scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

Solar power

About: Solar power is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 22014 publications have been published within this topic receiving 267243 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, real experiences with active storage systems and passive storage systems are compiled, giving detailed information of advantages and disadvantages of each one and a summary of different technologies and materials used in solar power plants with thermal storage systems existing in the world.
Abstract: Power generation systems are attracting a lot of interest from researchers and companies. Storage is becoming a component with high importance to ensure system reliability and economic profitability. A few experiences of storage components have taken place until the moment in solar power plants, most of them as research initiatives. In this paper, real experiences with active storage systems and passive storage systems are compiled, giving detailed information of advantages and disadvantages of each one. Also, a summary of different technologies and materials used in solar power plants with thermal storage systems existing in the world is presented.

775 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the current state of the art of parabolic trough solar power technology and describe the R&D efforts that are in progress to enhance this technology.
Abstract: Parabolic trough solar technology is the most proven and lowest cost large-scale solar power technology available today, primarily because of the nine large commercial-scale solar power plants that are operating in the California Mojave Desert. These plants, developed by Luz International Limited and referred to as Solar Electric Generating Systems (SEGS), range in size from 14-80 MW and represent 354 MW of installed electric generating capacity. More than 2,000,000 m 2 of parabolic trough collector technology has been operating daily for up to 18 years, and as the year 2001 ended, these plants had accumulated 127 years of operational experience. The Luz collector technology has demonstrated its ability to operate in a commercial power plant environment like no other solar technology in the world. Although no new plants have been built since 1990, significant advancements in collector and plant design have been made possible by the efforts of the SEGS plants operators, the parabolic trough industry, and solar research laboratories around the world. This paper reviews the current state of the art of parabolic trough solar power technology and describes the R&D efforts that are in progress to enhance this technology. The paper also shows how the economics of future parabolic trough solar power plants are expected to improve.

762 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A full solar thermophotovoltaic device is reported on, which, thanks to the nanophotonic properties of the absorber-emitter surface, reaches experimental efficiencies of 3.2%.
Abstract: The most common approaches to generating power from sunlight are either photovoltaic, in which sunlight directly excites electron-hole pairs in a semiconductor, or solar-thermal, in which sunlight drives a mechanical heat engine. Photovoltaic power generation is intermittent and typically only exploits a portion of the solar spectrum efficiently, whereas the intrinsic irreversibilities of small heat engines make the solar-thermal approach best suited for utility-scale power plants. There is, therefore, an increasing need for hybrid technologies for solar power generation. By converting sunlight into thermal emission tuned to energies directly above the photovoltaic bandgap using a hot absorber-emitter, solar thermophotovoltaics promise to leverage the benefits of both approaches: high efficiency, by harnessing the entire solar spectrum; scalability and compactness, because of their solid-state nature; and dispatchablility, owing to the ability to store energy using thermal or chemical means. However, efficient collection of sunlight in the absorber and spectral control in the emitter are particularly challenging at high operating temperatures. This drawback has limited previous experimental demonstrations of this approach to conversion efficiencies around or below 1% (refs 9, 10, 11). Here, we report on a full solar thermophotovoltaic device, which, thanks to the nanophotonic properties of the absorber-emitter surface, reaches experimental efficiencies of 3.2%. The device integrates a multiwalled carbon nanotube absorber and a one-dimensional Si/SiO2 photonic-crystal emitter on the same substrate, with the absorber-emitter areas optimized to tune the energy balance of the device. Our device is planar and compact and could become a viable option for high-performance solar thermophotovoltaic energy conversion.

755 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the potential of single and tandem solar cells, the main experimental achievements reported in the literature so far, and design rules for efficient material combinations in bulk-heterojunction organic tandem solar cell are presented.
Abstract: In this article some brief theoretical considerations addressing the potential of single and tandem solar cells, the main experimental achievements reported in the literature so far and finally some design rules for efficient material combinations in bulk-heterojunction organic tandem solar cells are presented.

752 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An overview of the challenges of integrating solar power to the electricity distribution system, a technical overview of battery energystorage systems, and a variety of modes of operation for battery energy storage systems in grid-tied solar applications are presented.
Abstract: As solar photovoltaic power generation becomes more commonplace, the inherent intermittency of the solar resource poses one of the great challenges to those who would design and implement the next generation smart grid. Specifically, grid-tied solar power generation is a distributed resource whose output can change extremely rapidly, resulting in many issues for the distribution system operator with a large quantity of installed photovoltaic devices. Battery energy storage systems are increasingly being used to help integrate solar power into the grid. These systems are capable of absorbing and delivering both real and reactive power with sub-second response times. With these capabilities, battery energy storage systems can mitigate such issues with solar power generation as ramp rate, frequency, and voltage issues. Beyond these applications focusing on system stability, energy storage control systems can also be integrated with energy markets to make the solar resource more economical. Providing a high-level introduction to this application area, this paper presents an overview of the challenges of integrating solar power to the electricity distribution system, a technical overview of battery energy storage systems, and illustrates a variety of modes of operation for battery energy storage systems in grid-tied solar applications. The real-time control modes discussed include ramp rate control, frequency droop response, power factor correction, solar time-shifting, and output leveling.

712 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Renewable energy
87.6K papers, 1.6M citations
91% related
Photovoltaic system
103.9K papers, 1.6M citations
90% related
Wind power
99K papers, 1.5M citations
89% related
Electric power system
133K papers, 1.7M citations
82% related
Energy consumption
101.9K papers, 1.6M citations
81% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023169
2022422
20211,161
20201,688
20191,787
20181,783