Mittwoch, 13. Juli 2016

Ultra-flexible solar cells thin enough to wrap around a glass stirring rod

Source : kurzweil accelerating intelligence

June 20, 2016

Ultra-thin solar cells flexible enough to bend around small objects, such as this 6-mm-diameter glass rod (credit: Juho Kim, et al./APL)
Scientists in South Korea have designed ultra-thin photovoltaics that are flexible enough to wrap around a thin glass rod. The new solar cells could power wearable electronics like smart watches and fitness trackers.
“Our photovoltaic is about 1 micrometer thick” (the thinnest human hair is about 17 micrometers), said Jongho Lee, an engineer at the Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology in South Korea. Standard photovoltaics are usually hundreds of times thicker, and most other thin photovoltaics are 2 to 4 times thicker, he explained.


Fabrication procedure of the flexible vertical ultra-thin gallium-arsenide solar microcells.* (credit: Juho Kim, et al./APLThe researchers made the ultra-thin solar cells from the semiconductor gallium arsenide. They stamped the cells directly onto a flexible substrate without using an adhesive (which would add to the material’s thickness).








The researchers made the ultra-thin solar cells from the semiconductor gallium arsenide. They stamped the cells directly onto a flexible substrate without using an adhesive (which would add to the material’s thickness).
The cells were then “cold welded” to the electrode on the substrate by applying pressure at 170 degrees Celsius and melting a top layer of material called photoresist, which acted as a temporary adhesive. The photoresist was later peeled away, leaving the direct metal-to-metal bond.
The metal bottom electrode layer also serves as a reflector to direct stray light back to the solar cells (to increase current output). The researchers tested the efficiency of the device at converting sunlight to electricity and found that it was comparable to thicker photovoltaics.
The team performed bending tests and found the cells could wrap around a radius as small as 1.4 millimeters. They also performed numerical analysis of the cells, finding that they experience one-fourth the amount of strain of similar cells that are 3.5 micrometers thick.
A few other groups have reported solar cells with thicknesses of around 1 micrometer, but have produced the cells in different ways, for example, by removing the whole subtrate by etching. By transfer-printing instead of etching, the new method developed by Lee and his colleagues could be used to make very flexible photovoltaics with a smaller amount of materials, according to Lee.
The thin cells can also be integrated onto glasses frames or fabric and might power the next wave of wearable electronics, Lee said.
The researchers report the results in an open-access paper in the journal Applied Physics Letters, from AIP Publishing.
* (a) Schematic illustration of a film stamp with vertical gallium-arsenide microcells fabricated and isolated from the epitaxially grown source wafers. The photoresist (PR) temporarily holds the solar microcells on the source wafers. (b) The bottom electrode, which also serves as a back reflector, is deposited onto the backside of the ultra-thin vertical GaAs microcells. (c) After the film stamp is brought into contact with the receiver substrate, heat (∼170 °C) and pressure (∼80 kPa) are applied to melt the PR to serve as an adhesive. (d) Cross-sectional scanning electron microscope (SEM) image of the microcell covered with the adhesive (PR) on the receiver substrate after the printing process. The bottom electrode is in direct contact with the Au layer on the receiver substrate. (e) Peeling the film stamp leaves the vertical ultra-thin solar microcells on the receiver substrate. (h) An optical image of the microcell wrapped on a glass slide with a radius of 1 mm. The microcell is encapsulated with a thin epoxy layer (thickness ∼2 μm).

Montag, 11. April 2016

2015 Top Ten Photovoltaic Zell- und Modulhersteller

Top Ten Hersteller 2015 auf Basis verkaufter Zellen und Module

Chinesische Hersteller dominieren einmal mehr das Feld der größten Zell- und Modulhersteller.

Absatzstärkste Top Ten Photovoltaic Hersteller  2015
PV cell

Top Ten Hersteller 2015 : Technologie, Produktionsort, Modulkapazität, Zellkapazität 
PV cell

 Entwicklung der Wettbewerber von 2010 bis 2015
Suntech war der führende Hersteller in 2010 und 2011 und erklärte Konkurs im März 2013. In 4Q13 erwarb Shungfeng das Anlagevermögen von Suntech  und im Jahr 2015 erwarb es eine Mehrheitsbeteiligung an der US-Firma Suniva.

PV cell

Umsatzstärkste Top Ten Hersteller 2015
PV cell


Source : renewableenergyworld.com

Montag, 4. April 2016

European Solar Market Struggling to Retain Scale

Remarks : Due to constraining legal boundary conditions and the achievment of grid parity in the most european countries a real marketing push strategy is needed for the industry.

 

If it wasn’t for the U.K., Europe’s solar power market would have flat-lined last year, according to new industry figures that reveal the world’s biggest market for the technology is struggling to retain its scale.
On Friday, the continent’s largest solar market will end generous subsidies for solar farms, undermining growth in one of the region’s few bright spots. The European solar market will start contracting next year as a result, according to SolarPower Europe, a trade group that is publishing a report on the industry this week. The industry has been in decline in recent years as Germany, Italy and Spain slashed subsidies and shifted to market-based support mechanisms for renewables.
European solar grew by 15 percent last year, mainly because the U.K. market grew by about half. “Without the enormous growth in the U.K., the European solar market would have remained roughly at the 2014 level,” the report said.
The findings suggest more pain ahead for the continent’s solar industry, since U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron said he would close the Renewable Obligation Certificate subsidy program on April 1 for solar farms smaller than 5 MW. Germany, for years the biggest PV market in the world, is moving to a system of auctions where support for renewable power is subject to strict limits.
The U.K. will install 2,000 MW to 2,500 MW in 2016 because many projects will remain eligible for a grace period for the subsidy, said James Watson, chief executive of SolarPower Europe in an interview. As a result, the European market is likely to contract slightly in 2016 to about 7,000 MW, or by 7 GW, he said.
“We will see a very large reduction in growth in the rate of installation in the U.K. in 2017 to about half a gigawatt,” Watson said. “2017 is a wild card because Turkey has set a target to have 5 GW by 2022 so could be installing as much as 1.5 GW a year in 2017.”
With almost 100 GW of installed capacity, Europe remains the biggest user of solar technologies, which on average delivers 4 percent of electricity demand. Growth peaked in 2011 and declined for the next three years as governments took an ax to some subsidy schemes and moved toward tendering systems in others.
The U.K. was among just a handful of countries to record market growth in Europe, scaling up by 50 percent as developers rushed to beat the end of higher subsidies this month. The Netherlands grew by about 25 percent to 400 MW after it introduced net metering, where consumers who generate their own power can sell surplus to the grid.
© 2016 Bloomberg

Mittwoch, 24. Februar 2016

Trina Solar ist auch 2015 der weltweit größte Solarmodulhersteller

Trina Solar Ltd. 
Canadian Solar Inc. 
Jinko Solar Holding Co., Ltd.
JA Solar Holdings Co., Ltd.
Hanwha Q Cells Co., Ltd.
Yingli Green Energy Holding Co. Ltd
GCL System Integration Technology Co., Ltd

 Nach Einschätzung des britischen Research- und Consulting-Unternehmen Globaldata war 2015 die chinesische Trina Solar Ltd. weiterhin der weltweit führende Hersteller von Solarmodulen mit einer Produktionsmenge von 4,55 Gigawatt. An zweiter Stelle steht demnach die chinesisch-kanadische Canadian Solar Inc. mit 3,9 Gigawatt gefolgt von Jinko Solar Holding Co., Ltd. (3,79 Gigawatt), JA Solar Holdings Co., Ltd. (3,38 Gigawatt) sowie Hanwha Q Cells Co., Ltd. (3,2 Gigawatt). Der zweitgrößte Modulhersteller des Jahres 2014, Yingli Green Energy Holding Co. Ltd., sackte mit seiner 2015er Produktionsmenge von 2,35 Gigawatt auf Platz sieben. Um in jenem Jahr den ersten Platz zu erreichen reichte Trina Solar Ltd. eine Produktionsmenge von 3,5 Gigawatt, womit das Unternehmen Yingli als weltgrößten Modulproduzenten der Vorjahre erstmals vom Sockel stieß. Das weitere Rennen um die Spitzenplätze könnte in diesem Jahr spannend werden. Erst vor wenigen Tagen hatte die GCL System Integration Technology Co., Ltd verkündet, man habe 2015 Module in einer Größenordnung von 2,5 bis 2,7 Gigawatt verkauft. Das reicht zwar noch nicht für einen Platz unter den Top Five, doch geht das Unternehmen davon aus, seine Produktionskapazität von jetzt 3,7 auf 6,0 Gigawatt Ende 2016 auszubauen.


Quelle : Globaldata, Photon