4.7 Article

Optical design and validation of a solar concentrating photovoltaic-thermal (CPV-T) module for building louvers

Journal

ENERGY
Volume 239, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.energy.2021.122256

Keywords

Building integrated photovoltaic (BIPV); Concentrating photovoltaic/thermal (CPV/T); Solar concentration; Concentrating blade; Optical efficiency

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This paper introduces a solar concentrating photovoltaic-thermal module designed for building louvers, which combines a specially designed concentrating blade with a PV-T module to provide electricity and heat in building vertical spaces. The concentrating blade operates under solar incident angles of 0-90 degrees, with a high-efficiency photovoltaic-thermal working range of 20-70 degrees. Optical simulations show that the maximum geometrical concentration ratio is 2.96 at an incident angle of 20 degrees, and remains above 2 over a wide range of incident angles between 12.5 degrees and 52.5 degrees. Experiment results demonstrate that the CPV-T module can achieve an overall efficiency above 55% for nearly 5 hours without tracking during all-day experiments.
This paper presents a solar concentrating photovoltaic-thermal (CPV-T) module for building louver which is designed to provide electricity and heat for buildings by capturing solar radiation in building vertical space. A specially designed concentrating blade used for louver is combined with a PV-T module. The concentrating blade enables incident sunlight converge to a solar cell, thus obtaining electricity. The heat generated in the solar cell is taken away and collected by thermal fluid, by which the deficiency of increasing extra cooling demand in summer existing in traditional building integrated photovoltaic is overcome. The concentrating blade is designed to work under the solar incident angle of 0-90 degrees, and its high-efficiency photovoltaic-thermal working range is 20-70 degrees. Optical simulations are conducted to illustrate the characteristics of the concentrating blade. Remarkably, the maximum geometrical concentration ratio is 2.96 at the incident angle of 20 degrees. Over a wide range of incident angles between 12.5 degrees and 52.5 degrees, the geometrical concentration ratio maintains above 2. Finally, experiments are carried out to test the electrical and thermal performance of the CPV-T module. The results illustrate that its overall efficiency can reach above 55 % for nearly 5 h without tracking during the all-day experiment. (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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