Research Article Open Access

A New Approach to Model Concentrating PV Cells Under Non-Uniform Illumination

Hang Zhou1, Yuehong Su1, Gang Pei2, Yunyun Wang2 and Tiezhou WU 3
  • 1 University of Nottingham, United Kingdom
  • 2 University of Science and Technology of China, China
  • 3 Hubei University of Technology, China

Abstract

Concentrating PV (CPV) cells are often designed optimally depending on solar concentrator characteristics and operating conditions to ensure the best system performance. Before reaching a PV cell, solar radiation may experience some optical losses caused by the different physical phenomena occurring in a solar concentrator. A particular issue with the CPV technology is the non-uniformity of the concentrated radiation, which will cause power dissipation and reduce the overall efficiency of the PV cell. Considering this issue and understanding of its effect is significant in PV cell design and optimization. This paper presents a new approach for modeling PV cell under non-uniform illumination condition, in which a PV cell is represent by an equivalent array of cell splits. The main advantage of this approach is the possibility to express each cell split voltage as an explicit function of the current by using the Lambert-W function. The output characteristics are simulated and analyzed using proposed simulation approach built in MATLAB/Simulink platform. Through the analysis of the results, a comprehensive expression of the PV cell under non-uniform illumination could be present.

Energy Research Journal
Volume 8 No. 2, 2017, 37-46

DOI: https://doi.org/10.3844/erjsp.2017.37.46

Submitted On: 2 October 2014 Published On: 30 August 2017

How to Cite: Zhou, H., Su, Y., Pei, G., Wang, Y. & WU , T. (2017). A New Approach to Model Concentrating PV Cells Under Non-Uniform Illumination. Energy Research Journal, 8(2), 37-46. https://doi.org/10.3844/erjsp.2017.37.46

  • 3,808 Views
  • 2,005 Downloads
  • 24 Citations

Download

Keywords

  • CPC
  • CPV
  • Cell Splits
  • Array
  • Non-uniform illumination
  • MATLAB/Simulink
  • Lambert-W Function