Solar Energy Technologies
These are notes from
Renewable Energy Futures Study.
- Introduction
- US population uses about 4,000 TWh of electrical energy each year
- about the amount of solar energy that falls on US every few hours
- fraction of generation is small but rapidly growing 3,400 MW in 2011
- generating technologies began in 1970s, 80s
- solar deployment initially dominated by CSP(Concentrating Solar Power) until PV became more popular around 2005
- Resource Availability Estimates
- Solar energy contains both a direct and diffuse component
- direct accounts for 60-80% of surface solar insolation and is needed for high efficiencies for solar technologies
- CSP is more reliant on direct components than PV or passive heating
- Solar resource greatest in southwestern united states but generally high in most parts of the united states except alaska and pacific northwest
- i.e. Germany is world leader in PV but has less than 40% efficiency as systems in LA
- Technology Characterization
- Solar Photovoltaics
- PV convert sunlight into electricity through excitation from ground state
- several technologies deployed at gigawatt scale
- Emerging tech
- Copper indium gallium diselenide thin films
- concentrating PV
- organic PV cells
- Concentrating Solar Power
- CSP uses lenses or mirrors to focus sunlight onto receiver to heat fluid
- Parabolic trough systems, first commercialized in 1984, 96% of global deployment
- 1 axis track linear receiver to focus sunlight
- Dish uses 2 axis tracking
- Other Solar Technlogies
- water heating, space heating, cooling, and lighting, displace end use electricity
- Technologies included in RE Future Scenario Analysis
- PV Markets
- grid connected residential rooftop PV
- grid-connected commercial rooftop PV
- distributed utility scale PV
- central utility scale PV
- CSP technologies
- trough systems no storage
- trough with thermal energy storage
- tower systems with thermal energy storage
- Technology Cost and Performance
- steady trend of improvement
- RE technology costs RE-ETI (renewable electricity evolutionary technology improvement)
- represents more complete implementation of renewables
- RE-ITI (renewable electricity incremental technology improvement)
- represents only a partial achievement of potential technologies
- Solar costs refer to bottom up estimates of materials, manufacturing, installation
- Solar prices refer to market price of PV
- Solar Photovoltaics Cost and Performance
- since 1980s, factory gate module prices have decreased
- Engineering Analysis of Advancement Potential for Solar Photovoltaics
- PV Prices will improve from increasing module efficiencies, manufacturing throughput, reducing wafer thickness
- PV market dominated by multi crystalline and mono crystalline PV dominates about 85% of global market
- thin film cadmium telluride represents a significant other portion
- Balance of systems costs for solar photovoltaics
- BOS includes cost of inverters, transformers, support structures, mounting hardware, electrical protection devices, wiring, monitoring equipment, shipping, land, installation labor, permitting, and fees $1-4 per watt
- Hard BOS
- increase module efficiency, reduce size of installation
- developing racking systems to enhance energy production and integrate them into modules
- create standardized package systems and supply chains
- improve inverter price/performance
- Soft BOS
- reduce supply chain margins
- create standardized practices
- expand financing plans
- Solar cost projections in the SunShot vision study
- in 2011 the Department of Energy launched the SunShot Initiative
- push solar energy to become competitive with retail tech
- PV target to reach $1 per watt for utility scale systems, and 1.25 for commercial rooftop scale PV, and $1.50 for residential rooftop
- CSP targeted to reach $3.60 for systems with 14 hour storage
- RE futures modeling scenarios do not reach these price and performance targets
- Resource Cost Curves
- curves developed for rooftop PV, distributed PV, central utility PV, and CSP
- derived using solar resource characteristics from NREL's National Solar Radiation Database and the National Land Cover Data
- The following table describes the supply curves for PV
- Rooftop PV has technical potential of 700 GW in US
- Distributed Utility PV has about 2,000 GW
- Technical potential of central utility PV about 80,000 GW
- land availability not likely to limit PV deployment
- Output Characteristics and Grid Service Possibilities
- Solar Electricity consists of 2 distinct technologies with different generation characteristics
- PV provides DC in the range from 100-200W, then converted into utility grade power with 60 Hz frequency
- PV fluctuation in production varies, even more than wind generation
- Depends on cloud variability, short time variations
- CSP systems have much less short term variability due to thermal inertia of system
- CSP with storage viable to improve power quality, voltage, frequency stability
- Advantages
- PV generation curve does match peak load which occurs during the day
- PV reduces line losses due to distributed generation
- Technology Options for Power System Services
- Utilize inverter's power electronics
- reactive power, voltage control, and low voltage ride through
- Large Scale Production and Deployment Issues
- Environmental and social impacts
- land area required for PV and CSP is very large
- PV is modular, can be sited virtually anywhere, CSP has more specified locations
- Water Use
- CSP consumes water through evaporation, PV requires only maintenance water
- Life cycle Greenhouse Gases
- life cycle greenhouse gas emissions insignificant in comparison to power generation
- 45.5g carbon dioxide for PV, 19.0g carbon dioxide for CSP
- Other Impacts
- CSP often use oil or salt heat transfer fluid, which is not risk free
- glare from PV can cause risk to nearby persons
- Manufacturing and Deployment Challenges
- scale up capital is necessary
- availability of raw materials shouldn't be an issue, byproducts of electrolytic copper refining can be used for PV, cadmium telluride
- Indium is byproduct of zinc refining
- Material for silicon PV virtually unlimited
- High up front costs, low operating costs
- Human resources needed for design, manufacture, installation, and maintanence
- Conclusions
- fraction of solar usage is currently small but growing rapidly
- it faces mainly the issues of high upfront cost, and regulations especially for rooftop pv, local legislature can limit growth
- large scale deployment may cause landscape change
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