4.5 Article

Illumination Dependence of Reverse Leakage Current in Silicon Solar Cells

Journal

IEEE JOURNAL OF PHOTOVOLTAICS
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages 1285-1290

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JPHOTOV.2021.3088005

Keywords

Lighting; Computer architecture; Microprocessors; Sun; Mathematical model; Leakage currents; Electric breakdown; Breakdown; illumination; leakage current; light induced

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Singapore through the Singapore Economic Development Board under Solar Competitive Research Program [S18-1175-SCRP]
  2. National University of Singapore (NUS)
  3. National Research Foundation Singapore (NRF)
  4. Singapore Economic Development Board (EDB)
  5. National University of Singapore
  6. Singapore's National Research Foundation through the Singapore Economic Development Board under the Solar Competitive Research Program

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study investigates the light induced effect of leakage current at the onset of breakdown in solar cells, finding it to be more prominent in p-type and mono c-Si cells. A proposed split-cell model offers a simple approach for handling partial shading in p-type cells, which is not captured by current breakdown models.
In the modeling of PV modules under shading and low illumination, a complete description of reverse bias behavior at the cell level is critical to understanding module response. This is particularly important when dealing with high voltage configurations such as tandem and shingled modules. Current simulation studies often do not account for the effects of incident light when dealing with operating voltages approaching cell breakdown. In this article, we investigate the illumination dependence of leakage current at the onset of breakdown in crystalline silicon solar cells. A study of the most popular cell technologies in the market today reveals a light induced effect under reverse bias that is prominent for p-type and small for n-type cells. Additionally, this effect is found to be larger in mono c-Si than multi c-Si cells. Because this phenomenon is not captured in current breakdown models such as Bishop's equation, we propose a split-cell model to describe partial shading in p-type cells. The outlined approach divides the cell into two parallel regions and is advantageous for its procedural simplicity as well as its ability to generalize effects from complex shading profiles.

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