This article is about generation of electricity using solar energy. For

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This article is about generation of electricity using solar energy. For other uses of solar energy, see Solar energy .

The PS10 concentrates sunlight received from a field of heliostats onto a central tower.

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Solar power is the conversion of sunlight into electricity , either directly using photovoltaics (PV), or indirectly using concentrated solar power (CSP). Concentrated solar power systems use lenses or mirrors and tracking systems to focus a large area of sunlight into a small beam. Photovoltaics convert light into electric current using the photoelectric effect .

[1]

Commercial concentrated solar power plants were first developed in the 1980s. The 354

MW SEGS CSP installation is the largest solar power plant in the world, located in the Mojave

Desert of California. Other large CSP plants include the Solnova Solar Power Station (150 MW) and the Andasol solar power station (150 MW), both in Spain. The over 200 MW Agua Caliente Solar

Project in the United States, and the 214 MW Charanka Solar Park in India , are the world’s largest photovoltaic plants .

Contents

[ hide ]

1 Applications

2 Concentrating solar power

3 Photovoltaics o 3.1 Photovoltaic power systems

4 Development and deployment o

4.1 Photovoltaic power stations o

4.2 Concentrating solar thermal power

5 Economics o 5.1 Energy payback time and energy returned on energy invested o 5.2 Power costs o

5.3 Self Consumption o

5.4 Grid parity o

5.5 Net metering o 5.6 Financial incentives

6 Environmental impacts o

6.1 Greenhouse gases o

6.2 Cadmium

7 Energy storage methods

8 Experimental solar power

9 See also

10 References

11 Sources

12 External links

Applications

Average insolation showing land area (small black dots) required to replace the world primary energy supply with solar electricity. 18 TW is 568 Exajoule (EJ) per year. Insolation for most people is from 150 to 300 W/m 2 or 3.5 to 7.0 kWh/(m 2 day).

Solar power is the conversion of sunlight into electricity . Sunlight can be converted directly into electricity using photovoltaics (PV), or indirectly with concentrated solar power (CSP), which normally focuses the sun's energy to boil water which is then used to provide power. Other technologies also exist, such as Stirling engine dishes which use a Stirling cycle engine to power a generator.

Photovoltaics were initially used to power small and medium-sized applications, from the calculator powered by a single solar cell to off-grid homes powered by a photovoltaic array .

Concentrating solar power

Further information: Solar thermal energy and Concentrated solar power

Concentrating Solar Power (CSP) systems use lenses or mirrors and tracking systems to focus a large area of sunlight into a small beam. The concentrated heat is then used as a heat source for a conventional power plant. A wide range of concentrating technologies exists; the most developed are the parabolic trough [ discuss ] , the concentrating linear fresnel reflector, the Stirling dish and the solar power tower. Various techniques are used to track the Sun and focus light. In all of these systems a working fluid is heated by the concentrated sunlight, and is then used for power generation or energy storage.

[2] Thermal storage efficiently allows up to 24 hour electricity generation.

[3]

A diagram of a parabolic trough solar farm (top), and an end view of how a parabolic collector focuses sunlight onto its focal point.

A parabolic trough consists of a linear parabolic reflector that concentrates light onto a receiver positioned along the reflector's focal line. The receiver is a tube positioned right above the middle of the parabolic mirror and is filled with a working fluid. The reflector is made to follow the Sun during the daylight hours by tracking along a single axis. Parabolic trough systems provide the best land-use factor of any solar technology.

[4] The SEGS plants in California and Acciona's Nevada Solar

One near Boulder City, Nevada are representatives of this technology.

[5][6] Compact Linear Fresnel

Reflectors are CSP-plants which use many thin mirror strips instead of parabolic mirrors to concentrate sunlight onto two tubes with working fluid. This has the advantage that flat mirrors can be used which are much cheaper than parabolic mirrors, and that more reflectors can be placed in the same amount of space, allowing more of the available sunlight to be used. Concentrating linear fresnel reflectors can be used in either large or more compact plants.

[7][8]

The Stirling solar dish combines a parabolic concentrating dish with a Stirling engine which normally drives an electric generator. The advantages of Stirling solar over photovoltaic cells are higher efficiency of converting sunlight into electricity and longer lifetime. Parabolic dish systems give the highest efficiency among CSP technologies.

[9] The 50 kW Big Dish in Canberra , Australia is an example of this technology.

[5]

A solar power tower uses an array of tracking reflectors ( heliostats ) to concentrate light on a central receiver atop a tower. Power towers are more cost effective, offer higher efficiency and better energy storage capability among CSP technologies.

[5] The PS10 Solar Power Plant and PS20 solar power plant are examples of this technology.

Photovoltaics

Main article: Photovoltaics

The 71.8 MW Lieberose Photovoltaic Park in Germany.

A solar cell , or photovoltaic cell (PV), is a device that converts light into electric current using the photoelectric effect . The first solar cell was constructed by Charles Fritts in the 1880s.

[10] In 1931 a

German engineer, Dr Bruno Lange, developed a photo cell using silver selenide in place of copper oxide .

[11] Although the prototype selenium cells converted less than 1% of incident light into electricity, both Ernst Werner von Siemens and James Clerk Maxwell recognized the importance of this discovery.

[12] Following the work of Russell Ohl in the 1940s, researchers Gerald Pearson, Calvin

Fuller and Daryl Chapin created the silicon solar cell in 1954.

[13] These early solar cells cost

286 USD/watt and reached efficiencies of 4.5

–6%.

[14]

Photovoltaic power systems

Main article: Photovoltaic system

Simplified schematics of a grid-connected residential PV power system [15]

Solar cells produce direct current (DC) power which fluctuates with the sunlight's intensity. For practical use this usually requires conversion to certain desired voltages or alternating current (AC), through the use of inverters .

[15] Multiple solar cells are connected inside modules. Modules are wired together to form arrays, then tied to an inverter, which produces power at the desired voltage, and for

AC, the desired frequency/phase.

[15]

Many residential systems are connected to the grid wherever available, especially in developed countries with large markets.

[16] In these grid-connected PV systems , use of energy storage is optional. In certain applications such as satellites, lighthouses, or in developing countries, batteries or additional power generators are often added as back-ups. Such stand-alone power systems permit operations at night and at other times of limited sunlight.

Development and deployment

Main article: Solar power by country

Nellis Solar Power Plant , 14 MW power plant installed 2007 in Nevada, USA

The early development of solar technologies starting in the 1860s was driven by an expectation that coal would soon become scarce. However, development of solar technologies stagnated in the early

20th century in the face of the increasing availability, economy, and utility of coal and petroleum .

[17] In

1974 it was estimated that only six private homes in all of North America were entirely heated or cooled by functional solar power systems.

[18] The 1973 oil embargo and 1979 energy crisis caused a reorganization of energy policies around the world and brought renewed attention to developing solar technologies.

[19][20] Deployment strategies focused on incentive programs such as the Federal

Photovoltaic Utilization Program in the US and the Sunshine Program in Japan. Other efforts included the formation of research facilities in the US (SERI, now NREL ), Japan ( NEDO ), and Germany ( Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems ISE ).

[21]

Between 1970 and 1983 photovoltaic installations grew rapidly, but falling oil prices in the early 1980s moderated the growth of PV from 1984 to 1996. Since 1997, PV development has accelerated due to supply issues with oil and natural gas, global warming concerns , and the improving economic position of PV relative to other energy technologies.

[22] Photovoltaic production growth has averaged 40% per year since 2000 and installed capacity reached 39.8 GW at the end of 2010, [23] of them 17.4 GW in Germany . As of October 2011, the largest photovoltaic (PV) power plants in the world are the Sarnia Photovoltaic Power Plant (Canada, 97 MW), Montalto di Castro Photovoltaic Power

Station (Italy, 84.2 MW) and Finsterwalde Solar Park (Germany, 80.7 MW).

[24]

There are also many large plants under construction. The Desert Sunlight Solar Farm is a 550 MW solar power plant under construction in Riverside County, California , that will use thin-film solar photovoltaic modules made by First Solar .

[25] The Topaz Solar Farm is a 550 MW photovoltaic power plant, being built in San Luis Obispo County, California .

[26] The Blythe Solar Power Project is a

500 MW photovoltaic station under construction in Riverside County, California . The Agua Caliente

Solar Project is a 290 megawatt photovoltaic solar generating facility being built in Yuma County,

Arizona . The California Valley Solar Ranch (CVSR) is a 250 megawatt (MW) solar photovoltaic power plant , which is being built by SunPower in the Carrizo Plain , northeast of California Valley .

[27] The 230

MW Antelope Valley Solar Ranch is a First Solar photovoltaic project which is under construction in the Antelope Valley area of the Western Mojave Desert, and due to be completed in 2013.

[28]

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