Title :
Use of the Suns-Voc for diagnosing outdoor arrays & modules
Author :
Forsyth, M. Keith ; Mahaffey, Matthew ; Blum, Adrienne L. ; Dobson, Weston A. ; Sinton, Ronald A.
Author_Institution :
Sinton Instrum., Boulder, CO, USA
Abstract :
The Suns-Voc technique has been widely used in both industrial settings and in research and development laboratories to characterize the fundamental behavior of photovoltaic diodes. Its application spans the development of metallization pastes, to novel thin-film technologies, to the failure analysis of high-efficiency c-Si modules. One area in which the technique has been used in only a limited fashion is in the analysis of modules and arrays in the field. This paper examines the application of the technique to outdoor measurements and highlights an under-utilized analysis method available to data sets from the field that include Voc as a function of illumination. Specifically, by comparing the module or array I-V curve with the Suns-Voc curve, the mismatch losses, shunting losses, and series resistance losses can be quantified. By tracking these parameters over time, module and array degradation can be monitored and broken down by mechanism.
Keywords :
elemental semiconductors; failure analysis; integrated circuit metallisation; semiconductor thin films; silicon; solar cell arrays; thin film devices; I-V curve array; Suns-Voc technique; array degradation; failure analysis; high-efficiency crystalline-silicon modules; metallization pastes; mismatch losses; module diagnosis; outdoor array diagnosis; outdoor measurements; photovoltaic diodes; research and development laboratory; series resistance losses; shunting losses; thin-film technology; Arrays; Current measurement; Monitoring; Resistance; Sun; Temperature measurement; Voltage measurement; Illumination-Voc; Jsc-Voc; Suns-Voc;
Conference_Titel :
Photovoltaic Specialist Conference (PVSC), 2014 IEEE 40th
Conference_Location :
Denver, CO
DOI :
10.1109/PVSC.2014.6925302