SOLAR DAILY
How to assess new solar technologies
by Staff Writers
Boston MA (SPX) May 01, 2018

illustration only

Which is a better deal: an established, off-the-shelf type of solar panel or a cutting-edge type that delivers more power for a given area but costs more?

It turns out that's far from a simple question, but a team of researchers at MIT and elsewhere has come up with a way to figure out the best option for a given location and type of installation.

The bottom line is that for household-scale rooftop systems in relatively dry locations, the more efficient but more costly panels would be better, but for grid-scale installations or for those in wetter climates, the established, less efficient but cheaper panels are better.

The costs of solar cells continue to plummet, while the costs of installation and the associated equipment remain relatively constant. So, figuring out the tradeoffs involved in planning a new installation has gotten more complicated. But the new study provides a clear way to estimate the best technology for a given project, the authors say.

The findings are reported in the journal Nature Energy, in a paper by MIT graduate student Sarah Sofia, associate professor of mechanical engineering Tonio Buonassisi, research scientist I. Marius Peters, and three others at MIT and at First Solar and Siva Power, solar companies in California.

The study compared two basic varieties of solar cells: standard designs that use a single type of photovoltaic material, and advanced designs that combine two different types (called tandem cells) in order to capture more of the energy in sunlight.

For the tandem cells, the researchers also compared different varieties: those in which each of the two cells are connected together in series, called two-junction tandem cells, and those where each cell is separately wired, called four-junction tandem cells.

Instead of just looking at the amount of power each kind can deliver, the team analyzed all the associated installation and operational costs over time, to produce a measurement called the levelized cost of electricity (LCOE), a measure that incorporates all the costs and revenues over the lifetime of the system.

"Standard single-junction cells have a maximum efficiency limit of about 30 percent," Sofia explains, whereas "tandem cells, using two materials, can have much higher efficiency, above 40 percent." But while higher efficiency is obviously an advantage in principle, "when you make a tandem, you basically have two solar cells instead of one, so it's more expensive to manufacture. So, we wanted to see if it's worth it," she says.

For their analysis, the team looked at three types of environment - arid (Arizona), temperate (South Dakota), and humid (Florida) - because the amount of water vapor in the air can affect how much sunlight reaches the solar cell.

In each of these locations, they compared the standard two kinds of single-junction solar cells (cadmium telluride, or CdTe, and copper-indium-gallium-selenide, or CIGS) with two different types of tandem cells, two-junction or four-junction. Thus, a total of four different technologies were studied in each environment. In addition, they studied how the overall LCOE of the installations would be affected depending on whether overall energy prices remain constant or decline over time, as many analysts expect.

The results were somewhat surprising. "For residential systems, we showed that the four-terminal tandem system [the most efficient solar cell available] was the best option, regardless of location," Sofia says. But for utility-scale installations, the cell with the lowest production costs is the best deal, the researchers found.

The new findings could be significant for those planning new solar installations, Sofia says. "For me, showing that a four-terminal tandem cell had a clear opportunity to succeed was not obvious. It really shows the importance of having a high energy yield in a residential system."

But because utility-scale systems can spread the costs of the installation and the control systems over many more panels, and because space tends to be less constrained in such installations, "we never saw an opportunity" for the more costly, efficient cells in such settings. In large arrays, "because the installation costs are so cheap, they just want the cheapest cells [per watt of power]," she says.

The study could help to guide research priorities in solar technology, Sofia says. "There's been a lot of work in this field, without asking this first [whether the economics would actually make sense]. We should be asking the question before we do all the work. ... I hope this can serve as a guide to where research efforts should be focused," she says.

The methodology the team developed for making the comparisons should be applicable to many other comparisons of solar technologies, not just the specific types chose for this study, Sofia says. "For thin-film technologies, this is generalizable," she says.

Because the materials they studied for the four-terminal case are already commercialized, Sofia says, "if there was a company that had an interest," practical, affordable four-junction tandem systems for residential applications could potentially be brought to market quite quickly.

Research paper


Related Links
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
All About Solar Energy at SolarDaily.com

SOLAR DAILY
ABB Ability supports India's clean-energy future
Vadodora, India (SPX) Apr 30, 2018
ABB inaugurates innovative microgrid with battery energy storage at its Vadodora manufacturing campus - a first in India. ABB's world-class power institute to train customers on latest technologies ABB has inaugurated an innovative microgrid solution at its Vadodora manufacturing facility in Gujarat, India. This is the company's largest facility in India, with over 3,000 employees and among ABB's biggest manufacturing hubs in the world. The microgrid is the first of its kind to be installed ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

SOLAR DAILY
New catalyst turns ammonia into an innovative clean fuel

Wood formation model to fuel progress in bioenergy, paper, new applications

Research shows how genetics can contribute for advances in 2G ethanol production

Algae-forestry, bioenergy mix could help make CO2 vanish from thin air

SOLAR DAILY
Transparent eel-like soft robot can swim silently underwater

For heavy lifting, use exoskeletons with caution

Face recognition for galaxies: Artificial intelligence brings new tools to astronomy

A robot by NTU Singapore autonomously assembles an IKEA chair

SOLAR DAILY
US renewables firm takes Poland to court over U-turn on windmills

New control strategy helps reap maximum power from wind farms

Alberta proposes more renewable energy incentives

Transformer station for giant German wind farm positioned

SOLAR DAILY
China's electric carmakers bloom at Beijing auto show

Global carmakers show off SUVs, electrics as China pledges reforms

Volkswagen makes 15-bn-euro bet on EVs in China; Auto show opens

Can fish school cars in how to drive together?

SOLAR DAILY
Nanowires could make lithium ion batteries safer

New testing of model improves confidence in the performance of ITER

Some superconductors can also carry currents of 'spin'

When superconductivity disappears in the core of a quantum tube

SOLAR DAILY
Balancing nuclear and renewable energy

Framatome and Vattenfall sign contracts for the delivery of fuel assembly reloads

Framatome receives two patent awards for nuclear innovations

Quake hits near Iran nuclear power plant

SOLAR DAILY
Carbon taxes can be both fair and effective, study shows

Trump rolls back Obama-era fuel efficiency rules

Lights out for world landmarks in nod to nature

Puerto Rico power grid snaps, nearly 1 million in the dark

SOLAR DAILY
Warming climate could speed forest regrowth in eastern US

Warming climate could speed forest regrowth in eastern US

Poland illegally cut down ancient forest, EU court rules

Palm trees are spreading northward - how far will they go?