• Title of article

    thermal behavior of monocrystalline silicon solar cells: a ‎numerical and experimental investigation on the module ‎encapsulation materials

  • Author/Authors

    pavlovic, ana university of bologna (unibo) - department of industrial engineering, forlì, italy , fragassa, cristiano university of bologna (unibo) - department of industrial engineering, forlì, italy , bertoldi, marco university of bologna (unibo) - department of electrical, energy and information engineering guglielmo marconi , bologna, italy , mikhnych, vladyslav karlsruhe school of optics photonics - karlsruhe institute of technology (kit), karlsruhe, germany

  • From page
    1847
  • To page
    1855
  • Abstract
    this research outlines the numerical predictions of the heat distribution in solar cells, accompanied by their empirical validation. finite element thermal models of five laminated silicon solar photovoltaic cells were firstly established using a simulation software (ansys®). the flexible laminated solar cells under study are made of a highly transparent frontsheet, a silicon cell between two encapsulants, and a backsheet. different combinations of layers (i.e., materials and thicknesses) were taken into account in order to analyze their effect on thermal behavior. thermal properties of materials were derived in accordance with the literature. similarly, boundary conditions, loads, and heat losses by reflection and convection were also specified. the solar cells were tested using solar lamps under standard conditions (irradiance: 1000w/m^2; room-temperature: 25°c) with real-time temperatures measured by a thermal imager. this analysis offers an interpretation of how temperature evolves through the solar cell and, consequently, how the design choice can influence the cells’ efficiency.
  • Keywords
    photovoltaics , solar mobility , solar cell efficiency , transient thermal analysis , finite elements
  • Journal title
    Journal of Applied and Computational Mechanics
  • Journal title
    Journal of Applied and Computational Mechanics
  • Record number

    2652912