Premium
Comparative study of high concentrating photovoltaics integrated with phase‐change liquid film cooling system
Author(s) -
Wang Yiping,
Huo Junpeng,
Zhou Liqun,
Huang Qunwu
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of energy research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.808
H-Index - 95
eISSN - 1099-114X
pISSN - 0363-907X
DOI - 10.1002/er.4414
Subject(s) - coolant , materials science , thermal , photovoltaic system , volumetric flow rate , nanofluids in solar collectors , heat transfer coefficient , heat transfer , photovoltaics , water cooling , nuclear engineering , optics , thermodynamics , photovoltaic thermal hybrid solar collector , engineering , electrical engineering , physics
Summary In high concentrating photovoltaic systems, thermal regulation is of great importance to the conversion efficiency and the safety of solar cells. Direct‐contact liquid film cooling technique is an effective way of thermal regulation with low initial investment. Tilt of solar cells is common in concentrating solar systems. An evaluation of direct‐contact liquid film cooling technique behind tilted high concentration photovoltaics was performed using both experimental and computational approaches. In the experiment, deionized water was used as the coolant at the back of simulated solar cells. Solar cell inclination of 0° to 75° with inlet water flow rate of 100–300 L/hour and inlet temperature of 30°C to 75°C were experimentally investigated. A two‐dimensional model was developed using computational fluid dynamics technique and validated by experimental results. The effects of inclination on average temperature, temperature uniformity, and heat transfer coefficient were discovered in this paper. The results indicated that 20° is the optimum angle for liquid film cooling. In addition, optimum inlet width, temperature, and velocity for inclination over 30° are 0.75 mm, 75°C, and 0.855 m/s, respectively.