A
Absorber - In a photovoltaic
device, the material that readily absorbs photons to generate charge
carriers (free electrons
or holes).
AC - see alternating
current.
Activated Shelf Life - The period of time, at a specified
temperature, that a charged battery
can be stored before its capacity falls to an unusable level.
Activation Voltage(s) - The voltage(s)
at which a charge
controller will take action to protect the batteries.
Adjustable Set Point - A feature allowing the user to
adjust the voltage
levels at which a charge
controller will become active.
Alternating Current (AC)
- A type of electrical
current, the direction of which is reversed at regular intervals or
cycles. In the United States, the standard is 120 reversals or 60 cycles per
second. Electricity transmission networks use AC because voltage
can be controlled with relative ease.
Acceptor - A dopant
material, such as boron,
which has fewer outer shell electrons
than required in an otherwise balanced crystal structure, providing a hole,
which can accept a free electron.
AIC - See amperage
interrupt capability.
Air mass (sometimes called air mass ratio) - Equal to the
cosine of the zenith angle-that
angle from directly overhead to a line intersecting the sun. The air mass is an
indication of the length of the path solar radiation travels through the
atmosphere. An air mass of 1.0 means the sun is directly overhead and the
radiation travels through one atmosphere (thickness).
Ambient Temperature - The temperature
of the surrounding area.
Amorphous Semiconductor - A non-crystalline semiconductor
material that has no long-range order.
Amorphous Silicon - A thin-film,
silicon
photovoltaic
cell having no crystalline structure. Manufactured by depositing
layers of doped
silicon
on a substrate.
See also single-crystal
silicon an polycrystalline
silicon.
Amperage Interrupt
Capability (AIC) - direct
current fuses should be rated with a sufficient AIC to interrupt the
highest possible current.
Ampere (amp) - A unit of electrical
current or rate of flow of electrons.
One volt
across one ohm
of resistance causes a current flow of one ampere.
Ampere-Hour (Ah/AH) - A measure
of the flow of current (in amperes)
over one hour; used to measure battery
capacity.
Ampere Hour Meter - An instrument that monitors current
with time. The indication is the product of current (in amperes)
and time (in hours).
Angle of Incidence - The angle that a ray of sun makes with
a line perpendicular to the surface. For example, a surface that directly faces
the sun has a solar angle of incidence of zero, but if the surface is parallel
to the sun (for example, sunrise striking a horizontal rooftop), the angle of
incidence is 90°.
Annual Solar Savings - The annual solar savings of a solar
building is the energy savings attributable to a solar feature relative to the
energy requirements of a non-solar building.
Anode - The positive electrode
in an electrochemical
cell (battery). Also, the earth or ground in a cathodic
protection system. Also, the positive terminal of a diode.
Antireflection Coating - A thin coating of a material
applied to a solar cell
surface that reduces the light reflection and increases light transmission.
Array - see photovoltaic
(PV) array.
Array Current - The electrical
current produced by a photovoltaic
array when it is exposed to sunlight.
Array Operating Voltage - The voltage
produced by a photovoltaic
array when exposed to sunlight and connected to a load.
Autonomous System - See stand-alone
system.
Availability - The quality or condition of a photovoltaic
system being available to provide power to a load.
Usually measured in hours per year. One minus availability equals downtime.
Azimuth Angle - The angle between true
south and the point on the horizon directly below the sun.
B
Balance of System - Represents all
components and costs other than the photovoltaic
modules/array.
It includes design costs, land, site preparation, system installation, support
structures, power conditioning, operation and maintenance costs, indirect
storage, and related costs.
Band Gap - In a semiconductor,
the energy difference between the highest valence band
and the lowest conduction
band.
Band Gap Energy (Eg) - The amount of energy (in electron
volts) required to free an outer shell electron
from its orbit about the nucleus to a free state, and thus promote it from the valence
to the conduction
level.
Barrier Energy - The energy given up by an electron
in penetrating the cell barrier;
a measure of the electrostatic potential of the barrier.
Base Load - The average amount of electric power that a
utility must supply in any period.
Battery - Two or more electrochemical
cells enclosed in a container and electrically interconnected in an
appropriate series/parallel arrangement to provide the required operating voltage
and current levels. Under common usage, the term battery also applies to a
single cell if it constitutes the entire electrochemical storage system.
Battery Available Capacity - The total maximum charge,
expressed in ampere-hours,
that can be withdrawn from a cell or battery
under a specific set of operating conditions including discharge
rate, temperature, initial state of
charge, age, and cut-off voltage.
Battery Capacity - The
maximum total electrical charge, expressed in ampere-hours,
which a battery
can deliver to a load
under a specific set of conditions.
Battery Cell - The simplest operating unit in a storage battery.
It consists of one or more positive electrodes
or plates, an electrolyte
that permits ionic conduction, one or more negative electrodes or plates,
separators between plates of opposite polarity, and a container for all the
above.
Battery Cycle Life - The number of cycles, to a specified depth of
discharge, that a cell or battery
can undergo before failing to meet its specified capacity or efficiency
performance criteria.
Battery Energy Capacity - The total energy available,
expressed in watt-hours
(kilowatt-hours),
which can be withdrawn from a fully charged cell or battery.
The energy capacity of a given cell
varies with temperature, rate, age, and cut-off voltage.
This term is more common to system designers than it is to the battery
industry where capacity usually refers to ampere-hours.
Battery Energy Storage - Energy storage using
electrochemical batteries.
The three main applications for battery energy storage systems include spinning
reserve at generating stations, load
leveling at substations, and peak shaving on the customer side of the meter.
Battery Life - The period during which a cell
or battery
is capable of operating above a specified capacity or efficiency performance
level. Life may be measured in cycles and/or years, depending on the type of
service for which the cell or battery is intended.
BIPV (Building-Integrated Photovoltaics) - A term for the
design and integration of photovoltaic
(PV) technology into the building envelope, typically replacing conventional
building materials. This integration may be in vertical facades, replacing view
glass, spandrel glass, or other facade material; into semitransparent skylight
systems; into roofing systems, replacing traditional roofing materials; into
shading "eyebrows" over windows; or other building envelope systems.
Blocking Diode - A semiconductor
connected in series with a solar cell
or cells and a storage battery
to keep the battery
from discharging through the cell
when there is no output, or low output, from the solar cell.
It can be thought of as a one-way valve that allows electrons
to flow forwards, but not backwards.
Boron (B) - The chemical element commonly
used as the dopant
in photovoltaic
device or cell
material.
Boule - A sausage-shaped, synthetic single-crystal mass
grown in a special furnace, pulled and turned at a rate necessary to maintain
the single-crystal structure during growth.
Btu (British Thermal Unit) - The amount of
heat required to raise the temperature of one pound of water one degree
Fahrenheit; equal to 252 calories.
Bypass Diode - A diode
connected across one or more solar cells
in a photovoltaic module such that the diode will conduct if the cell(s)
become reverse biased. It protects these solar cells from thermal destruction
in case of total or partial shading of individual solar cells while other cells
are exposed to full light.
C
Cadmium (Cd) - A chemical element used
in making certain types of solar cells
and batteries.
Cadmium Telluride (CdTe) —
A polycrystalline thin-film photovoltaic material.
Capacity (C) - See battery
capacity.
Capacity Factor - The ratio of the average load on (or
power output of) an electricity generating unit or system to the capacity
rating of the unit or system over a specified period of time.
Captive Electrolyte Battery - A battery having an
immobilized electrolyte
(gelled or absorbed in a material).
Cathode - The negative pole or electrode
of an electrolytic cell,
vacuum tube, etc., where electrons
enter (current
leaves) the system; the opposite of an anode.
Cathodic Protection - A
method of preventing oxidation of the exposed metal in structures by imposing a
small electrical voltage between the structure and the ground.
Cd - see cadmium.
CdTe - see cadmium
telluride.
Cell (battery) - A single
unit of an electrochemical device capable of producing direct voltage by
converting chemical energy into electrical energy. A battery usually consists
of several cells electrically connected together to produce higher voltages.
(Sometimes the terms cell and battery
are used interchangeably). Also see photovoltaic
(PV) cell.
Cell Barrier - A very thin
region of static electric charge along the interface of the positive and
negative layers in a photovoltaic
cell. The barrier inhibits the movement of electrons
from one layer to the other, so that higher-energy electrons from one side
diffuse preferentially through it in one direction, creating a current and thus
a voltage
across the cell. Also called depletion
zone or space charge.
Cell Junction - The area of
immediate contact between two layers (positive and negative) of a photovoltaic
cell. The junction lies at the center of the cell barrier
or depletion
zone.
Charge - The process of adding electrical energy to a battery.
Charge Carrier - A free and
mobile conduction electron
or hole
in a semiconductor.
Charge Controller - A
component of a photovoltaic
system that controls the flow of current
to and from the battery
to protect it from over-charge and over-discharge. The charge controller may
also indicate the system operational status.
Charge Factor - A number representing the time in hours
during which a battery
can be charged at a constant current without damage to the battery. Usually
expressed in relation to the total battery
capacity, i.e., C/5 indicates a charge factor of 5 hours. Related to
charge rate.
Charge Rate - The current applied
to a cell
or battery
to restore its available
capacity. This rate is commonly normalized by a charge control
device with respect to the rated capacity of the cell
or battery.
Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD) - A method of depositing thin
semiconductor films used to make certain types of photovoltaic
devices. With this method, a substrate
is exposed to one or more vaporized compounds, one or more of which contain
desirable constituents. A chemical reaction is initiated, at or near the
substrate surface, to produce the desired material that will condense on the
substrate.
Cleavage of Lateral Epitaxial Films for Transfer (CLEFT) —
A process for making inexpensive Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) photovoltaic
cells in which a thin film of GaAs is grown atop a thick,
single-crystal GaAs (or other suitable material) substrate
and then is cleaved from the substrate and incorporated into a cell, allowing
the substrate to be reused to grow more thin-film GaAs.
Cloud Enhancement - The increase in solar intensity caused
by reflected irradiance
from nearby clouds.
Combined Collector - A photovoltaic
device or module
that provides useful heat energy in addition to electricity.
Concentrator - A photovoltaic
module, which includes optical components such as lenses (Fresnel lens)
to direct and concentrate sunlight onto a solar cell
of smaller area. Most concentrator arrays
must directly face or track the sun. They can increase the power flux of
sunlight hundreds of times.
Conduction Band (or
conduction level) - An energy band in a semiconductor
in which electrons
can move freely in a solid, producing a net transport of charge.
Conductor - The material through
which electricity is transmitted, such as an electrical wire, or transmission
or distribution line.
Contact Resistance - The resistance between metallic
contacts and the semiconductor.
Conversion Efficiency - See photovoltaic
(conversion) efficiency.
Converter - A unit that converts a direct current
(dc) voltage to another dc voltage.
Copper Indium Diselenide (CuInSe2, or CIS)
— A polycrystalline
thin-film
photovoltaic material (sometimes incorporating gallium
(CIGS) and/or sulfur).
Crystalline Silicon - A type of photovoltaic
cell made from a slice of single-crystal
silicon or polycrystalline
silicon.
Current - See electric
current.
Current at Maximum Power (Imp) - The current
at which maximum power is available from a module.
Cutoff Voltage - The voltage
levels (activation) at which the charge
controller disconnects the photovoltaic
array from the battery
or the load
from the battery.
Cycle - The discharge and subsequent charge of a battery.
Czochralski Process - A method of growing large size, high
quality semiconductor
crystal by slowly lifting a seed crystal from a molten bath of the material
under careful cooling conditions.
D
Dangling Bonds - A chemical
bond associated with an atom on the surface layer of a crystal. The bond does
not join with another atom of the crystal, but extends in the direction of
exterior of the surface.
Days of Storage - The number of consecutive days the stand-alone
system will meet a defined load
without solar energy input. This term is related to system availability.
DC - See direct
current.
DC-to-DC Converter - Electronic circuit to convert direct
current voltages
(e.g., photovoltaic module voltage)
into other levels (e.g., load
voltage).
Can be part of a maximum power
point tracker.
Deep-Cycle Battery - A battery with large plates that can
withstand many discharges to a low state-of-charge.
Deep Discharge - Discharging a battery to 20% or less of
its full charge capacity.
Depth of Discharge (DOD) —
The ampere-hours
removed from a fully charged cell
or battery,
expressed as a percentage of rated capacity. For example, the removal of 25
ampere-hours from a fully charged 100 ampere-hours rated cell results in a 25%
depth of discharge. Under certain conditions, such as discharge rates lower
than that used to rate the cell, depth of discharge can exceed 100%.
Dendrite - A slender threadlike spike
of pure crystalline material, such as silicon.
Dendritic Web Technique - A method for making sheets of polycrystalline
silicon in which silicon dendrites
are slowly withdrawn from a melt of silicon whereupon a web of silicon forms
between the dendrites and solidifies as it rises from the melt and cools.
Depletion Zone - Same as cell barrier.
The term derives from the fact that this microscopically thin region is
depleted of charge
carriers (free electrons
and hole).
Design Month - The month having the combination of insolation
and load
that requires the maximum energy from the photovoltaic
array.
Diffuse Insolation —
Sunlight received indirectly as a result of scattering due to clouds, fog,
haze, dust, or other obstructions in the atmosphere. Opposite of direct
insolation.
Diffuse Radiation - Radiation received from the sun after
reflection and scattering by the atmosphere and ground.
Diffusion Furnace - Furnace used to make junctions in semiconductors
by diffusing dopant atoms into the surface of the material.
Diffusion Length - The mean distance a free electron
or hole
moves before recombining with another hole or electron.
Diode - An electronic device that allows
current to flow in one direction only. See blocking diode
and bypass diode.
Direct Beam Radiation - Radiation
received by direct solar rays. Measured by a pyrheliometer with a solar
aperture of 5.7° to transcribe the solar disc.
Direct Current (DC) - A type
of electricity transmission and distribution by which electricity flows in one
direction through the conductor,
usually relatively low voltage
and high current. To be used for typical 120 volt or 220 volt
household appliances, DC must be converted to alternating
current, its opposite.
Direct Insolation —
Sunlight falling directly upon a collector. Opposite of diffuse insolation.
Discharge - The withdrawal of
electrical energy from a battery.
Discharge Factor - A number
equivalent to the time in hours during which a battery is discharged at
constant current usually expressed as a percentage of the total battery
capacity, i.e., C/5 indicates a discharge factor of 5 hours. Related to discharge
rate.
Discharge Rate - The rate,
usually expressed in amperes
or time, at which electrical
current is taken from the battery.
Disconnect - Switch gear used to connect or disconnect
components in a photovoltaic
system.
Distributed Energy Resources (DER) - A variety of small,
modular power-generating technologies that can be combined with energy
management and storage systems and used to improve the operation of the
electricity delivery system, whether or not those technologies are connected to
an electricity grid.
Distributed Generation - A popular term for localized or
on-site power generation.
Distributed Power - Generic term for any power supply
located near the point where the power is used. Opposite of central power. See stand-alone
systems.
Distributed Systems - Systems that are installed at or near
the location where the electricity is used, as opposed to central systems that
supply electricity to grids.
A residential photovoltaic
system is a distributed system.
Donor - In a photovoltaic
device, an n-type
dopant,
such as phosphorus,
that puts an additional electron
into an energy level very near the conduction
band; this electron is easily exited into the conduction band where
it increases the electrical conductivity over than of an undoped semiconductor.
Donor Level - The level that donates conduction
electrons
to the system.
Dopant - A chemical element (impurity)
added in small amounts to an otherwise pure semiconductor material to modify
the electrical properties of the material. An n-dopant introduces more
electrons. A p-dopant creates electron vacancies (holes).
Doping - The addition of dopants
to a semiconductor.
Downtime - Time when the photovoltaic system cannot provide
power for the load.
Usually expressed in hours per year or that percentage.
Dry Cell - A cell
(battery) with a captive electrolyte.
A primary battery that cannot be recharged.
Duty Cycle - The ratio of active time to total time. Used
to describe the operating regime of appliances or loads in photovoltaic
systems.
Duty Rating - The amount of time
an inverter
(power conditioning unit) can produce at full rated power.
E
Edge-Defined Film-Fed Growth (EFG) - A method for making
sheets of polycrystalline
silicon for photovoltaic
devices in which molten silicon is drawn upward by capillary action
through a mold.
Electric Circuit - The path followed by electrons from a
power source (generator or battery), through an electrical system, and
returning to the source.
Electric Current - The flow
of electrical energy (electricity) in a conductor,
measured in amperes.
Electrical grid - An integrated system of
electricity distribution, usually covering a large area.
Electricity - Energy resulting from the flow of charge
particles, such as electrons
or ions.
Electrochemical Cell - A device
containing two conducting electrodes,
one positive and the other negative, made of dissimilar materials (usually
metals) that are immersed in a chemical solution (electrolyte)
that transmits positive ions
from the negative to the positive electrode and thus forms an electrical
charge. One or more cells constitute a battery.
Electrode - A conductor that is
brought in conducting contact with a ground.
Electrodeposition - Electrolytic process in which a metal
is deposited at the cathode
from a solution of its ions.
Electrolyte - A nonmetallic (liquid
or solid) conductor that carries current
by the movement of ions
(instead of electrons)
with the liberation of matter at the electrodes
of an electrochemical
cell.
Electron - An elementary particle of
an atom with a negative electrical charge and a mass of 1/1837 of a proton;
electrons surround the positively charged nucleus of an atom and determine the
chemical properties of an atom. The movement of electrons in an electrical conductor
constitutes an electric current.
Electron Volt (eV) - The
amount of kinetic energy gained by an electron when accelerated through an
electric potential difference of 1 Volt; equivalent to 1.603 x 10^-19; a unit
of energy or work.
Energy - The capability of doing work; different forms of
energy can be converted to other forms, but the total amount of energy remains
the same.
Energy Audit - A survey that shows how much energy used in
a home, which helps find ways to use less energy.
Energy Contribution Potential - Recombination
occurring in the emitter region of a photovoltaic
cell.
Energy Density - The ratio of available energy per pound;
usually used to compare storage batteries.
Energy Levels - The energy represented by an electron
in the band model of a substance.
Epitaxial Growth - The growth of one crystal on the surface
of another crystal. The growth of the deposited crystal is oriented by the lattice
structure of the original crystal.
Equalization - The process of
restoring all cells
in a battery
to an equal state-of-charge.
Some battery types may require a complete discharge as a part of the
equalization process.
Equalization Charge - The process of mixing the electrolyte
in batteries by periodically overcharging the batteries for a short time.
Equalizing Charge - A continuation of normal battery
charging, at a voltage
level slightly higher than the normal end-of-charge voltage, in order to
provide cell equalization
within a battery.
Equinox - The two times of the year when the sun crosses
the equator and night and day are of equal length; usually occurs on March 21st
(spring equinox) and September 23 (fall equinox).
Extrinsic Semiconductor - The product of doping
a pure semiconductor.
F
Fermi Level - Energy level at
which the probability of finding an electron
is one-half. In a metal, the Fermi level is very near the top of the filled
levels in the partially filled valence band.
In a semiconductor,
the Fermi level is in the band gap.
Fill Factor - The ratio of a photovoltaic
cell's actual power to its power if both current and voltage
were at their maxima. A key characteristic in evaluating cell performance.
Fixed Tilt Array - A photovoltaic
array set in at a fixed angle with respect to horizontal.
Flat-Plate Array - A photovoltaic
(PV) array that consists of non-concentrating PV modules.
Flat-Plate Module - An
arrangement of photovoltaic
cells or material mounted on a rigid flat surface with the cells
exposed freely to incoming sunlight.
Flat-Plate Photovoltaics (PV) - A PV array or module that
consists of nonconcentrating elements. Flat-plate arrays
and modules
use direct and diffuse sunlight, but if the array is fixed in position, some
portion of the direct sunlight is lost because of oblique sun-angles in
relation to the array.
Float Charge - The voltage
required to counteract the self-discharge
of the battery
at a certain temperature.
Float Life - The number of years that a battery
can keep its stated capacity when it is kept at float charge.
Float Service - A battery operation in which the battery is
normally connected to an external current source; for instance, a battery
charger which supplies the battery load< under normal conditions, while also
providing enough energy input to the battery to make up for its internal
quiescent losses, thus keeping the battery always up to full power and ready
for service.
Float-Zone Process - A method of growing a large-size,
high-quality crystal whereby coils heat a polycrystalline
ingot placed atop a single-crystal seed. As the coils are slowly raised the
molten interface beneath the coils becomes single crystal.
Float-Zone Process - In reference to solar photovoltaic
cell manufacture, a method of growing a large-size, high-quality crystal
whereby coils heat a polycrystalline ingot placed atop a single-crystal seed.
As the coils are slowly raised the molten interface beneath the coils becomes a
single crystal.
Frequency - The number of repetitions
per unit time of a complete waveform, expressed in Hertz (Hz).
Frequency Regulation - This indicates the variability in
the output frequency.
Some loads
will switch off or not operate properly if frequency variations exceed 1%.
Fresnel Lens - An optical device
that focuses light like a magnifying glass; concentric rings are faced at
slightly different angles so that light falling on any ring is focused to the
same point.
Full Sun - The amount of power density in sunlight received
at the earth's surface at noon on a clear day (about 1,000 Watts/square meter).
G
Ga - See gallium.
GaAs - See gallium
arsenide.
Gallium (Ga) - A chemical element,
metallic in nature, used in making certain kinds of solar cells and semiconductor
devices.
Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) - A
crystalline, high-efficiency compound used to make certain types of solar cells
and semiconductor
material.
Gassing - The evolution of gas from one
or more of the electrodes
in the cells
of a battery.
Gassing commonly results from local action self-discharge
or from the electrolysis of water in the electrolyte
during charging.
Gassing Current - The portion of charge current
that goes into electrolytical production of hydrogen and oxygen from the
electrolytic liquid. This current increases with increasing voltage
and temperature.
Gel-Type Battery - Lead-acid battery
in which the electrolyte
is composed of a silica gel matrix.
Gigawatt (GW) - A unit of power equal to 1 billion Watts; 1
million kilowatts, or 1,000 megawatts.
Grid - See electrical
grid.
Grid-Connected System —
A solar electric or photovoltaic
(PV) system in which the PV array
acts like a central generating plant, supplying power to the grid.
Grid-Interactive System - Same as grid-connected
system.
Grid Lines - Metallic contacts fused to the surface of the solar cell
to provide a low resistance path for electrons
to flow out to the cell interconnect wires.
H
Harmonic Content - The
number of frequencies in the output waveform
in addition to the primary frequency
(50 or 60 Hz.). Energy in these harmonic frequencies is lost and may cause
excessive heating of the load.
Heterojunction - A region of
electrical contact between two different materials.
High Voltage Disconnect
— The voltage
at which a charge
controller will disconnect the photovoltaic
array from the batteries to prevent overcharging.
High Voltage Disconnect Hysteresis - The voltage
difference between the high voltag
disconnect set point and the voltage at which the full photovoltaic
array current
will be reapplied.
Hole - The vacancy where an electron
would normally exist in a solid; behaves like a positively charged particle.
Homojunction - The region between an n-layer and a p-layer
in a single material, photovoltaic cell.
Hybrid System - A solar electric or photovoltaic
system that includes other sources of electricity generation, such
as wind or diesel generators.
Hydrogenated Amorphous Silicon - Amorphous
silicon with a small amount of incorporated hydrogen. The hydrogen
neutralizes dangling bonds in the amorphous silicon, allowing charge
carriers to flow more freely.
I
Incident Light - Light that shines onto the face of a solar cell
or module.
Indium Oxide - A wide band gap semiconductor
that can be heavily doped
with tin to make a highly conductive, transparent thin film.
Often used as a front contact or one component of a heterojunction
solar cell.
Infrared Radiation - Electromagnetic radiation whose
wavelengths lie in the range from 0.75 micrometer to 1000 micrometers;
invisible long wavelength radiation (heat) capable of producing a thermal or photovoltaic
effect, though less effective than visible light.
Input Voltage - This is determined by the total power
required by the alternating
current loads and the voltage of any direct
current loads. Generally, the larger the load,
the higher the inverter input voltage.
This keeps the current
at levels where switches and other components are readily available.
Insolation - The solar power density
incident on a surface of stated area and orientation, usually expressed as Watts
per square meter or Btu
per square foot per hour. See diffuse
insolation and direct
insolation.
Interconnect - A conductor
within a module
or other means of connection that provides an electrical interconnection
between the solar cells.
Intrinsic Layer - A layer of semiconductor
material, used in a photovoltaic
device, whose properties are essentially those of the pure, undoped,
material.
Intrinsic Semiconductor
— An undoped semiconductor.
Inverter - A device that converts direct
current electricity to alternating
current either for stand-alone systems or to supply power to an
electricity grid.
Ion - An electrically charged atom or group
of atoms that has lost or gained electrons;
a loss makes the resulting particle positively charged; a gain makes the
particle negatively charged.
Irradiance - The direct, diffuse,
and reflected solar radiation that strikes a surface. Usually expressed in kilowatts
per square meter. Irradiance multiplied by time equals insolation.
ISPRA Guidelines - Guidelines for the assessment of photovoltaic
power plants, published by the Joint Research Centre of the Commission of the
European Communities, Ispra, Italy.
I-Type Semiconductor - Semiconductor
material that is left intrinsic, or undoped so that the concentration of charge
carriers is characteristic of the material itself rather than of added
impurities.
I-V Curve - A graphical presentation of the
current versus the voltage from a photovoltaic device as the load is increased
from the short circuit (no load) condition to the open circuit (maximum
voltage) condition. The shape of the curve characterizes cell performance.
J
Joule - A metric unit of energy or work;
1 joule per second equals 1 watt
or 0.737 foot-pounds; 1 Btu
equals 1,055 joules.
Junction - A region of transition
between semiconductor
layers, such as a p/n junction, which goes from a region that has a high
concentration of acceptors (p-type) to one that has a high concentration of
donors (n-type).
Junction Box - A photovoltaic
(PV) generator junction box is an enclosure on the module where PV strings are
electrically connected and where protection devices can be located, if
necessary.
Junction Diode - A semiconductor
device with a junction and a built-in potential that passes current better in
one direction than the other. All solar cells
are junction diodes.
K
Kilowatt (kW) - A standard unit of
electrical power equal to 1000 watts,
or to the energy consumption at a rate of 1000 joules
per second.
Kilowatt-Hour (kWh) - 1,000
thousand watts acting over a period of 1 hour. The kWh is a unit of energy. 1
kWh=3600 kJ.
L
Langley (L) - Unit of solar irradiance.
One gram calorie per square centimeter. 1 L = 85.93 kwh/m2.
Lattice - The regular periodic arrangement
of atoms or molecules in a crystal of semiconductor material.
Lead-Acid Battery - A general category that includes
batteries with plates made of pure lead, lead-antimony, or lead-calcium
immersed in an acid electrolyte.
Life - The period during which a system is capable of
operating above a specified performance level.
Life-Cycle Cost - The estimated cost of owning and
operating a photovoltaic
system for the period of its useful life.
Light-Induced Defects - Defects, such as dangling bonds, induced in an amorphous silicon semiconductor upon
initial exposure to light.
Light Trapping - The trapping of light inside a
semiconductor material by refracting and reflecting the light at critical
angles; trapped light will travel further in the material, greatly increasing
the probability of absorption and hence of producing charge carriers.
Line-Commutated Inverter - An inverter that is tied to a
power grid
or line. The commutation of power (conversion from direct
current to alternating
current) is controlled by the power line, so that, if there is a
failure in the power grid, the photovoltaic
system cannot feed power into the line.
Liquid Electrolyte Battery - A battery containing a liquid
solution of acid and water. Distilled water may be added to these batteries to
replenish the electrolyte
as necessary. Also called a flooded battery because the plates are covered with
the electrolyte.
Load - The demand on an energy producing
system; the energy consumption or requirement of a piece or group of equipment.
Usually expressed in terms of amperes
or watts
in reference to electricity.
Load Circuit - The wire, switches, fuses, etc. that connect
the load
to the power source.
Load Current (A) - The current required by the electrical
device.
Load Resistance - The resistance presented by the load. See
resistance.
Low Voltage Cutoff (LVC) - The voltage
level at which a charge
controller will disconnect the load
from the battery.
Low Voltage Disconnect - The voltage
at which a charge
controller will disconnect the load
from the batteries to prevent over-discharging.
Low Voltage Disconnect Hysteresis - The voltage
difference between the low voltage disconnect set point and the voltage at
which the load
will be reconnected.
Low Voltage Warning - A warning buzzer or light that
indicates the low battery voltage set point has been reached.
M
Maintenance-Free Battery - A sealed battery
to which water cannot be added to maintain electrolyte
level.
Majority Carrier - Current carriers (either free electrons
or holes)
that are in excess in a specific layer of a semiconductor
material (electrons in the n-layer, holes in the p-layer) of a cell.
Maximum Power Point (MPP) - The point on
the current-voltage (I-V)
curve of a module under illumination, where the product of current
and voltage
is maximum. For a typical silicon
cell,
this is at about 0.45 volts.
Maximum Power Point Tracker (MPPT) - Means
of a power conditioning unit that automatically operates the photovoltaic
generator at its maximum power
point under all conditions.
Maximum Power Tracking - Operating a photovoltaic
array at the peak power
point of the array's I-V curve
where maximum power is obtained. Also called peak power tracking.
Megawatt (MW) - 1,000 kilowatts,
or 1 million watts;
standard measure of electric power plant generating capacity.
Megawatt-Hour - 1,000 kilowatt-hours
or 1 million watt-hours.
Microgroove - A small groove scribed into the surface of a solar cell,
which is filled with metal for contacts.
Minority Carrier - A current
carrier, either an electron
or a hole,
that is in the minority in a specific layer of a semiconductor
material; the diffusion of minority carriers under the action of the cell junction
voltage
is the current
in a photovoltaic
device.
Minority Carrier Lifetime - The average time a minority
carrier exists before recombination.
Modified Sine Wave - A waveform
that has at least three states (i.e., positive, off, and negative). Has less harmonic
content than a square wave.
Modularity - The use of multiple inverters
connected in parallel to service different loads.
Module - See photovoltaic
(PV) module.
Module Derate Factor - A factor that lowers the photovoltaic
module current
to account for field operating conditions such as dirt accumulation on the
module.
Monolithic - Fabricated as a single structure.
Movistor - Metal Oxide Varistor. Used to protect electronic
circuits from surge currents such as those produced by lightning.
Multicrystalline - A semiconductor
(photovoltaic) material composed of variously oriented, small, individual
crystals. Sometimes referred to as polycrystalline or semicrystalline.
Multijunction Device - A
high-efficiency photovoltaic
device containing two or more cell junctions,
each of which is optimized for a particular part of the solar
spectrum.
Multi-Stage Controller - A charging
controller unit that allows different charging currents as the
battery nears full state of
charge.
N
National Electrical Code (NEC) - Contains
guidelines for all types of electrical installations. The 1984 and later
editions of the NEC contain Article 690, "Solar Photovoltaic Systems"
which should be followed when installing a PV system.
National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA)
— This organization sets standards for some non-electronic products like
junction boxes.
NEC - See National
Electrical Code.
NEMA - See National
Electrical Manufacturers Association.
Nickel Cadmium Battery - A battery containing nickel and
cadmium plates and an alkaline electrolyte.
Nominal Voltage - A reference voltage
used to describe batteries,
modules,
or systems (i.e., a 12-volt or 24-volt battery, module, or system).
Normal Operating Cell Temperature (NOCT) - The estimated
temperature of a photovoltaic
module when operating under 800 w/m2 irradiance,
20?C ambient
temperature and wind speed of 1 meter per second. NOCT is used to
estimate the nominal operating temperature of a module in its working
environment.
N-Type - Negative semiconductor
material in which there are more electrons
than holes;
current
is carried through it by the flow of electrons.
N-Type Semiconductor - A
semiconductor
produced by doping
an intrinsic
semiconductor with an electron-donor
impurity (e.g., phosphorus
in silicon).
N-Type Silicon - Silicon
material that has been doped
with a material that has more electrons
in its atomic structure than does silicon.
O
Ohm - A measure of the electrical
resistance of a material equal to the resistance of a circuit in which the
potential difference of 1 volt produces a current of 1 ampere.
One-Axis Tracking - A system capable of rotating about one
axis.
Open-Circuit Voltage (Voc) - The maximum possible voltage
across a photovoltaic cell; the voltage across the cell in sunlight when no
current is flowing.
Operating Point - The current
and voltage
that a photovoltaic module
or array
produces when connected to a load.
The operating point is dependent on the load or the batteries connected to the
output terminals of the array.
Orientation - Placement with respect to the cardinal
directions, N, S, E, W; azimuth
is the measure of orientation from north.
Outgas - See gassing.
Overcharge - Forcing current
into a fully charged battery.
The battery will be damaged if overcharged for a long period.
P
Packing Factor - The ratio of array
area to actual land area or building envelope area for a system; or, the ratio
of total solar cell
area to the total module
area, for a module.
Panel - See photovoltaic
(PV) panel.
Parallel Connection - A way of joining solar cells
or photovoltaic
modules by connecting positive leads together and negative leads
together; such a configuration increases the current,
but not the voltage.
Passivation - A chemical reaction that eliminates the
detrimental effect of electrically reactive atoms on a solar cell's
surface.
Peak Demand/Load - The maximum
energy demand or load in a specified time period.
Peak Power Current - Amperes produced by a photovoltaic module
or array
operating at the voltage
of the I-V curve
that will produce maximum power from the module.
Peak Power Point - Operating
point of the I-V
(current-voltage) curve for a solar cell
or photovoltaic
module where the product of the current value times the voltage
value is a maximum.
Peak Power Tracking - see maximum power
tracking.
Peak Sun Hours - The
equivalent number of hours per day when solar irradiance
averages 1,000 w/m2. For example, six peak sun hours means that the energy
received during total daylight hours equals the energy that would have been
received had the irradiance for six hours been 1,000 w/m2.
Peak Watt - A unit used to rate the performance of solar cells,
modules,
or arrays;
the maximum nominal output of a photovoltaic
device, in watts
(Wp) under standardized test conditions, usually 1,000 watts per square meter
of sunlight with other conditions, such as temperature specified.
Phosphorous (P) - A chemical element
used as a dopant
in making n-type
semiconductor layers.
Photocurrent - An electric current induced by radiant
energy.
Photoelectric Cell - A device for measuring light intensity
that works by converting light falling on, or reach it, to electricity, and
then measuring the current; used in photometers.
Photoelectrochemical Cell - A type of photovoltaic
device in which the electricity induced in the cell is used immediately
within the cell to produce a chemical, such as hydrogen, which can then be
withdrawn for use.
Photon - A particle of light that acts
as an individual unit of energy.
Photovoltaic(s) (PV) - Pertaining
to the direct conversion of light into electricity.
Photovoltaic (PV) Array —
An interconnected system of PV modules
that function as a single electricity-producing unit. The modules are assembled
as a discrete structure, with common support or mounting. In smaller systems,
an array can consist of a single module.
Photovoltaic (PV) Cell —
The smallest semiconductor element within a PV module
to perform the immediate conversion of light into electrical energy (direct
current voltage
and current).
Also called a solar cell.
Photovoltaic (PV) Conversion
Efficiency - The ratio of the electric power produced by a
photovoltaic device to the power of the sunlight incident on the device.
Photovoltaic (PV) Device
— A solid-state electrical device that converts light directly into direct
current electricity of voltage-current characteristics that are a
function of the characteristics of the light source and the materials in and
design of the device. Solar photovoltaic devices are made of various semiconductor
materials including silicon,
cadmium
sulfide, cadmium
telluride, and gallium
arsenide, and in single crystalline, multicrystalline,
or amorphous forms.
Photovoltaic (PV) Effect
— The phenomenon that occurs when photons,
the "particles" in a beam of light, knock electrons
loose from the atoms they strike. When this property of light is combined with
the properties of semiconductors,
electrons flow in one direction across a junction,
setting up a voltage.
With the addition of circuitry, current will flow and electric power will be
available.
Photovoltaic (PV) Generator
— The total of all PV strings of a PV power supply system, which are
electrically interconnected.
Photovoltaic (PV) Module
— The smallest environmentally protected, essentially planar assembly of solar
cells and ancillary parts, such as interconnections, terminals, [and protective
devices such as diodes]
intended to generate direct
current power under unconcentrated sunlight. The structural (load
carrying) member of a module can either be the top layer (superstrate) or the
back layer (substrate).
Photovoltaic (PV) Panel —
often used interchangeably with PV module
(especially in one-module systems), but more accurately used to refer to a
physically connected collection of modules (i.e., a laminate string of modules
used to achieve a required voltage
and current).
Photovoltaic (PV) System
— A complete set of components for converting sunlight into electricity by the photovoltaic
process, including the array
and balance of
system components.
Photovoltaic-Thermal (PV/T) System - A photovoltaic system
that, in addition to converting sunlight into electricity, collects the
residual heat energy and delivers both heat and electricity in usable form.
Also called a total energy system.
Physical Vapor Deposition
— A method of depositing thin
semiconductor photovoltaic films. With this method, physical
processes, such as thermal evaporation or bombardment of ions, are used to
deposit elemental semiconductor
material on a substrate.
P-I-N - A semiconductor photovoltaic
(PV) device structure that layers an intrinsic semiconductor between
a p-type semiconductor and an n-type
semiconductor; this structure is most often used with amorphous
silicon PV devices.
Plates - A metal plate, usually lead or lead compound,
immersed in the electrolyte
in a battery.
P/N - A semiconductor
photovoltaic
device structure in which the junction
is formed between a p-type layer and an n-type layer.
Pocket Plate - A plate for a battery
in which active materials are held in a perforated metal pocket.
Point-Contact Cell - A high efficiency silicon
photovoltaic concentrator
cell that employs light trapping techniques and point-diffused contacts on the
rear surface for current collection.
Polycrystalline - See Multicrystalline.
Polycrystalline Silicon - A
material used to make photovoltaic
cells, which consist of many crystals unlike single-crystal
silicon.
Power Conditioning - The process of modifying the
characteristics of electrical power (for e.g., inverting direct
current to alternating
current).
Power Conditioning Equipment - Electrical equipment, or
power electronics, used to convert power from a photovoltaic
array into a form suitable for subsequent use. A collective term for
inverter,
converter, battery charge regulator, and blocking
diode.
Power Conversion Efficiency - The ratio of output power to
input power of the inverter.
Power Density - The ratio of the power available from a
battery to its mass (W/kg) or volume (W/l).
Power Factor (PF) - The ratio of
actual power being used in a circuit, expressed in watts
or kilowatts,
to the power that is apparently being drawn from a power source, expressed in
volt-amperes or kilovolt-amperes.
Primary Battery - A battery
whose initial capacity
cannot be restored by charging.
Projected Area - The net south-facing glazing area
projected on a vertical plane.
P-Type Semiconductor - A semiconductor in which holes
carry the current; produced by doping
an intrinsic
semiconductor with an electron
acceptor
impurity (e.g., boron
in silicon).
Pulse-Width-Modulated (PWM) Wave Inverter - A type of power
inverter that produce a high quality
(nearly sinusoidal) voltage, at minimum current harmonics.
PV - See photovoltaic(s).
Pyranometer - An instrument used for measuring global solar
irradiance.
Pyrheliometer - An instrument used for measuring direct beam
solar irradiance.
Uses an aperture of 5.7° to transcribe the solar disc.
Q
Quad - One quadrillion Btu
(1,000,000,000,000,000 Btu).
Qualification Test - A procedure applied to a selected set
of photovoltaic
modules involving the application of defined electrical, mechanical,
or thermal stress in a prescribed manner and amount. Test results are subject
to a list of defined requirements.
R
Rated Battery Capacity - The term used by battery
manufacturers to indicate the maximum amount of energy that can be withdrawn
from a battery under specified discharge rate and temperature. See battery
capacity.
Rated Module Current (A) - The current output of a photovoltaic
module measured at standard test
conditions of 1,000 w/m2 and 25?C cell temperature.
Rated Power - Rated power of the inverter.
However, some units cannot produce rated power continuously. See duty rating.
Reactive Power - The sine of the phase angle between the current
and voltage
waveforms
in an alternating
current system. See power factor.
Recombination - The action of a
free electron falling back into a hole.
Recombination processes are either radiative, where the energy of recombination
results in the emission of a photon, or nonradiative, where the energy of
recombination is given to a second electron which then relaxes back to its
original energy by emitting phonons. Recombination can take place in the bulk
of the semiconductor, at the surfaces, in the junction region, at defects, or
between interfaces.
Rectifier - A device that converts alternating
current to direct
current. See inverter.
Regulator - Prevents overcharging of batteries by
controlling charge cycle-usually adjustable to conform to specific battery
needs.
Remote Systems - See stand-alone
systems.
Reserve Capacity - The amount of generating capacity a
central power system must maintain to meet peak loads.
Resistance (R) - The property of a conductor,
which opposes the flow of an electric
current resulting in the generation of heat in the conducting
material. The measure of the resistance of a given conductor is the
electromotive force needed for a unit current flow. The unit of resistance is ohms.
Resistive Voltage Drop - The voltage developed across a cell
by the current
flow through the resistance of the cell.
Reverse Current Protection - Any method of preventing
unwanted current
flow from the battery to the photovoltaic
array (usually at night). See blocking
diode.
Ribbon (Photovoltaic) Cells - A type of photovoltaic
device made in a continuous process of pulling material from a
molten bath of photovoltaic material, such as silicon,
to form a thin sheet of material.
RMS - See root mean
square.
Root Mean Square (RMS) - The square root of
the average square of the instantaneous values of an ac output. For a sine wave
the RMS value is 0.707 times the peak value. The equivalent value of alternating
current, I, that will produce the same heating in a conductor
with resistance, R, as a dc current of value I.
S
Sacrificial Anode - A piece of metal buried near a
structure that is to be protected from corrosion. The metal of the sacrificial anode
is intended to corrode and reduce the corrosion of the protected structure.
Satellite Power System (SPS) - Concept for providing large
amounts of electricity for use on the Earth from one or more satellites in
geosynchronous Earth orbit. A very large array of solar cells on each satellite
would provide electricity, which would be converted to microwave energy and
beamed to a receiving antenna on the ground. There, it would be reconverted
into electricity and distributed the same as any other centrally generated
power, through a grid.
Schottky Barrier - A cell barrier
established as the interface between a semiconductor,
such as silicon,
and a sheet of metal.
Scribing - The cutting of a grid pattern of grooves in a
semiconductor material, generally for the purpose of making interconnections.
Sealed Battery - A battery with a captive electrolyte and a
resealing vent cap, also called a valve-regulated battery. Electrolyte cannot
be added.
Seasonal Depth of Discharge - An adjustment factor used in
some system sizing procedures which "allows" the battery to be
gradually discharged over a 30-90 day period of poor solar insolation.
This factor results in a slightly smaller photovoltaic
array.
Secondary Battery - A battery
that can be recharged.
Self-Discharge - The rate at
which a battery,
without a load,
will lose its charge.
Semiconductor - Any material that
has a limited capacity for conducting an electric current. Certain
semiconductors, including silicon,
gallium
arsenide, copper indium
diselenide, and cadmium
telluride, are uniquely suited to the photovoltaic
conversion process.
Semicrystalline - See Multicrystalline.
Series Connection - A way of joining photovoltaic
cells by connecting positive leads to negative leads; such a
configuration increases the voltage.
Series Controller - A charge
controller that interrupts the charging current by open-circuiting
the photovoltaic
(PV) array. The control element is in series with the PV array and battery.
Series Regulator - Type of battery
charge regulator where the charging current
is controlled by a switch connected in series with the photovoltaic module
or array.
Series Resistance - Parasitic resistance to current
flow in a cell
due to mechanisms such as resistance from the bulk of the semiconductor
material, metallic contacts, and interconnections.
Shallow-Cycle Battery - A battery with small plates that
cannot withstand many discharges to a low state-of-charge.
Shelf Life of Batteries - The length of time, under
specified conditions, that a battery
can be stored so that it keeps its guaranteed capacity.
Short-Circuit Current (Isc) - The current
flowing freely through an external circuit that has no load
or resistance; the maximum current possible.
Shunt Controller - A charge
controller that redirects or shunts the charging current away from
the battery. The controller requires a large heat sink to dissipate the current
from the short-circuited photovoltaic
array. Most shunt controllers are for smaller systems producing 30 amperes
or less.
Shunt Regulator - Type of a battery
charge regulator where the charging current is controlled by a switch connected
in parallel with the photovoltaic
(PV) generator. Shorting the PV generator prevents overcharging of
the battery.
Siemens Process - A commercial method of making purified silicon.
Silicon (Si) - A semi-metallic chemical
element that makes an excellent semiconductor
material for photovoltaic
devices. It crystallizes in face-centered cubic lattice
like a diamond. It's commonly found in sand and quartz (as the oxide).
Sine Wave - A waveform
corresponding to a single-frequency periodic oscillation that can be
mathematically represented as a function of amplitude versus angle in which the
value of the curve at any point is equal to the sine of that angle.
Sine Wave Inverter - An inverter that produces
utility-quality, sine wave
power forms.
Single-Crystal Material - A
material that is composed of a single crystal or a few large crystals.
Single-Crystal Silicon - Material with a single crystalline
formation. Many photovoltaic
cells are made from single-crystal silicon.
Single-Stage Controller - A charge
controller that redirects all charging current as the battery nears
full state-of-charge.
Solar Cell - see photovoltaic
(PV) cell.
Solar Constant - The average amount of solar radiation that
reaches the earth's upper atmosphere on a surface perpendicular to the sun's
rays; equal to 1353 Watts per square meter or 492 Btu per square foot.
Solar Cooling - The use of solar thermal energy or solar
electricity to power a cooling appliance. Photovoltaic
systems can power evaporative coolers ("swamp" coolers),
heat-pumps, and air conditioners.
Solar Energy - Electromagnetic energy transmitted from the
sun (solar radiation). The amount that reaches the earth is equal to one
billionth of total solar energy generated, or the equivalent of about 420
trillion kilowatt-hours.
Solar-Grade Silicon - Intermediate-grade silicon
used in the manufacture of solar cells.
Less expensive than electronic-grade silicon.
Solar Insolation - See insolation.
Solar Irradiance - See irradiance.
Solar Noon - The time of the day, at a specific location,
when the sun reaches its highest, apparent point in the sky; equal to true or
due, geographic south.
Solar Panel - See photovoltaic
(PV) panel.
Solar Resource - The amount of solar insolation
a site receives, usually measured in kWh/m2/day, which is equivalent to the
number of peak sun
hours.
Solar Spectrum - The total
distribution of electromagnetic radiation emanating from the sun. The different
regions of the solar spectrum are described by their wavelength range. The
visible region extends from about 390 to 780 nanometers (a nanometer is one
billionth of one meter). About 99 percent of solar radiation is contained in a
wavelength region from 300 nm (ultraviolet) to 3,000 nm (near-infrared). The
combined radiation in the wavelength region from 280 nm to 4,000 nm is called
the broadband, or total, solar radiation.
Solar Thermal Electric Systems - Solar energy conversion
technologies that convert solar energy to electricity, by heating a working
fluid to power a turbine that drives a generator. Examples of these systems
include central receiver systems, parabolic dish, and solar trough.
Space Charge - See cell barrier.
Specific Gravity - The ratio of the weight of the solution
to the weight of an equal volume of water at a specified temperature. Used as
an indicator of battery state-of-charge.
Spinning Reserve - Electric power plant or utility capacity
on-line and running at low power in excess of actual load.
Split-Spectrum Cell - A
compound photovoltaic
device in which sunlight is first divided into spectral regions by
optical means. Each region is then directed to a different photovoltaic
cell optimized for converting that portion of the spectrum into
electricity. Such a device achieves significantly greater overall conversion of
incident sunlight into electricity. See mulitjunction
device.
Sputtering - A process used to apply photovoltaic semiconductor
material to a substrate
by a physical
vapor deposition process where high-energy ions
are used to bombard elemental sources of semiconductor material, which eject
vapors of atoms that are then deposited in thin layers on a substrate.
Square Wave - A waveform
that has only two states, (i.e., positive or negative). A square wave contains
a large number of harmonics.
Square Wave Inverter - A type of inverter that produces square wave
output. It consists of a direct
current source, four switches, and the load.
The switches are power semiconductors
that can carry a large current
and withstand a high voltage
rating. The switches are turned on and off at a correct sequence, at a certain
frequency.
Staebler-Wronski Effect - The tendency of the sunlight to
electricity conversion efficiency of amorphous
silicon photovoltaic
devices to degrade (drop) upon initial exposure to light.
Stand-Alone System - An
autonomous or hybrid
photovoltaic system not connected to a grid.
May or may not have storage, but most stand-alone systems require batteries
or some other form of storage.
Stand-Off Mounting - Technique for mounting a photovoltaic
array on a sloped roof, which involves mounting the modules
a short distance above the pitched roof and tilting them to the optimum angle.
Standard Reporting Conditions (SRC) - A fixed set of
conditions (including meteorological) to which the electrical performance data
of a photovoltaic
module are translated from the set of actual test conditions.
Standard Test Conditions (STC) - Conditions
under which a module
is typically tested in a laboratory.
Standby Current - This is the amount of current (power)
used by the inverter
when no load
is active (lost power). The efficiency of the inverter is lowest when the load
demand is low.
Starved Electrolyte Cell - A battery
containing little or no free fluid electrolyte.
State-of-Charge (SOC) - The
available capacity remaining in the battery,
expressed as a percentage of the rated capacity.
Storage Battery - A device capable of transforming energy
from electric to chemical form and vice versa. The reactions are almost
completely reversible. During discharge, chemical energy is converted to
electric energy and is consumed in an external circuit or apparatus.
Stratification - A condition that occurs when the acid
concentration varies from top to bottom in the battery electrolyte.
Periodic, controlled charging at voltages
that produce gassing
will mix the electrolyte. See equalization.
String - A number of photovoltaic modules
or panels
interconnected electrically in series to produce the operating voltage
required by the load.
Substrate - The physical material
upon which a photovoltaic
cell is applied.
Subsystem - Any one of several components in a photovoltaic
system (i.e., array,
controller, batteries,
inverter,
load).
Sulfation - A condition that afflicts unused and discharged
batteries;
large crystals of lead sulfate grow on the plate, instead of the usual tiny
crystals, making the battery extremely difficult to recharge.
Superconducting Magnetic Energy Storage (SMES) - SMES
technology uses the superconducting characteristics of low-temperature
materials to produce intense magnetic fields to store energy. It has been
proposed as a storage option to support large-scale use of photovoltaics
as a means to smooth out fluctuations in power generation.
Superconductivity - The abrupt and large increase in
electrical conductivity exhibited by some metals as the temperature approaches
absolute zero.
Superstrate - The covering on the sunny side of a photovoltaic
(PV) module, providing protection for the PV materials from impact
and environmental degradation while allowing maximum transmission of the
appropriate wavelengths of the solar spectrum.
Surge Capacity - The maximum power, usually 3-5 times the
rated power, that can be provided over a short time.
System Availability - The percentage of time (usually
expressed in hours per year) when a photovoltaic
system will be able to fully meet the load
demand.
System Operating Voltage - The photovoltaic
array output voltage
under load.
The system operating voltage is dependent on the load or batteries connected to
the output terminals.
System Storage - See battery
capacity.
T
Tare Loss - Loss caused by a charge
controller. One minus tare loss, expressed as a percentage, is equal
to the controller efficiency.
Temperature Compensation - A circuit that adjusts the charge
controller activation points depending on battery temperature. This
feature is recommended if the battery temperature is expected to vary more than
±5°C from ambient
temperature.
Temperature Factors - It is common for three elements in photovoltaic
system sizing to have distinct temperature corrections: a factor
used to decrease battery
capacity at cold temperatures; a factor used to decrease PV module
voltage
at high temperatures; and a factor used to decrease the current
carrying capability of wire at high temperatures.
Thermophotovoltaic Cell (TPV) - A device where sunlight
concentrated onto a absorber
heats it to a high temperature, and the thermal radiation emitted by the
absorber is used as the energy source for a photovoltaic
cell that is designed to maximize conversion
efficiency at the wavelength of the thermal radiation.
Thick-Crystalline Materials - Semiconductor material,
typically measuring from 200-400 microns thick, that is cut from ingots or
ribbons.
Thin Film - A layer of semiconductor
material, such as copper indium
diselenide or gallium
arsenide, a few microns or less in thickness, used to make photovoltaic
cells.
Thin Film Photovoltaic Module - A photovoltaic
module constructed with sequential layers of thin film
semiconductor materials. See amorphous
silicon.
Tilt Angle - The angle at which a photovoltaic
array is set to face the sun relative to a horizontal position. The
tilt angle can be set or adjusted to maximize seasonal or annual energy
collection.
Tin Oxide - A wide band-gap semiconductor
similar to indium oxide;
used in heterojunction
solar cells or to make a transparent conductive film, called NESA glass when
deposited on glass.
Total AC Load Demand - The sum of the alternating
current loads. This value is important when selecting an inverter.
Total Harmonic Distortion - The measure of closeness in
shape between a waveform and it's fundamental component.
Total Internal Reflection - The trapping of light by
refraction and reflection at critical angles inside a semiconductor device so
that it cannot escape the device and must be eventually absorbed by the
semiconductor.
Tracking Array - A photovoltaic
(PV) array that follows the path of the sun to maximize the solar
radiation incident on the PV surface. The two most common orientations are (1)
one axis where the array tracks the sun east to west and (2) two-axis tracking
where the array points directly at the sun at all times. Tracking arrays use
both the direct and diffuse sunlight. Two-axis tracking arrays capture the
maximum possible daily energy.
Transformer - An electromagnetic device that changes the voltage
of alternating
current electricity.
Tray Cable (TC) - may be used for interconnecting balance-of-systems.
Trickle Charge - A charge at a low rate, balancing through self-discharge
losses, to maintain a cell
or battery
in a fully charged condition.
Two-Axis Tracking - A photovoltaic
array tracking system capable of rotating independently about two
axes (e.g., vertical and horizontal).
Tunneling - Quantum mechanical concept whereby an electron
is found on the opposite side of an insulating barrier without having passed
through or around the barrier.
U
Ultraviolet - Electromagnetic radiation in the wavelength
range of 4 to 400 nanometers.
Underground Feeder (UF) - May be used for photovoltaic
array wiring if sunlight resistant coating is specified; can be used
for interconnecting balance-of-system
components but not recommended for use within battery enclosures.
Underground Service Entrance (USE) - May be used within
battery enclosures and for interconnecting balance-of-systems.
Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) - The designation of a
power supply providing continuous uninterruptible service. The UPS will contain
batteries.
Utility-Interactive Inverter - An inverter
that can function only when tied to the utility grid,
and uses the prevailing line-voltage frequency on the utility line as a control
parameter to ensure that the photovoltaic system's output is fully synchronized
with the utility power.
V
Vacuum Evaporation - The deposition of thin films of semiconductor material by the
evaporation of elemental sources in a vacuum.
Vacuum Zero - The energy of an electron
at rest in empty space; used as a reference level in energy band diagrams.
Valence Band - The highest
energy band in a semiconductor
that can be filled with electrons.
Valence Level Energy/Valence State - Energy content of an electron
in orbit about an atomic nucleus. Also called bound state.
Varistor - A voltage-dependent variable resistor. Normally
used to protect sensitive equipment from power spikes or lightning strikes by
shunting the energy to ground.
Vented Cell - A battery
designed with a vent mechanism to expel gases generated during charging.
Vertical Multijunction (VMJ) Cell - A compound cell made of
different semiconductor
materials in layers, one above the other. Sunlight entering the top passes
through successive cell barriers, each of which converts a separate portion of
the spectrum into electricity, thus achieving greater total conversion
efficiency of the incident light. Also called a multiple junction cell. See multijunction
device and split-spectrum
cell.
Volt (V) - A unit of electrical force
equal to that amount of electromotive force that will cause a steady current
of one ampere
to flow through a resistance of one ohm.
Voltage - The amount of electromotive
force, measured in volts,
that exists between two points.
Voltage at Maximum Power (Vmp) - The voltage
at which maximum power is available from a photovoltaic
module.
Voltage Protection - Many inverters
have sensing circuits that will disconnect the unit from the battery if input voltage
limits are exceeded.
Voltage Regulation - This indicates the variability in the
output voltage.
Some loads
will not tolerate voltage variations greater than a few percent.
W
Wafer - A thin sheet of semiconductor
(photovoltaic material) made by cutting it from a single crystal or ingot.
Watt - The rate of energy transfer
equivalent to one ampere
under an electrical pressure of one volt.
One watt equals 1/746 horsepower, or one joule
per second. It is the product of voltage
and current
(amperage).
Waveform - The shape of the phase
power at a certain frequency and amplitude.
Wet Shelf Life - The period of time that a charged battery,
when filled with electrolyte,
can remain unused before dropping below a specified level of performance.
Window - A wide band gap
material chosen for its transparency to light. Generally used as the top layer
of a photovoltaic
device, the window allows almost all of the light to reach the semiconductor
layers beneath.
Wire Types - See Article 300 of National
Electric Code for more information.
Work Function - The energy difference between the Fermi level
and vacuum zero.
The minimum amount of energy it takes to remove an electron
from a substance into the vacuum.
Z
Zenith Angle - the angle between
the direction of interest (of the sun, for example) and the zenith (directly
overhead). .
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