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Preprint / Version 24

Impact of measured spectrum variation on solar photovoltaic efficiencies worldwide

##article.authors##

  • Geoffrey S Kinsey https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7285-6439
  • Matthew Boyd
  • Marília Braga
  • Nicholas C. Riedel-Lyngskær
  • Raul R. Cordero
  • Benjamin C. Duck
  • Christopher J. Fell
  • Sarah Feron
  • George Elias Georghiou
  • Nipon Ketjoy
  • Atse Louwen
  • Takashi Minemoto
  • Guilherme Neves
  • Gustavo Nofuentes Garrido
  • Basant R. Paudyal
  • Carlos D. Rodríguez Gallegos
  • Ricardo Rüther
  • Wilfried van Sark https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4738-1088
  • Miguel Angel Sevillano-Bendezú https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8717-7340
  • Marios Theristis
  • Jan Amaru Töfflinger
  • Márcia A. Yamasoe

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31224/osf.io/t5hu3

Keywords:

cadmium telluride, CIGS, energy yield, multijunction, operating efficiency, perovskite, PV efficiency, PV rating, silicon solar cell, solar cell efficiency, spectral irradiance, spectral response, tandem solar cell

Abstract

In photovoltaic power ratings, a single solar spectrum, AM1.5, is the de facto standard for record laboratory efficiencies, commercial module specifications, and performance ratios of solar power plants. More detailed energy analysis that accounts for local spectral irradiance, along with temperature and broadband irradiance, reduces forecast errors to expand the grid utility of solar energy. Here, ground-level measurements of spectral irradiance collected worldwide have been pooled to provide a sampling of geographic, seasonal, and diurnal variation. Applied to nine solar cell types, the resulting divergence in solar cell efficiencies illustrates that a single spectrum is insufficient for comparisons of cells with different spectral responses. Cells with two or more junctions tend to have efficiencies below that under the standard spectrum. Silicon exhibits the least spectral sensitivity: relative weekly site variation ranges from 1% in Lima, Peru to 14% in Edmonton, Canada, with a mean of 4%.

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