4.7 Article

An active self-cleaning surface system for photovoltaic modules using anisotropic ratchet conveyors and mechanical vibration

Journal

MICROSYSTEMS & NANOENGINEERING
Volume 6, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41378-020-00197-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Amazon Catalyst
  2. University of Washington CoMotion Innovation Fund
  3. National Science Foundation [ECCS-1308025, NNCI-1542101, 1337840, 0335765]
  4. National Institutes of Health
  5. Institute for Nano-engineered Systems
  6. Molecular Engineering & Sciences Institute
  7. Clean Energy Institute
  8. Washington Research Foundation
  9. M. J. Murdock Charitable Trust
  10. Altatech
  11. ClassOne Technology
  12. GCE Market
  13. Google
  14. SPTS
  15. University of Washington NSF I-Corps site
  16. UW Clean Energy Institute

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The purpose of this work is to develop an active self-cleaning system that removes contaminants from a solar module surface by means of an automatic, water-saving, and labor-free process. The output efficiency of a solar module can be degraded over time by dust accumulation on top of the cover glass, which is often referred to as soiling. This paper focuses on creating an active self-cleaning surface system using a combination of microsized features and mechanical vibration. The features, which are termed anisotropic ratchet conveyors (ARCs), consist of hydrophilic curved rungs on a hydrophobic background. Two different ARC systems have been designed and fabricated with self-assembled monolayer (SAM) silane and fluoropolymer thin film (Cytop). Fabrication processes were established to fabricate these two systems, including patterning Cytop without degrading the original Cytop hydrophobicity. Water droplet transport characteristics, including anisotropic driving force, droplet resonance mode, cleaning mechanisms, and system power consumption, were studied with the help of a high-speed camera and custom-made test benches. The droplet can be transported on the ARC surface at a speed of 27mm/s and can clean a variety of dust particles, either water-soluble or insoluble. Optical transmission was measured to show that Cytop can improve transmittance by 2.5 similar to 3.5% across the entire visible wavelength range. Real-time demonstrations of droplet transport and surface cleaning were performed, in which the solar modules achieved a 23 percentage-point gain after cleaning.

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