4 resultados para high optical-to-optical conversion efficiency
em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
Il compressed sensing è un’innovativa tecnica per l’acquisizione dei dati, che mira all'estrazione del solo contenuto informativo intrinseco di un segnale. Ciò si traduce nella possibilità di acquisire informazione direttamente in forma compressa, riducendo la quantità di risorse richieste per tale operazione. In questa tesi è sviluppata un'architettura hardware per l'acquisizione di segnali analogici basata sul compressed sensing, specializzata al campionamento con consumo di potenza ridotto di segnali biomedicali a basse frequenze. Lo studio è svolto a livello di sistema mediante l'integrazione della modulazione richiesta dal compressed sensing in un convertitore analogico-digitale ad approssimazioni successive, modificandone la logica di controllo. Le prestazioni risultanti sono misurate tramite simulazioni numeriche e circuitali. Queste confermano la possibilità di ridurre la complessità hardware del sistema di acquisizione rispetto allo stato dell'arte, senza alterarne le prestazioni.
Resumo:
A new method for the evaluation of the efficiency of parabolic trough collectors, called Rapid Test Method, is investigated at the Solar Institut Jülich. The basic concept is to carry out measurements under stagnation conditions. This allows a fast and inexpensive process due to the fact that no working fluid is required. With this approach, the temperature reached by the inner wall of the receiver is assumed to be the stagnation temperature and hence the average temperature inside the collector. This leads to a systematic error which can be rectified through the introduction of a correction factor. A model of the collector is simulated with COMSOL Multipyisics to study the size of the correction factor depending on collector geometry and working conditions. The resulting values are compared with experimental data obtained at a test rig at the Solar Institut Jülich. These results do not match with the simulated ones. Consequentially, it was not pos-sible to verify the model. The reliability of both the model with COMSOL Multiphysics and of the measurements are analysed. The influence of the correction factor on the rapid test method is also studied, as well as the possibility of neglecting it by measuring the receiver’s inner wall temperature where it receives the least amount of solar rays. The last two chapters analyse the specific heat capacity as a function of pressure and tem-perature and present some considerations about the uncertainties on the efficiency curve obtained with the Rapid Test Method.
Resumo:
The goal of this thesis is the application of an opto-electronic numerical simulation to heterojunction silicon solar cells featuring an all back contact architecture (Interdigitated Back Contact Hetero-Junction IBC-HJ). The studied structure exhibits both metal contacts, emitter and base, at the back surface of the cell with the objective to reduce the optical losses due to the shadowing by front contact of conventional photovoltaic devices. Overall, IBC-HJ are promising low-cost alternatives to monocrystalline wafer-based solar cells featuring front and back contact schemes, in fact, for IBC-HJ the high concentration doping diffusions are replaced by low-temperature deposition processes of thin amorphous silicon layers. Furthermore, another advantage of IBC solar cells with reference to conventional architectures is the possibility to enable a low-cost assembling of photovoltaic modules, being all contacts on the same side. A preliminary extensive literature survey has been helpful to highlight the specific critical aspects of IBC-HJ solar cells as well as the state-of-the-art of their modeling, processing and performance of practical devices. In order to perform the analysis of IBC-HJ devices, a two-dimensional (2-D) numerical simulation flow has been set up. A commercial device simulator based on finite-difference method to solve numerically the whole set of equations governing the electrical transport in semiconductor materials (Sentuarus Device by Synopsys) has been adopted. The first activity carried out during this work has been the definition of a 2-D geometry corresponding to the simulation domain and the specification of the electrical and optical properties of materials. In order to calculate the main figures of merit of the investigated solar cells, the spatially resolved photon absorption rate map has been calculated by means of an optical simulator. Optical simulations have been performed by using two different methods depending upon the geometrical features of the front interface of the solar cell: the transfer matrix method (TMM) and the raytracing (RT). The first method allows to model light prop-agation by plane waves within one-dimensional spatial domains under the assumption of devices exhibiting stacks of parallel layers with planar interfaces. In addition, TMM is suitable for the simulation of thin multi-layer anti reflection coating layers for the reduction of the amount of reflected light at the front interface. Raytracing is required for three-dimensional optical simulations of upright pyramidal textured surfaces which are widely adopted to significantly reduce the reflection at the front surface. The optical generation profiles are interpolated onto the electrical grid adopted by the device simulator which solves the carriers transport equations coupled with Poisson and continuity equations in a self-consistent way. The main figures of merit are calculated by means of a postprocessing of the output data from device simulation. After the validation of the simulation methodology by means of comparison of the simulation result with literature data, the ultimate efficiency of the IBC-HJ architecture has been calculated. By accounting for all optical losses, IBC-HJ solar cells result in a theoretical maximum efficiency above 23.5% (without texturing at front interface) higher than that of both standard homojunction crystalline silicon (Homogeneous Emitter HE) and front contact heterojuction (Heterojunction with Intrinsic Thin layer HIT) solar cells. However it is clear that the criticalities of this structure are mainly due to the defects density and to the poor carriers transport mobility in the amorphous silicon layers. Lastly, the influence of the most critical geometrical and physical parameters on the main figures of merit have been investigated by applying the numerical simulation tool set-up during the first part of the present thesis. Simulations have highlighted that carrier mobility and defects level in amorphous silicon may lead to a potentially significant reduction of the conversion efficiency.
Resumo:
In the last years, new materials have been developed in the broad area of nanoscience. Among them, an emergent class characterized by excellent electrical conductivity properties as well as high optical transmittance in the visible region are TCOs (Transparent Conducting Oxides). Due to their versatile properties, they have found many applications in a lot of optoelectronic devices, such as solar cells, liquid crystal displays, touch-panel displays, gas sensors, to cite a few examples. Different research groups have studied and characterized the TCOs. In this context, a new synthetic method has been developed to produce FTO nanocrystals (Fluorine-doped Tin Oxide NCs) in Prof. Pinna’s lab at the Humboldt University in Berlin. FTO belongs to the TCO category, and they have been studied as a promising alternative to ITO NCs (Indium Tin Oxide) which represent the standard TCO material in terms of properties and performances. In this work, FTO NCs have been synthesized using the “benzyl alcohol route” (a non-aqueous sol-gel method) via microwave, which permits to produce FTO particles with good properties as revealed by the characterizations performed, employing a cheap, fast and clean method.