From component to multi-junction solar cells for spectral monitoring
Author(s) -
Norman Jost,
Ignacio Antón,
Rubén Núñez,
Stephen Askins,
Luis San José,
Guido Vallerotto,
Rebeca Herrero,
Marta Victoria,
César Domínguez,
Gabriel Sala
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
aip conference proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
eISSN - 1551-7616
pISSN - 0094-243X
DOI - 10.1063/1.5053546
Subject(s) - triple junction , isotype , concentrator , spectral sensitivity , photovoltaic system , irradiance , solar cell , optoelectronics , spectral line , materials science , optics , physics , engineering , electrical engineering , biology , wavelength , astronomy , monoclonal antibody , antibody , immunology
Concentrator photovoltaic usually embeds multi-junction solar cells, which exhibit high spectral sensitivity due to the internal series connection of the sub-cells. The use of so-called isotype or component cells with the same spectral response as the corresponding sub-cell, is widely applied for characterizing the spectral content of the impinging irradiance. These isotype sensors can be substituted by the multi-junction cells themselves, which are inherently spectrally tuned to any evolution of the multi-junction technology. To convert a multi-junction cell in a spectral sensor, it is necessary to add bias light within the spectral response of all but one of the sub-cells to saturate the corresponding junctions, so the non-saturated limits the current under any specified impinging spectrum. This paper shows indoor and outdoor side-by-side comparison of the so-called pseudo isotypes, based on a triple-junction solar cell, and genuine isotypes. The conditions to ensure an accurate spectral response, particularly for the bottom pseudo-isotype, are presented and discussed.Concentrator photovoltaic usually embeds multi-junction solar cells, which exhibit high spectral sensitivity due to the internal series connection of the sub-cells. The use of so-called isotype or component cells with the same spectral response as the corresponding sub-cell, is widely applied for characterizing the spectral content of the impinging irradiance. These isotype sensors can be substituted by the multi-junction cells themselves, which are inherently spectrally tuned to any evolution of the multi-junction technology. To convert a multi-junction cell in a spectral sensor, it is necessary to add bias light within the spectral response of all but one of the sub-cells to saturate the corresponding junctions, so the non-saturated limits the current under any specified impinging spectrum. This paper shows indoor and outdoor side-by-side comparison of the so-called pseudo isotypes, based on a triple-junction solar cell, and genuine isotypes. The conditions to ensure an accurate spectral response, parti...
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