Preconditioning of thin-film PV module technologies for calibration
Thin-film module technologies are known for their metastability, and a study of this behaviour for different types of thin-film
modules is presented. The modules investigated through a series of controlled light-soaking procedures are copper–indium
sulfide (CIS), copper–indium–gallium diselenide (CIGS), cadmium telluride (CdTe), triple-junction amorphous silicon
(a-Si), micromorph silicon (a-Si/m-Si) and thin-film crystalline silicon (CSG). The objective of the paper is to investigate
whether after the stabilization point, as defined in the international qualification standard IEC 61646, there is any further significant
change in the maximum power of the module. It was found that all CIS and CIGS modules investigated in this study
stabilize according to IEC 61646, and no further significant change in maximum power is observed. The same result was
obtained also for the CSG module. To the contrary, CdTe, triple-junction a-Si and a-Si/m-Si modules continued to show further
change in maximum power even after they stabilize according to IEC 61646. For the purposes of module qualification, given
the need to stay ‘within reasonable constraints of cost and time’, the stability procedure of IEC 61646 could be considered as
satisfactory. However, in order to perform sufficient preconditioning of thin-film modules prior to precision calibration, a new
more complete standard procedure is needed, tailored to the specific technology. For example, tighter stability limits lower than
the current 2%, which would have the effect of increasing the number of light-soaking periods required.
KENNY Robert;
CHATZIPANAGI Anatoli;
SAMPLE Tony;
2014-01-24
JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
JRC61997
1062-7995,
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/pip.2234/full,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC61997,
10.1002/pip.2234,
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