing in March 2024. The company has plans to expand to 35 states this year.

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Circular recycling approach aims for ‘perpetual utility’ of PV materials https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/06/05/circular-recycling-approach-aims-for-perpetual-utility-of-pv-materials/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/06/05/circular-recycling-approach-aims-for-perpetual-utility-of-pv-materials/#respond Wed, 05 Jun 2024 22:02:31 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=104968 After analyzing the future usage of material by the crystalline silicon PV industry, including glass, aluminum, silver, copper, ethylene-vinyl-acetate (EVA), and silicon, a German research team found that a circular recycling approach could address foreseeable supply problems. It could also reportedly become economically sustainable.

Researchers in Germany analyzed the future consumption of material by the crystalline silicon PV industry, including glass, aluminum, silver, copper, ethylene-vinyl-acetate (EVA), and silicon, and found that a circular recycling approach could be a solution to supply chain and waste issues, with the potential to be economically sustainable.

The team presented a detailed vision of a “perpetual utility” cycle for solar panels, asserting that the time is now to begin to make the changes to enable cradle-to-cradle recycling, and that Europe will likely lead the way.

“I would say that genuinely circular recycling is in the future for almost anything we produce today. The biggest challenge in my opinion is that we still lack processes that allow circular recycling to compete economically with generating virgin materials,” research leader, Ian Marius Peters, told pv magazine. “Europe has the strongest regulatory framework, and I expect that to remain the case for some time. For that reason, I believe that Europe will be leading the way in the coming years.”

Peters asserts that circular recycling will make PV even more sustainable than it is now. Further benefits include the recovery of resources, especially glass, and even land. At the moment, a strong economic incentive is lacking, so recycling is driven by policies and regulations.

In the study, the researchers relied on a future scenario prepared by PV scientist Pierre Verlinden, which foresees a cumulative capacity of 80 TW by 2050  and a “steady-state manufacturing value of about 3.3 TW /year” in 2033. It considered material re-use scenarios, economic value, and volumes to determine the role of circular recycling to sustain the growth trajectory of solar PV, and to avoid waste streams on “a scale roughly equivalent to today’s global e-waste”.

It considered the recycling of silver, glass, and silicon. For example, it noted the need to replace or reduce silver due to competition from other industries with higher margins will be able to outbid the PV industry, due to its narrow margins.

The team noted that if silver is replaced, then it will be “essential” to recycle silicon, copper, and aluminum. The latter is seen as the second-most valuable recycling product of a PV module, and “its role will likely increase as silver is replaced,” noted the scientists.

Glass recycling is seen as “vital”, especially in the mid- to late-2030s, when the amount of glass from retired panels will be in the tens of millions of tons, as there is no alternative market able to absorb it. “The most suitable market, and in some cases the only one large enough to absorb the amount of recycled material, will be PV module manufacturing itself,” stressed the team.

Recycling processes must be able to retain the value of recycled components, it noted. For example, silicon recycling could reduce projected energy demand and shorten the energy payback time of modules made with recycled silicon. “Circular recycling of silicon has the potential to become the main economic driver for module recycling,” they said.

Looking ahead, teams are working on PV module designs that are easier to dismantle. “We have realized prototypes with solution-processes solar cells, for which we could demonstrate that all materials could be restored to the quality of virgin components,” said Peters.

There is also a need for research on improving the quality of recycled silicon, developing techniques to get rid of impurities, and reducing the energy required.

“Circular recycling is essential for managing the significant material flows required for a global PV module fleet in the multi-terawatt range,” conclude the researchers, adding that although the mass recycling of PV modules is still years or decades away, “it is vital to prepare for circular recycling now to avoid dealing with millions of tons of low-value waste in the future.”

The perspective paper appears in “Cradle-to-cradle recycling in terawatt photovoltaics: A vision of perpetual utility,” published in Joule.

Feedback since publishing has been positive. “Especially setting the projected material flows of the PV industry in a wider context and exploring the implications on circular recycling is something that people have told me they consider interesting and useful,” said Peters.

The researchers were from Helmholtz Institute Erlangen-Nürnberg for Renewable Energy, Jülich Institute for Energy and Climate Research, and Friedrich-Alexander University.

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Researchers build 24.4%-efficient perovskite solar cells with room temperature process https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/06/04/researchers-build-24-4-efficient-perovskite-solar-cells-with-room-temperature-process/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/06/04/researchers-build-24-4-efficient-perovskite-solar-cells-with-room-temperature-process/#respond Tue, 04 Jun 2024 15:38:10 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=104901 Researchers from the U.S. and South Korea have developed a method to make high-quality perovskite films at room temperature. The film was tested in a conventional perovskite solar cell architecture and the result was a power conversion efficiency of exceeding 24%.

An international research team has developed a method to make high-quality perovskite films at room temperature for applications in perovskite solar cells. The novel process avoids thermal annealing and additional post-treatments.

The team selected a perovskite composition known as (Csx(FA0.92MA0.08)1−xPb(I0.92Br0.08)3), which was converted into α-FAPbI3 at room temperature. Further conversion was promoted with the addition of an organic linker known as oleylamine or simply OAm. The method’s effect on quality growth patterns was confirmed by in situ X-ray monitoring.

Furthermore, to demonstrate the feasibility of the process on non-traditional PV substrates and materials, the researchers deposited their perovskite film on a plant leaf, something that would have been impossible with conventional methods.

“The most challenging aspects of the work were to understand the working mechanism and then to demonstrate that the process was gentle enough to deposit perovskite films atop fresh leaves which are very soft and fragile,” research lead author, Thuc-Quyen Nguyen, told pv magazine.

The researchers described the fabrication of cells with a planar p-i-n structure to investigate the effect of cesium (Cs) and OAm on performance and said they used only printable materials. The fabricated devices had an indium tin oxide substrate with a spin-coated layer of MeO-2PACz, which is also known as [2-(3,6-Dimethoxy-9H-carbazol-9-yl)ethyl]phosphonic acid.

Then the perovskite absorber went through a two-step spin-coating process and was connected to an electron transport layer (ETL) based on  phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM) that also relied on spin coating and a bathocuproine (BCP) buffer layer. All of the previous was achieved without thermal annealing. Finally, a 100 nm thick silver metal contact was thermally deposited onto the substrates as cathodes inside a vacuum thermal evaporator.

Reproducibility was assessed via 100 devices with varying amounts of experimental materials. Observing the results, the team noted that the addition of OAm “significantly mitigated” deviations and improved device properties, and that the Cs10+OAm devices exhibited the highest short-circuit current density, open-circuit voltage, and fill factor with the smallest deviations of efficiencies.

The team said that the optimized Cs10+OAm device achieved “impressive efficiencies” of 23.2%. With an anti-reflective coating, it was increased to 24.4%. It noted that the results surpassed efficiencies attained by previous low-temperature and room-temperature (RT) processed perovskite solar cells (PSCs).

“Through a combination of characterization techniques, we unveiled the morphology and device physics of RT-processed PSCs. Finally, we demonstrated that the annealing-free processing enables the fabrication of high-quality perovskite films on leaf substrates,” concluded the researchers.

The details of the study appear in “Room-temperature-processed perovskite solar cells surpassing 24% efficiency,” published in Joule. The researchers came from three institutions, University of California, Santa Barbara, Korea’s Pusan National University, and Korea Electric Power Research Institute.

Looking ahead, the teams intend to work on integrated PV and indoor PV technologies. “Currently, we focus on the development of efficient semi-transparent solar cells that achieve efficiencies exceeding 12% while ensuring a transparency level of over 30%. These cells are designed for integration into building windows, vehicles, and greenhouses,” said Nguyen.

“Additionally, we are actively engaged in the development of indoor solar cells capable of achieving efficiencies surpassing 40% under LED lighting conditions. This breakthrough has the potential to provide renewable energy to power indoor devices and systems.”

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PVRadar offers solar project risk assessments factoring in historical climate data https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/06/03/pvradar-offers-solar-project-risk-assessments-factoring-in-historical-climate-data/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/06/03/pvradar-offers-solar-project-risk-assessments-factoring-in-historical-climate-data/#respond Mon, 03 Jun 2024 12:10:15 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=104817 PVRadar Labs has expanded its software platform to include PV project risk assessment functionality, reportedly enabling more realistic performance estimates based on historical climate data.

From pv magazine Global

PVRadar Labs, a Germany-based software company, has expanded the functionality of its PVRadar software platform, adding the ability to model utility-scale project performance using climate data, in addition to soiling and cleaning optimization.

“By using PVRadar developers can do a proper risk assessment to factor in snow losses, soiling, or albedo effects. It is especially useful for European or U.S.-based developers who are entering new geographic markets because the climate data is global,” PVRadar Labs co-founder and CEO, Thore Müller, told pv magazine.

“Originally, the software was set up to optimize PV module cleaning costs at the early stage of planning, but we found that many of our clients struggled to correctly determine loss factors for yield estimation. Usually they use simple tools, like excel spreadsheets, but there is a clear need for accurate prediction based on historic conditions, such as rainfall, snowfall, and particulate matter, for example.”

PVRadar provides historical climate data going back 20 years. It is based on geographical information system (GIS) sources, as well as national weather databases, if available. “We saw that for some project inputs, there is verifiable data available to developers, such as the price of the modules supplied by manufacturers, or the performance attributes supplied by testing labs. But it was not so with climate-related effects and loss factors. Therefore, all too often project developers rely on generalized assumptions, for example assuming a flat 2% soiling loss, which in many dry areas has no relation to reality,” said Müller.

The platform is complementary to internal workflows and commercially available design tools, such as PVCase, PVFarm, PVDesign, or PVSyst. It provides users with realistic loss factor inputs, according to Müller.

Access to the platform comes in two variations, either a single project license or a corporate subscription for unlimited projects. “We have twelve project development companies using the platform for multiple projects. That is because developers are usually assessing a lot more sites than they end up developing. It could be ten designs for every project that gets built,” Franco Clandestino, co-founder and head of product, told pv magazine.

Looking ahead, the team is working on additional risk assessment tools. “We will be continuously adding more models, for example, for the degradation rate, and we will also allow users to create their own models and feed them from our database,” said Müller.

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PVFarm launches online tool for early stage PV project planning https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/30/pvfarm-launches-online-tool-for-early-stage-pv-project-planning/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/30/pvfarm-launches-online-tool-for-early-stage-pv-project-planning/#respond Thu, 30 May 2024 16:13:04 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=104752 U.S.-based PVFarm has released a web-based application for large-scale solar PV project planning at the early stage. It includes real-time energy models and building information model (BIM) features, reportedly supporting PV plant electrical, mechanical, civil, energy, and procurement aspects.

U.S.-based PVFarm has launched a web-based PV plant design application for professionals involved in the early stages of the design cycle of utility-scale and commercial and industrial (C&I) projects.

The subscription-based tool offers rapid feedback on the implications of design decisions about layouts, equipment, grading, and electrical systems at the start of the project workflow. “It is a critical phase of the project with a lasting impact. Decisions have a thirty-year tail,” PVFarm head of technology, Maksim Markevich told pv magazine. “Currently we offer a paid product license after a co-piloted trial where we work with potential users to evaluate a real project with PVFarm.”

Users can mix equipment and electrical designs, or run different grading strategies across an entire site or field-by-field, according to the company. Layouts can be edited multiple times. Advanced algorithms help to quickly identify the most efficient options.

“The application was three years in the making. Our team has eight years of experience developing design automation software for other industries,” said Markevich.

Suitable for fixed ground mounted or single-axis tracking plants, the application reportedly supports financial, energy performance, electrical, civil, mechanical, and procurement aspects.  It has a building information model (BIM) functionality for modeling and provides information about objects to team members for analysis, exploration, or comparisons.

Multiple file formats are supported and there is compatibility with other tools, such as Autodesk and PvSyst. “By bringing all these aspects together in one platform, PVFarm enables users to evaluate opportunities and trade-offs holistically, ensuring informed decision-making,” said Markevich.

“The application was three years in the making. Our team has eight years of experience developing design automation software for other industries,” said Markevich.

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Strategies to address thermomechanical instability of perovskite solar modules https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/29/strategies-to-address-thermomechanical-instability-of-perovskite-solar-modules/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/29/strategies-to-address-thermomechanical-instability-of-perovskite-solar-modules/#respond Wed, 29 May 2024 12:15:19 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=104630 A U.S. research team has investigated the thermomechanical reliability of metal halide perovskite (MHP) modules and cells in an effort to identify the best strategies to improve their stability under thermomechanical stressors. The scientists discussed, in particular, film stresses, adhesion of charge transport layers, and instability under light and heat.

Scientists from Arizona State University published a paper about solving mechanical-based failure mechanisms to make metal halide perovskite (MHP) modules and cells more stable and reliable.

The team asserted that the future of stable and efficient perovskite solar modules lies in understanding the interconnection between various degradation modes, mechanical, thermal, and chemical, under light, heat, and humidity stressors.

“We noticed that there is a significant acceleration in failure rates and reduction in lifetimes of perovskite solar modules in the field when compared to those tested in the lab,” the lead author of the paper, Marco Casareto, told pv magazine. “Specifically, there is little work on testing modules under multiple environmental stressors, such as both light and thermal fluctuations. We wanted to draw attention to this crucial area of research in the hopes of accelerating the progress and commercial viability of MHPs.”

“Yes, and we believe that these factors are connected, based on a shared underlying mechanism related to the mechanical properties of an MHP module,” research co-author, Nick Rolston, told pv magazine.

Their paper highlights issues related to the low fracture energy (Gc) of material layers and interlayer adhesion. “Gc is a material’s resistance to the propagation of a crack, dependent upon both material/interface bonding energy and the ability of a material to deform,” the research group explained.

In addition, it discusses the negative impact of film stresses within the perovskite absorber, how scribing removes material introducing even more interfaces for stress, and the importance of realistic accelerated degradation testing in the lab.

Realistic testing of devices with multiple simultaneous stressors is “crucial” to simulate operation in the field and achieve commercial maturity, emphasized the team. It proposed setting a minimum Gc of 1 J/m2 for devices in the lab to ensure that modules can withstand processing and packaging steps without mechanical failure, as well as reduce the potential for delamination and accelerated degradation.

The researchers propose that “engineering compressive stress” and “tuning layer properties” could improve thermomechanical reliability. They also describe encapsulant and perovskite solar module (PSM) materials strategies to increase toughness.

Their findings appear in “Designing metal halide perovskite solar modules for thermomechanical reliability,” published in communications materials. 

When asked about reactions to the publication, Rolston said, “We haven’t had much feedback yet since the paper was just released; however, we have been discussing these results with several of the MHP startups that are working toward commercializing the technology, as well as the Perovskite PV Accelerator for Commercializing Technologies (PACT),” referring to the multi-year US Department of Energy’s PACT accelerator, led by Sandia National Laboratories.

There is still a long way to go, as Rolston sees it, but there is optimism about the development of MHP PV panels with operational lifetimes comparable to incumbent silicon or cadmium telluride (CdTe), if there is more of an effort in designing for thermomechanical reliability, rather than just for performance.

Looking ahead, Casareto said, “We’re currently working on validating our hypothesis of a mechanical-based failure mechanism. This involved fabricating MHP individual cells without scribing or encapsulation to establish a baseline of how they degrade under thermal cycling once encapsulated. We are now doing the same with modules soon to elucidate any differences in degradation mechanisms/severity of modules under thermal cycling. We aim to examine the effect of encapsulation, particularly at the scribe lines, as a module is thermally cycled to evaluate what properties are most important/beneficial for a PSM encapsulant.”

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NREL-led consortium releases PV reliability forecasting tools https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/21/nrel-led-consortium-releases-pv-reliability-forecasting-tools/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/21/nrel-led-consortium-releases-pv-reliability-forecasting-tools/#respond Tue, 21 May 2024 14:56:52 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=104437 The Durable Module Materials consortium (DuraMAT) announced in its latest annual report the availability of new PV forecasting tools, and new research results towards the goal of more reliable PV modules.

From pv magazine Global

The Durable Module Materials (DuraMAT) consortium, established by the United States Department of Energy’s Solar Energy Technology Office (SETO), has released its latest annual report with news about the availability of new PV forecasting tools and new research about certain module degradation trends.

DuraMAT reported the results of its focus on reliability forecasting in 2023, driven by the observation that the PV industry is “innovating so quickly that the performance of modules in the field is no longer always a reliable indicator of what will happen in the future.”

“We awarded six projects under our reliability forecasting call this year,” said Teresa Barnes, DuraMAT director and DOE National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) researcher in a press release.

The reliability forecasting projects addressed ultraviolet-induced degradation, glass fracture mechanics, and degradation mechanisms in encapsulants, as well as how to do faster analysis of failure data. As a result, DuraMAT now has a suite of software tools and data sets, some of which rely on quantitative modeling and rapid validation technologies. The tools cover topics such as mechanical models for materials, wind loading, fracture mechanics, moisture diffusion, and irradiance, and are available in the DuraMAT Data Hub.

“Drawing insights from all these areas should give us the capability to predict the long-term reliability of new module designs,” stated Barnes.

Two degradation mechanisms that received special attention from DuraMAT in 2023 are cell cracking and ultraviolet (UV) degradation. “Cracked cells are a challenge for the solar industry because they can reduce output but often go unnoticed,” said the team. Studies were carried out on quantifying and addressing cell cracking.

“Researchers found that some newer modules with many busbars, half-cut cells, and glass–glass encapsulation are more tolerant of cracked cells and less likely to show power loss,” it said. An outcome of the research is WhatsCracking, a free cell fracture prediction application to assist in making modules that are less sensitive to cell breakage. For example, designing modules that rotate half-cells at 90-degree angles to reduce the chance of cracking under load, as reported in pv magazine. The WhatsCracking app is one of the tools in the DuraMAT Data Hub.

DuraMAT researchers also found that UV-induced degradation is a significant issue in certain high-efficiency products. “These results are important, as the increased degradation related to UV exposure in modern cell types may offset some of the gains predicted from bifacial and other high-efficiency cells,” said the team, adding that DuraMAT will be starting new work to quantify this type of degradation in 2024.

The DuraMAT consortium, which is led by the DOE’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), with participation by Sandia National Laboratories and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, includes a 22-member board of solar industry professionals.

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No ceiling on U.S. glass opportunity https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/17/no-ceiling-on-u-s-glass-opportunity/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/17/no-ceiling-on-u-s-glass-opportunity/#respond Fri, 17 May 2024 15:00:26 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=104322 With PV module capacity ramping up, glass suppliers have been investing in new solar glass production capacity. As in India and China, new facilities are popping up in North America, with unique twists to ensure competitiveness, such as using recycled material.

From pv magazine

In mid-March 2024, Canada’s Silfab Solar, a high-efficiency module manufacturer with plans to expand into South Carolina, said it would source glass from U.S.-based PV panel recycler Solarcycle, which is planning a $344 million solar glass fab in the U.S. state of Georgia, supplied by recycled panel materials.

“We’re excited about the potential for domestic solar manufacturing growth to provide jobs and R&D development in the US,” Solarcycle Chief Operating Officer (COO) Rob Vinje told pv magazine.

Global growth

Andries Wantenaar, from market intelligence company Rethink Technology Research, said that “demand for solar glass is looking robust. It is a growing market with relatively stable prices.” He noted a 66% increase in every part of China’s solar manufacturing industry in 2023, and even more rapid growth outside China, where output doubled from 65 GW in 2022, to around 130 GW in 2023.

“If you make solar glass, you have a very large and very rapidly growing ­market outside of China to sell to,” said Wantenaar. “You won’t be stuck in the situation of Western polysilicon makers, whose customers are the wafer makers in China who are now buying from Chinese polysilicon makers exclusively at prices well below the Western marginal cost of production.”

Glass material prices are relatively stable. “The price of solar-grade glass has been stubborn for at least a decade now because it’s a totally figured-out product,” said Wantenaar. The caveat is that glass is an energy-intensive product, which is a strong cost factor, and one reason why China dominates its production. Wantenaar estimated that China holds “around 90%” of the solar glass market, higher than its 80% PV module share.

Two sides

Wantenaar believes glass will represent a bigger share of module costs in the future, as other elements become more cost-efficient and the bifacial module trend, typically featuring glass on both sides rather than a glass front combined with a polymer backsheet, intensifies.

“Bifacial recently passed 50% market share, looking at Chinese manufacturing outputs, and will continue to grow, to perhaps 75% in 2030,” said the analyst.

Bifacial glass modules typically use two 2 mm glass panes, sometimes 1.6 mm, as opposed to conventional panels, that feature 3.2 mm glass. The use of thinner glass might require different heat-strengthening processes and that may impact quality.

The trend toward glass-glass is something researchers at the US Department of Energy’s (DOE) National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) are looking into, regarding module durability.

“The really thin glass is optimized for shipping and logistics, not necessarily for durability performance in the field,” said Teresa Barnes, who manages the PV reliability and system performance group at NREL, and serves as head of the DOE-funded Durable Module Materials (Duramat) research consortium.

“Historically, silicon PV modules have been made with rolled and textured cover glass while thin film has used antimony-free float glass with a thickness of 2 mm or 3 mm,” said Barnes. “Thinner is possible but it’s trickier due to the heat-tempering process.”

It could be that glass material made for the North American market will have different mechanical requirements than for other regions.

“Extreme weather, such as hail, could mean that US modules would need the thicker-tempered glass,” said Barnes.

There are also similar signals coming from Europe.

“The trend here is to find niches,” said Martin Zugg, managing director of German glass manufacturer Interfloat, which is owned by India’s Borosil. “It is hard to find a niche but we see manufacturers developing more and more new niche markets, which includes hail-resistant panels that require thicker glass, roof-integrated modules, and building-integrated PV applications.”

Interfloat produces enough low-iron, high-transmission textured solar glass for 2 GW of modules per year. It makes glass with thicknesses ranging from 2 mm to 6 mm, in conventional as well as custom and special-request dimensions.

The use of thicker glass could give local glass manufacturers a market opportunity and lower transport-related costs.

“Glass is an expensive material to ship,” said the NREL’s Barnes. “Logistics costs, shipping, and storage are all paid by the PV module manufacturer.”

First Solar effect

U.S.-based thin-film PV giant First Solar is expanding capacity with 13 GW of operational output as of September 2023, and plans for 25 GW of global annual nameplate capacity in 2026, with 14 GW in the United States.

That expansion trajectory is triggering glass industry investment to supply it with the float glass it needs for its thin-film modules. In the United States, manufacturers NSG Group and Vitro Architectural Glass have announced contracts and plans for dedicated lines to serve First Solar.

In India, where First Solar recently inaugurated its 3.3 GW Series 7 module plant, French materials company Saint Gobain is reportedly bringing production online at a plant in the state of Tamil Nadu in order to supply the American manufacturer.

In November 2023, NSG said it would add transparent conductive oxide (TCO)-coated glass capacity in Ohio to supply First Solar, planning the move in early 2025. NSG has produced TCO-coated glass for thin-film PV for more than 25 years.

“Every year the solar market is bigger and bigger; more capital, more resources,” said Stephen Weidner, who heads NSG’s North ­American ­architectural glass and solar products groups. “We see this on a global basis.”

Glass for solar is becoming more significant. “It has gone from virtually nothing 10 years ago, to 10% to 15% of the total supply of the flat glass market in North America,” said Weidner. “Our goal is to grow with the market. That means that by end of [2024] we will have three float lines in North America dedicated to the solar segment, a further two lines in Vietnam, also one in Malaysia, which we converted to TCO from architectural glass earlier.”

Vitro Architectural Glass is also adding U.S. capacity to supply First Solar. In October 2023, it announced an expansion of its contract with First Solar and a plan to invest in a plant in Pennsylvania, as well as in adapting existing PV glass facilities. The company said in a statement that it expected “significant growth” in solar glass business due to the “nearshoring” effect in the United States.

IRA impact

Besides influencing First Solar and its growing glass supply chain, policies such as the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), are also spurring crystalline silicon manufacturing investment, triggering Canadian Premium Sand (CPS), a new entrant from Canada, to announce a solar panel glass project. CPS plans to build a factory in Selkirk, Manitoba, to produce 1.8 mm to 4 mm glass module covers in enough volume for 6 GW of solar panels per year.

“We are estimating demand in the North America region for solar pattern glass to reach nearly 100 GW by 2030, driven by the reshoring of the solar panel manufacturing supply chain in the US,” said Anshul Vishal, who heads up corporate development at CPS.

The business announced offtake agreements with the likes of Swiss module manufacturer Meyer Burger, Canada-based Heliene, and Qcells, owned by South Korea’s Hanwha. Further offtake discussions with other potential patterned solar glass customers are under way, according to Vishal, with plans to reach 100% contracted status prior to construction.

The CPS integrated glass project needs a CAD 880 million ($639 million) investment to set up the plant and to develop a silica sand site. The plan includes multiple lines of tempered and patterned solar glass, including anti-reflective and anti-soiling coating lines, to be online in 2026.

“It is a project endorsed by both provincial and federal government agencies and the environmental permits are in place,” said Vishal. “We just had the sand material tested in Europe, which confirmed that we will be able to use simple, low-cost, and environmentally responsible processes to refine it to patterned solar glass-grade specifications.”

CPS will be able to tap the Manitoba energy mix for low-CO2-emission hydroelectricity and wind power. Being in the North American Free Trade ­Agreement zone at a site that is three to four days overland from customers – supporting simpler shipping and less potential disruption – are other location-related advantages, according to Vishal.

A consortium is contracted to build the CPS plant. It includes Henry F. Teichmann, an international glass plant contractor based in the United States; France-based industrial engineering firm Fives Group; Italian glassmaking equipment supplier Bottero; and two Canadian firms, Elrus Aggregate Systems, a mineral processing equipment provider; and PCL Constructors, a civil engineering firm.

Recycled glass

Like CPS, the plant planned for two-year old Solarcycle has an annual capacity with the module equivalent of 5 GW to 6 GW of generation capacity – but using recycled glass. Using recycled materials recovered from end-of-life crystalline silicon panels means the recovered glass has the right chemical composition. It is already a low-iron material, as Solarcycle’s Vinje sees it, and that will reduce energy demand and embodied carbon.

“It is the first low iron rolled glass plant to be built in the US market,” said the COO. “We are currently receiving offers from international glass processing equipment suppliers while the contracts for engineering, construction, and multiple subsystems are being negotiated with U.S.-based suppliers.”

In the works is an 800-meter-long patterned glass production line with both hot and cold processing segments. It includes a specially designed cross-fired regenerative furnace construction that reuses exhaust gases to reduce fuel consumption; hot rolled processing equipment; and the cutting, grinding, glass tempering, and other cold end process steps needed to make glass for dual-and single-glass modules.

Solarcycle is not the only glass supplier looking to benefit from using recycled material. Canada’s CPS also said it plans to use recycled glass cullet from external sources in its products while the likes of Japan’s AGC and Saint Gobain have also announced projects.

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Powering drones with ultra-thin, flexible perovskite PV cells https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/14/powering-drones-with-ultra-thin-flexible-perovskite-pv-cells/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/14/powering-drones-with-ultra-thin-flexible-perovskite-pv-cells/#respond Tue, 14 May 2024 14:15:29 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=104200 An Austrian research team has demonstrated that lightweight, flexible and ultra-thin perovskite solar technology can power palm-sized autonomous drones.

From pv magazine Global

A team from Johannes Kepler University Linz, Austria has developed lead halide perovskite solar cells that measure less than 2.5 μm thick with a champion specific PV power density of 44 W/g, and an average performance of 41 W/g, which they were able to integrate into modules to power palm-sized quadcopter-style drones.

The technology exhibited promising stability results under several standard tests, as well as the energy harvesting potential sufficient to recharge the vehicle’s batteries. The details of their research appear in “Flexible quasi-2D perovskite solar cells with high specific power and improved stability for energy-autonomous drones,” published in nature energy.

The study’s large-area photovoltaic module, which measured 24 cm2, enabled the autonomous operation of the drone that extended “beyond what is possible on a single battery charge while eliminating the need for docking, tethered charging or other forms of human involvement.” The perovskite solar modules contributed just 1/400th of the drone’s total weight.

The group tested several alpha-methylbenzyl ammonium iodide (MBA) combinations in the top perovskite absorber layer, with PEDOT:PSS combining hole transport and electrode functions. The longest lifetime of the various MBA formulations included cesium (Cs), indicating “a reduction of non-radiative recombination pathways due to the presence of MBA and Cs”, according to the researchers.

The substrate was an “ultrathin” and transparent-conductive-oxide-free 1.4-μm-thick polymer foil coated with a layer of 100 nm aluminum oxide. It effectively served as a “barrier” to moisture and gases.

“This type of device has no room for typical encapsulation approaches, which are just too thick. Instead, the team relied on the MBA perovskite top layer’s large, bulky crystal formation to effectively passivate the surface, and for the substrate, the aluminum oxide layer applied with atomic layer deposition (ALD) tool serves to protect from the external conditions, but still stay lightweight and flexible,” research leader, Martin Kaltenbrunner, told pv magazine.

Indeed, the paper notes, for example, that the water vapor transmission rate (WVTR) of the “coated ultrathin substrate was measured to be about 35% lower” when compared to the reference designs, which were methylammonium lead iodide (MAPbI3) devices.

Other features of the perovskite cell include an electron transport layer made of phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM) with a titanium oxide interlayer, and a metal top contact, which the group pointed out could be made interchangeably of gold, or chromium/gold, or low-cost aluminum.

“It is important in our perovskite solar research to use precursors that are synthesized in as few steps as possible. Straightforward synthesis is key because we want the technology to be scalable and to keep material production costs in check,” said Kaltenbrunner.

From cells to module

The study’s small area perovskite solar cell measured 0.1 cm2 with an open circuit of 1.13 V, a short-circuit current density of 21.6 mA cm−2, a fill factor of 74.3%, and a power conversion efficiency of 18.1 %. The champion cells reached an open-circuit voltage of 1.15 V, a fill factor of 78%, and an efficiency of 20.1%.

The larger device had an active cell area of 1.0 cm2, with a mean open-circuit voltage of 1.11 V, a short-circuit density of 20.0 mA cm−2, a fill factor of 65.9%, and an efficiency of 14.7. The champion device reached an efficiency 16.3%, stated the research team.

The module for powering the drone had 24 interconnected 1 cm2 solar cells. The energy-autonomous hybrid solar-powered commercially available quadcopter-type drone weighed just 13 g.

The stability and prolonged outdoor operability were tested. For example, both the small- and large-area unencapsulated solar cells maintained 90% and 74% of initial performance, respectively, after 50 h continuous maximum power point tracking (MPPT) in ambient air. In addition, an external lab validated performance and properties of the perovskite composition.

The team asserted that it demonstrated the “broader benefits of using a quasi-2D perovskite active layer” and that it outperforms “other compositions in this field”, adding that the performance, stability, and usability of the ultra-lightweight perovskite solar technology is both a “portable and cost-effective sustainable energy harvesting” solution.

As a drone charging system, it is a step on the path to “perpetual-operation vehicle development” for both aerospace and terrestrial applications, it asserted.

The team has plans for further research along these lines. “We will continue to work continue to develop the AlOx barrier substrate technology, scalable deposition techniques, and to scale up to even larger modules, measuring at least 10 cm X 10 cm. We are intent on the development of lightweight, flexible PV solutions to power all kinds of robotics and autonomous vehicles,” said Kaltenbrunner. “There is great potential for deployable, flexible solar PV in both earth and space applications.”

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Sinovoltaics publishes energy storage manufacturer financial stability ranking https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/10/sinovoltaics-publishes-energy-storage-manufacturer-financial-stability-ranking/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/10/sinovoltaics-publishes-energy-storage-manufacturer-financial-stability-ranking/#respond Fri, 10 May 2024 13:14:30 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=104131 The report lists Tesla as number one, followed by South Korean’s LG Energy Solution, Taiwan-based Kung Long Battery, China’s Mustang Battery, along with U.S.-based Solid Power in the top five.

From pv magazine global

The latest Sinovoltaics financial stability ranking of battery energy storage system producers, which is based on a balance sheet model and publicly available financial information, lists U.S.-based Tesla as number one, followed by South Korean’s LG Energy Solution, Taiwan-based Kung Long Battery and China’s Mustang Battery, along with U.S.-based Solid Power in the top five.

Sinovoltaics, a Hong Kong-based technical compliance and quality assurance service firm, has released its latest Energy Storage Manufacturers Ranking. The report, which is global in scope and covers 55 manufacturers, is available to download for free.  Results are calculated from June 2020 until March 2024 to provide insight into the stability of the scores over time.

The ranking uses a so-called Altmann Z-score, a quantitative formula to analyze multiple corporate income and balance sheet values to gauge the financial health of a company. It assesses a company’s financial strength based on publicly available information through a credit-strength test based on profitability, leverage, liquidity, solvency, and activity ratios. A score that is 1.1 or lower indicates a higher probability of bankruptcy within the next two years, while a higher score of 2.6 or greater indicates a solid financial position.

The manufacturers in the top ten of the energy storage ranking include Tesla, LG Energy Solution, Kung Long Battery, Mustang Battery, Solid Power, along with Ireland-based Eaton, China-based Sinexcel, Japanese manufacturers GS Yuasa and Sanyo, along with U.S.-based Livent.

Sinovoltaics has published several other manufacturer rankings this year, including reports focused on inverter manufacturers and module manufacturers. It points out that although the reports do not assess the quality of the equipment, they can be used by buyers and other industry stakeholders, such as financial institutions, as an element of the due diligence process, or to help identify financially stable partners.

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Voltaic Systems unveils battery monitoring system for offgrid PV applications https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/03/voltaic-systems-unveils-battery-monitoring-system-for-offgrid-pv-applications/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/03/voltaic-systems-unveils-battery-monitoring-system-for-offgrid-pv-applications/#respond Fri, 03 May 2024 13:00:18 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=103853 The U.S.-based PV system provider for infrastructure and industrial equipment without grid access has launched a battery health monitoring software module for its flagship Core Solar Power Systems product line.

From pv magazine Global

Voltaic Systems, a U.S.-based developer of solar PV systems for remotely-sited industrial and infrastructure equipment, has added monitoring software to track the health of the batteries in its Core Solar Power System product line.

The Core Solar Power products, which feature a PV panel, an integrated waterproof lithium battery and a mounting system, are sold as an alternative to traditional lead-acid batteries to power infrastructure equipment, such as cellular routers, network devices, air quality monitors, outdoor security cameras, irrigation systems, communications gateways and remote lighting.

The new monitoring software delivers information about the battery, its temperature, state of charge, power generated by solar panels and power consumed by the device.

“Given the value of the data and remote nature of these kinds of industrial Internet-of-Things applications, we developed a battery health monitoring system to help customers understand and make decisions about their deployments,” Voltaic Systems’ chief operating officer, Jeff Crystal, told pv magazine.

The monitoring system provides status snapshots via the cellular network, as well as time-series data (see graphic below), which can be used to warn of potential outages and provide potential corrective steps. “In one instance, a customer modified their power consumption during a particularly rainy week to maintain uptime. It works for single systems as well as for managing fleets of remote devices,” said Crystal.

The Core Solar Power System includes an integrated maximum power point tracking (MPPT) charge controller in addition to the battery and PV panel. The panel sizes range from 25 W to 200 W and the matching batteries range from 18 ah (5 kg) to 100 ah (33 kg). The dimensions range from 307 mm x 507 mm x 30 mm to 586 mm x 980 mm x 30 mm.

The Voltaic Systems products are often integrated into its customers’ solutions, such as the air quality monitoring system shown below, made by California-based Clarity Movement Co.

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Sinovoltaics releases inverter manufacturer financial stability ranking https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/01/sinovoltaics-releases-inverter-manufacturer-financial-stability-ranking/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/05/01/sinovoltaics-releases-inverter-manufacturer-financial-stability-ranking/#respond Wed, 01 May 2024 13:00:55 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=103760 Sinovoltaics analyzed publicly traded inverter producers using a balance sheet-based model and publicly available financial information to track financial strength over the past three years. The top-five in the latest ranking are Hoymiles Power Electronics, Enphase, Kstar, Eaton, and Goodwe.

From pv magazine Global

Sinovoltaics, a Hong Kong-based technical compliance and quality assurance service firm, has released the second edition of its Sinovoltaics PV inverter manufacturer financial stability ranking. The company said the results, which are calculated since June 2020, provide insight into the stability of the scores over time. The report, which has a global scope, is free to download.

The Sinovoltaics’ financial stability ranking is based on a so-called Altmann Z-score, a quantitative formula that uses multiple corporate income and balance sheet values to measure the financial health of a company. It assesses a company’s financial strength through a credit-strength test based on profitability, leverage, liquidity, solvency, and activity ratios, according to Sinovoltaics.

A score that is 1.1 or lower indicates a higher probability of bankruptcy within the next two years, while a higher score of 2.6 or great

The inverter manufacturers leading the ranking are China’s Hoymiles Power Electronics, U.S.-based microinverter specialist Enphase Energy, Shenzen-based Kstar Science and Technology, Irish energy management specialist Eaton, China’s Goodwe and Sinexcel, Taiwan’s Delta Electronics, Clenergy and Hopewind, both based in China, and Switzerland’s ABB.

“Overall the global PV inverter market has grown steadily in tandem with worldwide solar PV installations. In this regard, we can see in our Sinovoltaics Manufacturer Ranking reports that the vast majority of the inverter makers included are financially healthy or stable,” Niclas Weimar, Sinovoltaics’ chief technology officer told pv magazine, adding that there are two inverter manufacturing trends worth noting.

“One [trend] is that Chinese inverter manufacturers are outpacing their European and U.S.-American peers in terms of global market share, with over 50% shared between Sungrow and Huawei,” said Weimar.

The other trend is that inverter manufacturers, along with many PV module makers, are “tapping into battery energy storage manufacturing” with Sungrow also taking the lead here as measured in MWh shipments, according to Weimar.

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New vapor deposition tech could accelerate commercialization of perovskite solar cells https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/04/17/new-vapor-deposition-tech-could-accelerate-commercialization-of-perovskite-solar-cells/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/04/17/new-vapor-deposition-tech-could-accelerate-commercialization-of-perovskite-solar-cells/#respond Wed, 17 Apr 2024 16:15:20 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=103319 A U.S.-based team developed a vapor deposition technique to fabricate outperforming all-inorganic perovskite thin films in under 5 minutes in a continuous process. The adoption of the proposed approach may also result in higher perovskite solar cell power conversion efficiencies.

From pv magazine global

Researchers developed a novel vapor deposition method for all-inorganic perovskite absorbers using continuous flash sublimation (CFS).

They described the new technique as a non-batch process that solves two problems associated with the use of established vapor processing in perovskite material manufacturing – the slow speed of deposition and the non-continuous nature of batch processing.

“Our deposition approach allows for the continuous deposition of a fully absorbing perovskite material within less than five minutes,” corresponding author Tobias Abzieher from Swift Solar, a U.S.-based perovskite PV startup, told pv magazine. “Solar cells prepared with these materials also outperform previously realized efficiencies of vapor processed inorganic perovskite solar cells significantly.”

The researchers said that they are pursuing vapor processing because of its potential for high yield, high-quality and high reproducibility processing, and its potential to eliminate the use of hazardous solvents. Furthermore, it is seen as simplifying the scaling up to larger device areas. In addition, its performance on rough surfaces makes it attractive for perovskite-based tandem applications.

“The limited throughput of vapor processes for the deposition of perovskite materials remains the number one bottleneck for a swift commercialization. Researching alternative deposition strategies is therefore key,” David Moore, a researcher from the US Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and co-corresponding author told pv magazine.

The scientists fabricated a variety of “high-quality” cesium lead halide (CsPb(IxBr1−x)3) thin films in a prototype system to test the versatility of the CFS approach, noting that the process was able to produce thin film compositions “across the entire bromine/iodine space maintaining the composition of the source materials”.

They noted that the CFS approach enabled the reduction of the time required to deposit a “fully absorbing layer to less than 5 minutes” in a continuous deposition process.

The CFS-derived films were made into working solar cell devices. The study’s champion solar cells achieved power conversion efficiencies as high as 14.9%, open-circuit voltage of 1.17 V, fill factor of 76.0%, and short-circuit current densities of 16.8 mA cm−2. The forward scan direction values were 10.3%, 1.12 V, 55.1%, and 16.7 mA cm−2, respectively.

The researchers describe the source material, a mechano-chemically synthesized powder, and how it is prepared by mixing individual precursor materials, cesium and lead salts into a stochiometric powder. They said it was flashed at high temperatures to overcome the differences in deposition characteristics of the individual precursor materials.

The powder was filled into a reservoir connected to a vibratory feeder, which in turn was connected to an AC signal. After moving along the vibratory feeder, the powder falls into a preheated tantalum evaporation boat kept at a temperature “significantly above” the highest sublimation temperature of the individual inorganic salts, typically in the range of 700 C. “Inside the evaporation boat, the powder constituents instantaneously sublime, leave the evaporation source, to finally condense on a substrate situated above the evaporation boat,” explained the team.

An annealing step at temperatures between 330 C and 380 C for 0.5 min to 1 min was implemented after the CFS step to “improve thin-film quality and to ensure stabilization of the correct photoactive perovskite phase”. The details are described in “Continuous flash sublimation of inorganic halide perovskites: overcoming rate and continuity limitations of vapor deposition,” published in the Journal of Materials Chemistry A.

The team concluded that the work is a critical step toward fast and continuous processing of perovskite materials, which is “highly suitable for the fast deposition of thin films whose individual constituents have significant differences in sublimation characteristics.”

“I can imagine that a process like this could be used for the industrial fabrication of perovskites. Throughput is one of the number one bottlenecks of vapor processing of perovskites, so developing novel approaches that overcome this limitation are crucial,” Abzieher said, when asked about technology transfer potential.

Looking ahead at research activity, David Moore said that NREL, for example, is looking into the use of the CFS method for other hard-to-deposit material classes, as well as investigating using this method with other types of perovskite materials, such as hybrid materials containing organic and inorganic precursor materials.

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Origami Solar readies production of steel solar module frames https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/04/17/origami-solar-readies-production-of-steel-solar-module-frames/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/04/17/origami-solar-readies-production-of-steel-solar-module-frames/#respond Wed, 17 Apr 2024 13:15:50 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=103315 The U.S. based developer of steel PV module frames said its products are an alternative to conventional aluminum frames. They passed several third party tests as the company readies production and evaluations by module manufacturers.

From pv magazine Global

Origami Solar, a U.S-based developer of a recycled steel module frame as an alternative to conventional aluminum frames announced it passed several key third party tests, now making its frames available to module manufacturers for validation and ready for production.

Origami said its rolled steel frames passed third party tests at U.S.-based CFV Labs and the Renewable Energy Test Center (RETC), the same tests that that customers will have to undergo on the way to certification, namely International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) 61215 static mechanical load testing and IEC 61701 salt-mist corrosion testing and continuity testing of bonding. The Origami frames were also put through test-to-failure runs.

“Following these tests, it is clear that module makers will have no issues getting their modules certified with our current frame design. Our production-ready frames are available now to ship to module manufacturers for evaluation, testing and certification,” Origami Solar vice president of engineering Lauren Ahsler told pv magazine.

In a statement, Colin Sillerud, vice president of engineering at CFV Labs, indicated outperformance in the lab. “The steel-frame modules supplied by Origami to CFV for testing exhibited test-to-failure pressure values that were higher than similarly sized and constructed modules with aluminum frames. While CFV cannot say that laboratory tests translate directly to field performance, these results show a strong relative lab performance when compared to traditionally framed PV modules.”

The static mechanical load tests, specified in IEC 61215 were carried out with three cycles of one hour of down push pressure and one hour of uplift pressure at pressure levels of around 2400 Pa. “When using quarter point clamps along the module long side, with racking below the module, the modules passed the same cycle times but with down push pressure of 5400 Pa and uplift pressure of 3000 Pa,” said the manufacturer.

RETC’s salt mist corrosion and continuity testing on modules using Origami’s steel solar frames demonstrated similarly successful results, which the startup says confirms the corrosion protection performance of its zinc-aluminum-magnesium coatings.

“The salt mist testing methods are the type typically used for land-based solar, known as IEC 61701 method six,” explained the manufacturer, adding that the testing sequences also included testing for continuity bonding both pre-and-post salt mist sequences.

“While these are the first round of testing following the specific provisions set by the IEC and UL to validate the performance of our production-ready design, the combination of extensive prior testing and this latest round of tests have us ready to take our frame to production for our first customer early in 2025,” said Ahsler.

Origami Solar, which was founded in 2019 is a pv magazine 2023 award winner for manufacturing, it sees an opportunity to supply module manufacturers in the U.S. market who are switching from imported aluminum frames to domestically made steel frames. It also uses recycled steel from suppliers in the US and Europe in its frames to give it a competitive edge when it comes to greenhouse gas scoring as assessed by Boundless Impact

When it comes to price, Ahsler said, “Module makers will be the real winners thanks to our steel frames. For a competitive price, they will get a product with a completely domestic supply chain, with far less embodied carbon, and, as the testing shows, a product that offers greater protection.”

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Vehicle-integrated photovoltaics making the moves from niche to mainstream https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/04/04/vehicle-integrated-photovoltaics-making-the-moves-from-niche-to-mainstream/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/04/04/vehicle-integrated-photovoltaics-making-the-moves-from-niche-to-mainstream/#respond Thu, 04 Apr 2024 15:35:41 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=102890 A new report from the International Energy Agency’s Photovoltaic Power Systems Programme (IEA-PVPS) looks at success factors required to take vehicle integrated photovoltaics (VIPV) from niche to mainstream based on a survey of 110 experts in the topic of transport and PV.

From pv magazine Global

A survey of 110 experts identified by the Transport and PV group at the International Energy Agency’s Photovoltaic Power Systems Programme (IEA-PVPS) Task 17 (T17) reveals a set of technical requirements or areas seen as important for the adoption of vehicle-integrated photovoltaics (VIPV) with a focus on passenger vehicles.

The study was conducted by the Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO) and includes experts’ views on what users may be willing to give up in terms of PV yield to achieve superior vehicle aesthetics.

When it comes to the choice of cell technology for VIPV, crystalline silicon (c-Si) is dominant with a clear preference for back contact technology and no visible metal. However, by 2030 survey respondents expect tandem and thin film technology to grow.

“The desire for minimal visibility of metal on the front side of cells, coupled with a preference for glass on roof components and polymer on other surfaces, indicates a strong aesthetic consideration in VIPV design,” said the researchers.

The study considered the variety of cell technologies available in prototype and commercial VIPV passenger cars. For example, startups Lightyear and Sono Motors used c-Si, while Japanese automakers Toyota and Nissan used Sharp’s III-V compound solar technology, and Germany’s Flixbus and European joint venture Volvo-Renault have used CIGS

Several system features, including color, charging frequency, and cost, were ranked with the most important being efficiency, additional mileage per year, and vehicle range extension. “The report underscores the paramount importance of these factors, alongside the significant benefit of reducing the need for charging,” noted the researchers.

Looking at efficiency based on an available area of 3 m2 area, the respondents agreed on the minimum power conversion efficiency of at least 20% to 22%, with power output ranging from 600 W to 660 W, while a large group, 29%,  said it should be greater than 25%, with power output reaching 750 W.

Module lifetime of at least 10 to 15 years was indicated, along with the need for repair concepts that include spot repairs for visible damage and full-body replacement parts for performance failures.

The cost of VIPV systems, manufacturing and installation costs, are expected to fall by as much as 60% by 2030, according to the survey results. The largest technical bottleneck to lower costs is the complexity of manufacturing.

Asked about surprising results, TNO scientist and co-leader of the task group, Anna J. Carr, told pv magazine, “Probably the amount of performance that people were willing to sacrifice to get the colors they wanted. Among the respondents who said more color choice, than black or dark blue, is required an average performance loss of 24.2% was indicated to be acceptable.”

Around 62% of respondents came from PV research, while 13% came from PV cell or module manufacturing, 9% from automotive manufacturing, and 8% from automotive research. The majority are from Europe, with just 20% from Asia and a small percentage from North America.

“The reason that so many of the respondents were European is that the invitations to take part in the survey went out to the companies and researchers that we knew who were already working on the topic. And it represents the membership mix of T17,” said Carr.

Looking ahead, the researchers recommended adding more industry professionals to the survey group to be able to develop a better understanding of VIPV preferences and requirements. In addition, the group is likely to expand the focus and look at VIPV in heavy-duty and commercial vehicles, according to Carr.

The objective of Task 17 of the IEA PVPS is to deploy PV in the transport sector, contributing to reducing CO2 emissions of the sector and enhancing PV market expansions.

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Report tracks emerging PV manufacturing hubs in Europe, North America https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/03/20/report-tracks-emerging-pv-manufacturing-hubs-in-europe-north-america/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/03/20/report-tracks-emerging-pv-manufacturing-hubs-in-europe-north-america/#respond Wed, 20 Mar 2024 15:34:48 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=102375 Sinovoltaics is studying the changes in the supply chains in manufacturing hubs in Europe and North America to determine site capacity, current and planned, for dozens of manufacturers. The results are being published in free reports.

From pv magazine Global

Sinovoltaics, a Hong Kong-based technical compliance and quality assurance service firm, has begun to publish supply chain reports about PV manufacturing in North American and European markets. In the pipeline is coverage of India and Southeast Asia.

Published in the form of infographics and data tables, the supply chain reports are free.

“We have been observing supply chain trends and movements for years and years, for example also witnessing the gradual growth of manufacturing in Southeast Asia, which is why we have nowadays quality engineering teams on-site at the factories in that region,” Sinovoltaics CTO Niclas Weimar told pv magazine. “This new type of report is basically putting our observations into report form, starting from this year onwards, helping to visualize the distribution of manufacturing capacities across different jurisdictions.”

The analysts expects the information to be used by solar developers and other buyers to locate manufacturers in relevant regions, assess the scalability of the supply chain for larger projects, or to source modules for projects more efficiently with an eye on reducing transportation costs and carbon emissions.

“The solar industry needs the most up-to-date module purchasing information,” said Dricus de Rooij, co-founder and CEO of Sinovoltaics in a statement. “Every four months, solar developers will have critical and dynamic data that will enable them to stay informed about emerging PV suppliers and the latest developments in global solar manufacturing.”

The supply chain reports cover current and planned manufacturing activity from 2023 to 2027 for producers of modules, cells, wafers, ingots, polysilicon, and multigrain silicon. It notes capacity at each of a manufacturers’ factory locations. There are also symbols indicating if a company is now bankrupt, or a manufacturing site is closed or on hold.

The first edition of North American report covers 81 sites in the United States, Canada, and Mexico, while the European version lists 91 sites across the region, including companies located in Kazakhstan and Turkey.

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Vehicle-integrated photovoltaics for electric ground transport https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/03/15/vehicle-integrated-photovoltaics-for-electric-ground-transport/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/03/15/vehicle-integrated-photovoltaics-for-electric-ground-transport/#respond Fri, 15 Mar 2024 13:25:32 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=102239 Canadian custom module manufacturer Capsolar developed a vehicle integrated PV system (VIPV) for an electric material towing application, reportedly enabling 30% to 40% range increase per battery charge.

From pv magazine Global

Canada’s Capsolar, a manufacturer of vehicle-integrated PV (VIPV) systems, recently completed an electric tow tractor ground transport project.

“We designed, built and installed the solar PV system, including the electronic and physical integrations. It is used at one of the largest US-based automotive industry original equipment manufacturers (OEMs),” Capsolar’s CEO, Samy Benhamza, told pv magazine. “Our customer uses electric ground-support vehicles for heavy-duty material transport.”

The Capsolar system consists of 5.6 kW of power based on 20 solar panels, a high-efficiency controller system, and a data management tracking platform. It enables a 30% to 40% range increase per battery charge, according to Benhamza.

Looking ahead, the Canadian company is in discussion to equip the rest of the OEM’s fleet with “an improved and larger system with higher efficiency.”

The U.S. ground support vehicle project comes on the back of Capsolar completing construction of a 3 MW pilot line at 560.3 m2 facility in Montreal, Quebec.

Capsolar was founded in 2020 and began developing custom PV systems for small vehicles, such as electric golf carts, and has since expanded into electric passenger vehicles, boating and ground transportation applications.

It typically uses cells supplied by US-based manufacturer Maxeon that have 24% efficiency, along with high-efficiency charge controllers to optimize power output. The company can customize module shape, texture, size, and color to match clients’ requests.

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Decarbonized aviation attracts venture capital https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/03/12/decarbonized-aviation-attracts-venture-capital/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/03/12/decarbonized-aviation-attracts-venture-capital/#respond Tue, 12 Mar 2024 16:11:31 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=102098 Since 2016, some $2.4 billion worth of venture capital flowed to companies developing electric aviation and other air travel decarbonization technologies with a strong start in investment volume in 2024, according to Dealroom.co, a Dutch data and intelligence firm.

From pv magazine Global

Since 2016, there has been $2.4 billion worth of venture capital flowing to companies developing technologies to decarbonize aviation, according to Dealroom.co, a Netherlands-based provider of global data and intelligence on startups and tech ecosystems.

The segment had a strong start in 2024, noted Dealroom.co senior analyst Lorenzo Chiavarini.

“Aviation is one of the segments where we still don’t have a clear winning technology path to decarbonization to reach 2050 net-zero targets,” he told pv magazine. “In my assessment, it could be a threat or opportunity, either we don’t hit the targets, or we hit the targets thanks to huge investments and technological advances. A third option is we hit the targets thanks to massive social change. That is, flying becomes something we only do if there is no other alternative. So, if we want people to fly, and limit climate disruption and biodiversity collapse, we need to get serious about decarbonizing aviation now.”

Based on Dealroom.co data, a total of $2.4 billion was invested in the so-called sustainable aviation since 2016. “Under sustainable aviation, we include things like electric aircraft, aircraft batteries, and hydrogen aircraft; sustainable aviation fuels such as e-fuels and biofuels, as well as new aircraft models, airships, and software solutions for contrail avoidance,” he explained.

The startups that attracted most of the funding are developing electric aircraft, hydrogen aircraft, e-fuels and biofuels. Biofuel is the most mature of these segments while electric, hydrogen and e-fuels are emerging.

“Funding peaked in 2022 at almost $700 million before dropping 50% to $337 million in 2023,” Chiavarini said. “Interestingly, early-stage investments stayed nearly constant from 2021 to 2023, more than double the level of any previous year. It enabled a strong early-stage startup scene that needs to prove it can scale in the next few years. Also notable, Europe seems to have gained a share of innovation by both the amount invested and the number of rounds.”

Venture capital across all sectors decreased 38% from 2022 to 2023, totaling less than half of the 2021 peak, even considering the hype about artificial intelligence startups. “Sustainable aviation is not exactly mirroring the broader market, as it is such an emerging segment, especially the technologies for electric and hydrogen aircraft and e-fuels,” Chiavarini stated.

The surge in new investments, however, has to be taken with caution. “We are very early in 2024,” said Chiavarini. “It was mainly driven by two very large rounds, namely Swedish startup Heart Aerospace, which makes hybrid-electric regional aircraft, and Ineratec, a German company that aims to use CO2 and green hydrogen as feedstock for synthetic fuels and synthetic chemicals. I would add that it is common to announce rounds in January that were in reality closed at the end of the previous year. In any event, we are seeing both late-stage and early-stage activity, which is a good sign.

According to Dealroom.co, over 400 investors have made at least one bet on sustainable aviation startups. The most active based on the number of deals is Breakthrough Energy Ventures, a fund backed by Microsoft founder Bill Gates, with 8 investments from Series A to Series C, including Heart Aerospace, ZeroAvia, U.S.-based hydrogen aircraft developer, and Viridos, U.S.-based developer of microalgae biofuel.

JetBlue Technology Ventures, the corporate venture arm of the US-based JetBlue Airways, is the most active corporate investor with 6 seed and series A stage investments, including Universal Hydrogen, a U.S. provider of end-to-end hydrogen flight solutions, and Electric Power Systems, a U.S. developer of batteries for electric aircraft.

In addition to the sustainable aviation activity, Dealroom.co tracked $5.6 billion invested in electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) and electric Urban Air Mobility (UAM) startups since 2016. Most eVTOLs do not contribute to the decarbonization of the aviation industry due to a predominant focus on just a few passengers, typically 2 to 8 passengers, and limited flight range, typically less than 300 km.

“They are more about enabling new mobility models in urban and semi-urban areas, with use cases such as fast trips to the airport from urban centers,” Chiavarini said.

“They are comparable to the use cases of helicopters and short-distance private jets today, and they cater to a wealthy customer base. A few eVTOLs focus on longer ranges and more passenger seats, so could contribute to decarbonizations, such as France-based Voltaero and US-based XTI Aircraft.”

The hope is that they will still contribute positively to the development of aviation by pushing forward the use of emerging technologies and making regulators more comfortable with certifying electric aircraft. “But on their own, they are not solving any sustainability problems in aviation,” Chiavarini concluded.

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Solar simulator for perovskite-silicon tandem PV cells, modules https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/03/08/solar-simulator-for-perovskite-silicon-tandem-pv-cells-modules/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/03/08/solar-simulator-for-perovskite-silicon-tandem-pv-cells-modules/#respond Fri, 08 Mar 2024 20:24:29 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=102007 A new measurment and solar simulator instrument designed for perovskite-silicon tandem cells and encapsulated mini-modules is the latest product from a collaboration between Canadian solar simulator supplier G2V Optics and U.S.-based measurement instrumentation company Sinton Instruments.

From pv magazine Global

Canadian solar simulator developer G2V Optics and Sinton Instruments, a US-based PV characterization specialist, have created a solar simulator for solar cells and modules.

The new instrument supports both characterization and a Class AAA light in a single tool. It is designed to test all solar cell technologies, but with a focus on perovskite-silicon tandem cells and encapsulated mini-modules. It contains a fully programmable and tunable spectrum steady-state LED light combined with Sinton Instruments’ solar cell testing hardware and advanced characterization analysis software.

Named FCT-650SE, the instrument has a multi-source LED solar simulator with up to 36 tunable channels for spectrum control, integrated current versus voltage (IV) curve recording, and Suns-Voc measurement capability. It can perform both flash and continuous lighting tests. Also supported are maximum power point tracking (MPPT), light soaking, and automated measurement sequences.

Some of the supported tests and measurements include full IV curve, short circuit current, open circuit voltages, maximum power point, fill factor, efficiency, series resistance, shunt resistance, and Suns-Voc. For silicon devices, it can also measure bulk lifetime, lifetime at max power, substrate doping, substrate thickness, and power loss analysis.

The system has a footprint of approximately 4,645 cm2, which the manufacturer said is on par or slightly more compact than other solar simulators with similar illumination areas.

Its voltage and current range are 40 V and 20 A for silicon and 2.4 A for perovskite tandem devices. The temperature-controlled chuck can accommodate samples that range in size from 2 mm2 to 210 mm2. Custom chuck designs for unusual sizes are available from the manufacturer.

The testing instrument is available from both companies. Several units have already been built and delivered to customers, according to the manufacturers.

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Off-grid solar kit for EV pickup trucks https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/02/29/off-grid-solar-kit-for-ev-pickup-trucks/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/02/29/off-grid-solar-kit-for-ev-pickup-trucks/#respond Thu, 29 Feb 2024 14:33:59 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=101690 Worksport announced a solar kit for pickup trucks that can be used a portable power source for leisure activities or as a temporary backup to recharge electronics or small appliances during power outages.

From pv magazine global

Worksport, a Canadian company with manufacturing in New York and China, announced a protective solar cover and kit for pickup trucks. The kit includes a battery and an inverter and is meant to be a portable power source for leisure activities, such as camping, or as a temporary backup to recharge electronics or small appliances during power outages.

Conceived for vehicle-integrated photovoltaics (VIPV), the solar tonneau cover, Solis, will be sold in a kit with a Worksport inverter, Hub, and a 2000 W, 120 V AC 60 Hz rechargeable battery, dubbed Cor.

The kit is intended as an off-grid energy solution for consumers. “We will begin sales with the North American market and will eventually expand to global markets,” a company spokesperson told pv magazine.

The initial Solis truck bed cover is designed for the Ford-F150 Lightning. The solar modules contain M10 cells with 22% efficiency provided by an undisclosed supplier. “We will use flexible mono-crystalline cells that provide 170 W/m2, after conversion. The weight will be between 10 kg and 11 kg per m2,” they added. The performance figures are considered under 1000 W/m² solar irradiance.

The company will be marketing the product in a kit that includes truckbed mounting brackets and cables.

The battery is a 2000 W, unit with 1534 kWh, 120 V AC, 60 Hz capacity. It has a lithium nickel, cobalt and manganese (Li-NCM) battery cell. The rated voltage is 48 V and the minimum voltage is 40.3 V. The battery’s maximum discharge current is 60 A, and the maximum charge current is 20 A. The discharge temperature is -20 C to 65 C while the battery charging temperature range is 0 C to 55 C.

The inverter unit has an output frequency of 60 Hz, and maximum output power of 3 kW. It has a 200 Wh hot swap capacity, overload protection, 4 DC outlets, plus ports for USB and cigarette lighter connector charging.

Solis is not yet available for purchase. Worksport said in a statement that products are in the testing phase. The final prices are not confirmed. Estimated price for the battery is $1,499, including the inverter, one external battery, and charging cables. Bundled with Solis, the price is estimated to be $3,499.

Some of the scenarios seen by Worksport besides camping, include charging devices, such as cellphones, tablets, or other electronics, during power outages in the home or office. It is not meant for charging electric vehicle (EV) charging systems. The company said it may develop such technology in the future as its internal estimates suggested that the PV cover could provide enough charging to provide a potential additional range of up to 10 miles a day.

The solar cover will also be available on standard internal combustion engine trucks, according to the company.

 

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Verde Technologies advances solar perovskite thin film roll-to-roll coating https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/02/16/verde-technologies-advances-solar-perovskite-thin-film-roll-to-roll-coating/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/02/16/verde-technologies-advances-solar-perovskite-thin-film-roll-to-roll-coating/#respond Fri, 16 Feb 2024 17:00:59 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=101211 A spinoff of the University of Vermont, specializing in single junction and all thin-film tandem perovskite solar technologies, demonstrated that its coating processes are transferable to existing commercial roll-to-roll manufacturing lines.

From pv magazine global

Verde Technologies, a spinoff of the University of Vermont, developing lightweight and flexible perovskite solar modules, has made progress with its thin film coating technology in a pilot with Verico Technology, a contract manufacturer located in Connecticut.

The partners completed the deposition of perovskite solution on a flexible substrate measuring 76.2 cm x 6,096 cm using standard manufacturing processes, equipment, and environmental conditions. The novel coating tool and process is dubbed Verde Slot Coating.

“Verde Slot Coating achieves the scalability associated with slot-die coating, while significantly accelerating iteration cycles and film optimization,” Verde Technologies CEO, Skylar Bagdon, told pv magazine.

“This means we can make rapid progress on a small scale but unlike spin-coating or blade coating, the findings are transferable to large commercial roll-to-roll systems, as the pilot with Verico makes clear,” said Bagdon.

The Vermont-based company intends to develop single junction and all thin-film tandem perovskite solar technologies. Its perovskite cell technology has reportedly a lab-scale power conversion efficiency of above 21%.

Looking ahead, Bagdon said, “Verde’s next phase of development will be focused on outdoor testing of modules with early customers.” He added that the team will be doing testing with the Perovskite PV Accelerator for Commercializing Technologies (PACT) consortium and at new solar research and testing facility recently opened in Burlington, Vermont.

The company’s commercial roadmap is to initially target repowering projects, typically utility scale projects exchanging end-of-life panels with higher-performing panels, before expanding to other lightweight PV segments, such as “large commercial metal and membrane” rooftops.

Verde was able to tap into national U.S. research and development programs. For example, last summer Verde entered a collaboration with the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) and Northern Illinois University (NIU) which gives it access to some of NREL’s perovskite breakthroughs, such as lead sequestration and active encapsulation.

Verde also has an exclusive partnership with the University of Toledo to commercialize its perovskite cell technology with promising stability performance.

Most recently, the company was the grand prize winner in the latest round of the US Department of Energy’s Perovskite Startup Prize for its progress, focus on domestic solar manufacturing, scalability and collaboration , according to Bogdan.

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Fraunhofer ISE, Oxford PV produce 25%-efficient perovskite-silicon tandem PV module https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/01/31/fraunhofer-iseoxford-pv-produce-25-efficient-perovskite-silicon-tandem-pv-module/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/01/31/fraunhofer-iseoxford-pv-produce-25-efficient-perovskite-silicon-tandem-pv-module/#respond Wed, 31 Jan 2024 14:31:32 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=100638 Germany’s Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems (Fraunhofer ISE) announced today that it had produced at 421 W perovskite-silicon tandem glass-glass module measures 1.68 m2.

From pv magazine global

Germany’s Fraunhofer ISE has fabricated a perovskite-silicon tandem solar module with a glass-glass design.

The panel has a power conversion efficiency of 25% and an output of 421 W. It measures 1.68mand uses cells produced by Oxford PV, a UK-based perovskite solar cell manufacturer with pilot production in Germany. Oxford PV says that the module was assembled by the Fraunhofer team using its specifications.

“This new world record is a crucial milestone for Oxford PV, proving that our tandem solar cells can deliver record-breaking performance when assembled into solar panels,” Oxford PV CEO David Ward said in a statement.

The tandem cells produced by Oxford PV are M6-format. Last year, the company broke a record with a verified cell efficiency of 28.6 %. The tandem cells are currently produced in a small series line in Brandenburg, Germany, with commercial production slated for later this year.

The researchers said they utilized commercially available PV production equipment installed at the Fraunhofer Module Technology Evaluation Center (Module-TEC) and optimized the processes to make the glass-glass modules. “The fact that mass production-compatible technology was used for its manufacture demonstrates the enormous potential of tandem technology for the PV industry,” said Stefan Glunz, head of PV at Fraunhofer ISE.

The solar cells were interconnected using conductive bonding equipment at Fraunhofer ISE’s Module-TEC. As the perovskite layer of the tandem cells is temperature-sensitive, the research team said it had to develop low-temperature processes for the interconnection and encapsulation of the solar cells.

“In the future, we will also be testing another alternative: soldering the solar cells at low temperatures,” said Achim Kraft, who heads up the interconnection technology group at Fraunhofer ISE. “These are suitable for industrial mass production and can be implemented on commercial systems. The necessary adaptions can also easily be implemented in today’s PV production lines”

For the calibration measurements, the Fraunhofer ISE tapped its well-equipped calibration lab to determine the module efficiency, noting that precise and reproducible statements about the tandem module’s power, are only possible if both the perovskite and the silicon cell layers are illuminated by appropriate LED light sources under conditions as close as possible to natural sunlight.

“As the currently standardized measurement methods are not fully transferable to this new technology, the method used was additionally validated with field measurements,” noted the researchers.

The project teams from Fraunhofer ISE and Oxford PV are now working towards certification of the PV module and tests on long-term stability.

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Canadian startup offers 35%-efficient indoor perovskite PV modules https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/01/30/canadian-startup-offers-35-efficient-indoor-perovskite-pv-modules/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/01/30/canadian-startup-offers-35-efficient-indoor-perovskite-pv-modules/#comments Tue, 30 Jan 2024 22:13:10 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=100621 Canada’s Solaires Enterprises says its indoor perovskite modules are suitable for powering a range of electronic devices, such as wireless keyboards, smart door locks, electronic shelf labels, and sensors.

From pv magazine Global

Perovskite solar technology company Solaires Entreprises has switched on a pilot production line to manufacture indoor perovskite PV modules in Langford, British Columbia.

The company wants to sell the panels to automotive, consumer electronics, sensor, and LED component manufacturers. “The pilot line will produce 200,000 units per year, each unit measures 3.82 cm x 7.62 cm,” Solaires CEO Fabian De La Fuente told pv magazine.

The types of applications Solaires targets include self-charging electronic devices, wireless keyboards, smart door locks, electronic shelf labels, and sensors. Solaires says its modules can be standalone or paired with rechargeable batteries.

Solaires will produce the complete stack in-house.

“We have all the equipment to do so. Our manufacturing process is a sheet-to-sheet process for rigid glass substrates using slot-die coating, screen printing, laser ablation and lamination. We also have in-house quality control and testing equipment,” said De La Fuente, adding that the manufacturing equipment is commercially available and scalable.

The modules are based on perovskite tuned for indoor light absorption and have a power conversion of 35% in indoor light. Current prototypes have an aperture area of 17.22 cm2 and an active area of 14.70 cm2.

Under halogen lamp illumination at 1000 lux, the panels achieved a power density of 0.15 mW/cm2 and a power maximum power point (MPP) of 2.2 mW, with current MPP at 0.52 mA, and short-circuit current at 0.60 mA.

Under light-emitting diode lamp illumination at 1000 lux, the power density is 0.06 mW/cm2, the power MPP is 0.9 mW, the current MPP is 0.23 mA and the short-circuit current is 0.27 mA. The voltage MPP and open-circuit voltage are the same for both types of lamps, at 4 V and 5 V, respectively.

The company, which originated at Canada’s University of Victoria, was founded in 2022. It started out as a producer of mixed halide perovskite solutions, a product it called Solar Ink, with an energy bandgap of 1.54 eV. It stood out from the competition due to its longer shelf life, according to De La Fuente.

Solaires will continue to sell perovskite materials in addition to manufacturing modules. “Our business model is to license our technology to manufacturers around the globe and includes providing materials, such as our perovskite ink and other unique layers in the full module stack,” said De La Fuente.

De La Fuente said that thin film technologies, particularly perovskites, excel in absorbing indoor light compared to silicon, due to their intrinsic material properties.

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Germany’s Nexwafe mulling U.S. wafer factory https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/01/26/germanys-nexwafe-mulling-u-s-wafer-factory/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/01/26/germanys-nexwafe-mulling-u-s-wafer-factory/#respond Fri, 26 Jan 2024 16:23:24 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=100466 German wafer manufacturer Nexwafe says it has set up a subsidiary in the United States to evaluate the potential to produce wafers in the country.

From pv magazine Global

Nexwafe, a German epitaxial wafer manufacturer that is currently building a 250 MW factory in Bitterfeld, Germany, has announced that it has established a U.S. subsidiary.

The company said in a statement that it is evaluating the development of multi-gigawatt-scale solar wafer manufacturing in the U.S. market, with an initial target production volume of 6 GW.

The company said it is evaluating manufacturing locations, considering regional incentives, and actively working on strategic partnerships and wafer offtake agreements in the United States.

To lead the U.S. operation, the company has named Jonathan Pickering as VP of business development, North America. He was previously an executive at JA Solar Americas and Applied Materials.

“Multiple top-tier solar companies have committed to advanced PV cell and module manufacturing at a multi-gigawatt scale across the U.S. But now we see a significant bottleneck in the supply chain for a domestic source of silicon wafers,” said Pickering, adding that the company will be able to offer U.S.-made, thin silicon wafers.

Nexwafe is commercializing kerfless wafers. Its monocrystalline silicon wafers are grown directly in a gas-to-wafer manufacturing process that it claims is not only more efficient but also enables the production of ultra-thin wafers. Its wafers are compatible with conventional cell processing, and reportedly minimize wastage, offering a 60% reduction in the carbon footprint compared to conventional processes.

Nexwafe, which is based in Freiburg, Germany, announced a €30 million financing round in May 2023.

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Startup developing perovskite-silicon tandem panels with 26% efficiency https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/01/19/startup-developing-perovskite-silicon-tandem-panels-with-26-efficiency/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2024/01/19/startup-developing-perovskite-silicon-tandem-panels-with-26-efficiency/#respond Fri, 19 Jan 2024 18:38:54 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=100179 Tandem PV has secured capital to advance its four-terminal perovskite-silicon tandem module technology and move closer to first manufacturing. The company claims its products maintain 80% of the initial performance after 25 years.

From pv magazine global

Tandem PV, a San Jose, California-based startup company developing mechanically-stacked, four-terminal, perovskite-silicon modules, announced a $6 million venture funding round. The company, which was founded in 2016, said it will use the funds to accelerate towards commercialization, investing in research and development and plans for its first manufacturing facility.

The round was led by existing investor Planetary Technologies, an early-stage venture capital firm, joined by new compatriot investor Uncorrelated Ventures.

The new capital is a validation of the venture’s progress in terms of stability, power conversion efficiency, and module size, according to Tandem PV, CEO, Scott Wharton. “Everyone talks about durability and stability, but we are able to demonstrate it,” he told pv magazine.

“Our indoor tests are showing 80% performance after 25 years equivalent. The encapsulated tandem module’s power conversion efficiency is 26% with conventional PERC cells,” said Wharton, adding that the modules measure 100 cm2, with newer ones at 300 cm2.

The company did not provide more details about the module and cell technology.

Tandem PV is one of multiple teams using the U.S. Department of Energy’s PV Accelerator for Commercializing Technologies (PACT) for independent performance and reliability testing for all varieties of perovskite PV modules and mini modules, including field testing.

To date, the company has raised $27 million in venture capital and government support. It expects the latest financing round to help bring in customer agreements and to begin building the first plant. The next steps for this year are third-party validation of the performance metrics, specifically efficiency and durability, and to take part in outdoor testing programs.

The performance tests are the latest step that seven-year-old Tandem PV is taking toward commercializing its mechanically stacked panels. It has fabricated 100 cm2 panels which have passed IEC 61215 accelerated tests with academic partners, and has received initial data on passing triple-length duration IEC 61215 tests, as Colin Bailie, CTO, told pv magazine in a 2023 interview.

The initial application Tandem PV will target is utility-scale PV.

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Carbon electrode perovskite solar cells on track to commercialization https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2023/09/27/carbon-electrode-perovskite-solar-cells-on-track-to-commercialization/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2023/09/27/carbon-electrode-perovskite-solar-cells-on-track-to-commercialization/#respond Wed, 27 Sep 2023 16:24:00 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=96996 Carbon electrode back-contacts for perovskite solar cells promise simpler, less energy-intense manufacturing, but low power conversion efficiency has held back adoption. However, this may change now, as researchers are overcoming the barriers to commercialization.

From pv magazine Global

Thin-film perovskite solar cells made with carbon electrode back contacts, instead of metal ones, provide the opportunity to use low-temperature cell processes, with fewer steps, while ensuring stability. However, the advantages have always come at the cost of power conversion efficiency – until very recently.

“This year carbon electrode-based devices broke the psychological barrier of 20%, efficiency with several teams in several different locations announcing they had crossed the threshold,” Lukas Wagner, a researcher at Philipps-University Marburg, told pv magazine.

Researchers have made significant advancements in carbon electrode perovskite solar cells (c-PSC). In February, devices with 21.2% power conversion efficiency, as well as 19.6%-efficient mini-modules with stability above 4,390 hours, were reported in Nature Energy.

In June, the US National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) published a paper showcasing a c-PSC with 21.0% efficiency in ACS Energy Letters. Chinese researchers, meanwhile, reported a c-PSC with 20.8% efficiency, while another team developed an indoor c-PSC with an efficiency exceeding 30%.

Some experts see carbon electrodes as a promising avenue for the commercialization of low-cost, stable perovskite solar modules, as noted in the journal Electronics in February.

With  stability and efficiency on an upwards trajectory, there are now enough c-PSC companies and research teams exploring the technology to merit a conference – the First International Conference on Carbon Electrode-based Perovskite Solar Cells. It has attracted 34 speakers and more than 220 participants to participate in October, according to Wagner.

The ability to print the all or most of the cell stack is also a big part of the appeal of carbon electrodes.

“The cell stacks can be printed which eases upscaling and process with low capital expenditure,” said Wagner.

The event will feature speakers from various research groups and perovskite startup companies, including Switzerland-based materials firm Solaronix, Polish indoor/outdoor perovskite solar cell manufacturer Saule Technologies, Canadian thin-film startup Rayleigh Solar Tech, and perovskite materials specialist Greatcell Solar Italia.

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New study finds growing inequality in metal footprints of renewable power value chains https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2023/07/05/new-study-finds-growing-inequality-in-metal-footprints-of-renewable-power-value-chains/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2023/07/05/new-study-finds-growing-inequality-in-metal-footprints-of-renewable-power-value-chains/#respond Wed, 05 Jul 2023 13:45:24 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=94362 A U.S.-Chinese research team has investigated the flow of iron, copper, aluminum, and other precious metals from source to end-use destination in the renewable energy infrastructure value chain. It found significant imbalances that can be attributed to the continuous outsourcing of metal demand for the renewable power sector to developing economies.

From pv magazine global

An international research group has used quantitative models to analyze data about the flow of iron, copper, aluminum, and other precious metals from source to end-use destination in the renewable energy infrastructure value chain to reveal trends and potential risks.

The study found a growing inequality in metal footprints, which are defined in the paper as the total metal ores embodied in the renewable power value chains. The authors said this kind of uneven activity may “hinder the just net-zero transition and climate change mitigation actions” and that there is an urgency “to establish a metal-efficient and green supply chain for upstream suppliers [source countries of metals] as well as downstream renewable power installers for just transition in the power sector across the globe.”

Noting that the amount of metal used in renewable energy infrastructure has increased by 97% in the ten-year period from 2005 to 2015, the paper’s authors examined the flow of metals in seven value chains, including solar, solar thermal, ocean, wind, hydro, bioenergy, and geothermal.

They developed a multi-regional input-output model and a value chain decomposition model that are said to enable the analysis of the activity for worldwide regions and individual countries. They sourced data from Exiobase, a dataset used that estimates emissions and resource extractions by industry, developed by a consortium of research institutes in projects financed by the European research framework programs.

The scientists found imbalances within the global value chains studied and attributed them to the continuous outsourcing of metal demand for the renewable power sector to developing economies. “Developed economies occupy the high-end segments of the renewable power value chain, while allocating metal-intensive (but low value-added) production activities to developing economies,” they also stated, noting that some economies are contributing a considerable amount of metal from their reserves to fulfill foreign demand but have only minimal economic benefit.

The academics presented their findings in the paper “Tracing metal footprints via global renewable power value chains,” published in nature communications. The research group comprises scientists from China’s Shandong University, Fudan University, Guangxi University, and the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), as well as from the University of Maryland in the United States.

“Our results indicate that the trade structure can be modified to mitigate metal supply risk and consumption inequality along global renewable power value chains (RPVCs) among economies,” they concluded. “Import-dependent developed economies can adjust the distribution of traded goods towards metal-efficient sources.”

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Maxeon’s PV module capacity hits 2.5 GW in Mexico https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2023/06/27/maxeons-pv-module-capacity-hits-2-5-gw-in-mexico/ https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2023/06/27/maxeons-pv-module-capacity-hits-2-5-gw-in-mexico/#respond Tue, 27 Jun 2023 13:00:16 +0000 https://pv-magazine-usa.com/?p=94101 Maxeon Solar Technologies says it has invested $70 million to upgrade its panel factory in Mexicali, Mexico, to 1.8 GW. The remaining capacity is provided by a 700 MW facility that the Singapore-based manufacturer operates in Ensenada.

From pv magazine global

Maxeon has completed a $70 million refurbishing project to bring the capacity of its shingled-cell Performance line solar module plant in Mexicali, Mexico, up to 1.8 GW. The plan to upgrade the module plant was first reported by pv magazine two years ago.

Maxeon also has a second factory in Ensenada, in the same state of Baja California. The combined capacity of its two module plants in Mexico is 2.5 GW, with a workforce of about 2,000 people.

The company said in a statement that it has made cumulative investments of more than $260 million in the region. It claimed that its Mexicali location is now one of the “largest solar panel manufacturing facilities” in the Americas.

“Due to its talented workforce, its privileged geographical location, and a favorable business environment, today Baja California plays and will continue to play an increasingly relevant role in meeting the growing demand for our products in North America and the rest of the world in the coming years,” said Maxeon CEO Bill Mulligan.

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