Though the use of solar panels is on the rise, it still only represents 1.5 percent of total energy consumption in Europe. There are many reasons for this, starting with the intermittent nature of solar energy due to bad weather, the difficulty of storing it, and the cost of solar panels.
Researchers at the CSEM (The Swiss Center for Electronics and Microtechnology) in Neuchatel, Switzerland are working on ways to make solar energy more cost-effective. This includes using less precious metals in the manufacturing. Christophe Ballif, director the Photovoltaics laboratory, shows our reporter the new generation panels.
He explains how they contain more copper than silver, bringing down
production costs. Engineers have also added a nanometric layer of
silicon, increasing voltage, and thereby performance, by 15 percent.After it has been built, the solar panel undergoes resistance tests.
For the hail test, balls of ice measuring four centimetres in diameter
are launched at the panel at a speed of 27 metres per second.Researchers are particularly interested in how the panel’s thin
layer of silicon will stand the shock. Once the artificial hail storm is
over, the panel’s performance is measured again to see if it could take
it.Then comes the weight test. Metal bricks weighing more than twelve
kilos each are stacked onto the panels until the load reaches 1,000
kilos per square metre. The idea is to simulate strong winds and heavy
snow. This will allow engineers to select the right material for
building the panels.
“On top of the reliability tests, we also carry out tests on the
panel’s electric performance, which are very important because they
allow us to calculate how much electricity the unit generates. In order
to do that, we use light tables, which simulate the sun’s spectrum and
allow us to measure the unit’s electric efficiency,” says researcher
Laure-Emmanuelle Perret.“That kind of measurement allows us to establish whether there are
any manufacturing defects, especially when it comes to the electrical
connections,” she adds.In addition, researchers in Neuchatel have created a new panel
called ‘terracotta’ because of its colour, which they hope will blend in
better with roof tiles in cities across Europe. It is hoped that soon, new, more efficient and less costly
technology will help create more cost-effective and efficient solar
panels ready to be launched in the market, making them a force to be
reckoned with on the global energy market.
Source Euronews
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