The Worlds #1 Renewable Energy Network for News & Information
Sign In or Register
Renewable Energy World Logo
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
  • Sections
    • Home
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Solar
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Wind
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Geothermal
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Bio
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Hydro
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Careers
    • Companies
      • Company Directory
      • Press Releases
      • Products
      • Events Calendar
      • White Papers
    • Webcasts
      • All Webcasts
      • Featured Webcasts
      • Upcoming Webcasts
      • Archived Webcasts
      • Events Calendar
    • White Papers
    • Magazines
      • Renewable Energy World
      • Wind Technology
      • Large Scale Solar
      • Hydro Review
      • HRW - Hydro Review Worldwide
      • Renewable Energy World (North America Edition)
      • Photovoltaics World
    • Awards
  • Account
    • Sign In
    • Register
  • Search
Don't Miss The Great Solar Debate: Where Does the Global Solar Industry Stand? ×

Testing PV Module Reliability

Richard Bozicevich, Contributor
September 11, 2012  |  4 Comments

Reliability of PV and CPV modules is a key requirement for sustainable consumption of solar energy. To ensure their reliability and safety, PV modules must be tested to and comply with a universally accepted set of standards. Additionally, several initiatives are currently underway to enhance product reliability, some of which are likely to become industry-enforced standards in the near future.

Many globally recognized testing laboratories currently employ qualification testing as a means to identify initial short-term reliability issues in the module's design and construction. The demand for this testing is driven by marketplace requirements and is mandatory in all of Europe, Japan and parts of Asia. Qualification testing attempts to identify in advance the design and construction errors that can result in reducing the module's performance or causing failure over its lifetime. Many common failure mechanisms, such as broken interconnects, moisture ingress, delaminations, microcracks, hot spots, ground faults and structural failures can be uncovered through qualification testing.

This type of testing is a 65- to 90-day process designed to accelerate and induce many of the same failure mechanisms to which the module is subjected in the field. Qualification tests are a set of well-defined accelerated stress tests developed out of a reliability programme. They incorporate strict passing and failing criteria. The stress levels and durations of these tests are limited so that they can be completed within a reasonable amount of time and at a reasonable cost. From the manufacturer's point of view, the end goal for this type of qualification testing is to evaluate a significant number of commercial modules and, after they pass the tests, produce all subsequent modules in the same way as the test modules. 

A few of the major laboratories that perform and certify to these requirements typically have recognized procedures for regularly monitoring the production output of the factories and models under certification to the standard. If done properly, these factory inspections help ensure that module designs that pass the initial test criteria will continue to be produced in a robust manner over years in the module production environment. 

The Front Edge in the Battle

As we look into the future at a world with substantially more solar power, it is important to take a long-term and sustainable approach to module and device implementation as well as the performance analysis of these devices. In the solar industry, qualification testing is often confused with reliability testing in the minds of many customers.

However, it is important for them to understand the distinction between these two tests.

For a product to pass the qualification tests means it has successfully undergone a specific set of tests under what are called Standard Test Conditions. These tests do not predict the product's lifetime performance, nor do they indicate which product will last longer or experience faster performance degradation in actual field operation. The real-life conditions in humid tropical environments are much different from arid elevated regions with large swings in temperature. This can impact both module attrition and module performance to varying degrees.

According to a principle known as the Bathtub Curve, performance failure drops from a higher rate for out-of-the-box and start-up field failures, then stabilises to a more predictable and stable operating period during the usable life of the product, then upticks again as end-of-life failures begin to occur. For PV modules, the total time axis is generally depicted as 30 years of usable product life. 

When reviewing this information, it is important to understand that what appears to be an approximately linear degradation projected at the belly of the curve is variable for different module designs. In tandem, this degradation profile has a second order of variance based on the climatic conditions in which the modules are installed. These impacts, while relatively minor in comparison to the cost capital of a small project, can accumulate to a considerable financial cost for medium and large sized installations. 

Limitations of the Current Standards

Currently, the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) design and qualification standards, coupled with robust factory inspections by PV or CPV knowledgeable engineers, represent the first positive steps toward ensuring the integrity of the product design and its initial quality. 

However, these standards have their limitations. Based on the analysis of thousands of modules from many global manufacturers, some in the industry believe that these standards represent approximately the first six to eight years of module life in the field.

To be able to test products for a longer period of field performance, many in the market have tended to make a simple logical multiplication of the IEC programs: if one round of IEC testing approximates six or eight years, then three rounds would equal 18 to 24 years. However, at this point engineers, scientists, module developers and market analysts alike met with the far greater influence of variance considerations.

Looking Into the Future: Bankable Solar

Many organizations currently address the need to improve PV and CPV module reliability standards via research and development of new testing procedures. In their turn, some laboratories offer independent tests to manufacturers. Even though these tests help evaluate they do not replace a truly independent assessment. 

While many industry protocols are currently being proposed and conducted, thus far no one organisation has developed a completely fair and balanced method to determine how effectively a module is going to work throughout its lifetime.

Improving the reliability of PV modules benefits everyone — from manufacturers looking to offer the best product possible and investors underwriting projects to governments welcoming alternative energy sources and protecting consumers. All these forces combined are pushing reliability standards further to deliver a product that will serve as designed for many years. Manufacturers, consumers and other interested parties will do well to follow the latest developments in regulatory compliance.

Reliability Standards     

The performance and reliability standards trace their early origins back to the 1970s in the NASA Jet propulsion laboratory. Later, the product certification of crystalline PV modules for open-air climates was converted to standards from the series of International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) 68 “Environmental Test Procedures.”

The Research Centre of the European Commission in Ispra, Italy laid the groundwork for defining special test procedures for PV modules. Test specifications no. 503, “Terrestrial Photovoltaic Modules with Crystalline Solar Cells - Design Qualification and Type Approval” were adopted as the standard IEC 61215 in 1993 and ratified as the European standard EN 61215 in 1995. In April 2005, a second edition of IEC 61215 was published with changes in testing conditions and pass criteria. In 1996, a comparable standard was developed for thin-film PV modules. In 2008, a second edition to this standard, IEC 61646, “Thin-Film Terrestrial Photovoltaic Modules – Design Qualification and Type Approval,” was released addressing new developments in the thin-film technologies and reducing testing efforts.

In 2001, the IEEE 1513 standard first specified criteria for the design qualification and type approval of CPV modules and assemblies. In 2007, a comprehensive CPV standard IEC 62108 was issued. Programmes which have also gained support in the marketplace include the NREL “Terrestrial Photovoltaic Module Accelerated Test-to-Failure Protocol” (TTF) and the DoE's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy's Thresher Test for Crystalline Silicon (c-Si) PV. 

4 Comments

Register To Comment
Thibaut Lemoine
Thibaut Lemoine
September 27, 2012
Interesting article.
The main issue today is these "robust factory inspections". From our experience in factory inspection, we see that
The actual production site is not always the one inspected.
Manufacturers use different processes in different workshops (manual/automated), and it is almost impossible to track how the modules have been produced.
Equipment used in production are often not up to standard or characteristic they measure.
Acceptance standards for mass production do not relate to IEC standards (i.e electroluminescence), which makes the comparison difficult between manufacturers.

This is why IEC in theory answers the first half of the bathtub curve, but in reality the youth defects (first part of this curve) are actually much more important than they should be (up to 40%). Based on the testing of almost 175,000 modules we have confirmed this trend and use of cheaper (and unqualified) materials is not going to help improving quality in the industry.
Tom Speer
Tom Speer
September 12, 2012
Grounding is often not examined as closely as the active aspects of a system. Where is more info available on the grounding techniques that were used at the time of the JPL tests, and the test results (as mentined by BillK-AZ)?
Alexandre Minuzzo
Alexandre Minuzzo
September 12, 2012
We might be the only module maker in the world to have each single panel tested and qualified by an independent testing center before shipping. We are using STS Certified (www.sts-certified.com) which is the most adapted solution we could find so far; and we are really proud of it! Factory inspections (random), sample testing can't offer what our clients want: reliability on each panel they will receive. But 100% third-party can!
I am sure this solution will spread out in the industry very fast and fulfill the needs of many EPCs and Project developers.
William Kaszeta
William Kaszeta
September 11, 2012
This article does not mention that a primary goal of the standards for flat plate PV modules is safety. The NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) addressed performance, reliability, and safety. There were problems in all three areas at the time (1970s). JPL purchased PV modules and systems for demonstration/development purposes on a $/watt basis and quickly determined that several companies rated their PV modules for more power than one would measure in the field. There were major problems with hot spots and high failure rates. JPL studied the problems, developed methods of testing to identify specific failure modes, and worked these into a set of purchase requirements that became the basis of later standards. There was substantial coordination of efforts by industry, academic, and users in the process.

There are continuing safety, performance and reliability questions to be answered. What should be the end of life criteria for installed systems when considering safety and performance? Climate has a lot to do with this, failure modes and degradation are different in hot/dry vs. hot/moist climates. Installation practices do affect operating temperatures and this can lead to differing degradation rates in the same installation. There is evidence that the accepted practices for PV module grounding may fail long before the basic PV lamination of the cells fails in moist climates.

Add Your Comments

To add your comments you must sign-in or create a free account.

  • Create a Free Account!
  • Sign-In
Renewable Energy World Magazine

With over 57,000 subscribers and a global readership in 174 countries around the world, Renewable Energy World Magazine covers industry, policy, technology, finance and markets for all renewable technologies. Content is aimed decision makers...

  • Archives
  • About
  • subscribe
  • advertise
Stay Connected
         
To register for our free e-Newsletters, create your free account here:

Editors' Picks

  • America's Real Problem with Solar Energy
  • EU Debate Over Climate Change Policy Could Dampen Renewable Energy Growth
  • Massachusetts Resets Its Solar Energy Bar, Four Years Early

Most Commented

  • 17
    The Economic Case for Divesting from Fossil Fuels
  • 12
    Breakdown: Penetration of Renewable Energy in Selected Markets
  • 11
    Fracking and Solar: Friends, Foes or the Bridge to Clean Energy Adoption?
  • 4
    China Solar Update: Trina Improves, Suntech Scores Extension, Beijing Awaits EU Tariff Decision

Total Access Partners

Growing Your Business? Learn More about Total Access
  • Able Energy Co.
  • Borrego Solar Systems, Inc.
  • Fairtrade-Messe
  • Navigant
  • Active Communications International
  • SolarEstimate.org
  • Reed Exhibitions
  • Canadian Clean Energy Conferences
News
  • Renewable Energy
  • Solar Energy
  • Wind Energy
  • Bioenergy
  • Geothermal Energy
  • Hyrdo Power
  • Blogs
  • Video
  • Finance
Resources
  • Companies
  • Products
  • Careers
  • Events
  • Webcasts
  • White Papers
  • Magazines
  • Press Releases
  • e-Newsletters
Company
  • About Us
  • Our Team
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising & Services
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Site Map
Network Partners - Magazines
  • Hydro Review Magazine
  • Hydro Review Worldwide Magazine
  • Renewable Energy World Magazine
Network Partners - Events
  • Power-Gen International
  • Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo North America
  • Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo Europe
  • Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo Asia
  • Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo Africa
  • Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo India
  • HydroVision International
  • HydroVision Brazil
  • HydroVision India
  • HydroVision Russia
© Copyright 1999-2013 RenewableEnergyWorld.com - All rights reserved.
RenewableEnergyWorld.com - World's #1 Renewable Energy Network for news & Information