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  • ENERGY PRODUCTION AND CONVERSION  (3)
  • 2015-2019
  • 1985-1989  (3)
  • 1970-1974
  • 1945-1949
  • 1985  (3)
  • 1947
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: A technique for performing accelerated stress tests of large-area thin a-Si solar cells is presented. A computer-controlled short-interval test system employing low-cost ac-powered ELH illumination and a simulated a-Si reference cell (seven individually bandpass-filtered zero-biased crystalline PIN photodiodes) calibrated to the response of an a-Si control cell is described and illustrated with flow diagrams, drawings, and graphs. Preliminary results indicate that while most tests of a program developed for c-Si cells are applicable to a-Si cells, spurious degradation may appear in a-Si cells tested at temperatures above 130 C.
    Keywords: ENERGY PRODUCTION AND CONVERSION
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: Double-heterostructure solar cells have been fabricated from wafers prepared by using organometallic chemical vapor deposition to grow a p GaAs absorbing layer sandwiched between p(+) and n(+) AlGaAs layers. The best cell, which incorporates an abrupt AlGaAs/GaAs shallow heterojunction, exhibits a global AM1 one-sun conversion efficiency of 23 percent. The rate at which the open-circuit voltage decreases with increasing temperature is lower for the double-heterostructure cells than for GaAs shallow-homojunction cells.
    Keywords: ENERGY PRODUCTION AND CONVERSION
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: A theoretical and field experimental program has been carried out to investigate the use of tip devices on horizontal axis wind turbine rotors. The objective was to improve performance by the reduction of tip losses. While power output can always be increased by a simple radial tip extension, such a modification also results in an increased gale load both because of the extra projected area and longer moment arm. Tip devices have the potential to increase power output without such a structural penalty. A vortex lattice computer model was used to optimize three basic tip configuration types for a 25 kW stall limited commercial wind turbine. The types were a change in tip planform, and a single-element and double-element nonplanar tip extension (winglets). A complete data acquisition system was developed which recorded three wind speed components, ambient pressure, temperature, and turbine output. The system operated unattended and could perform real-time processing of the data, displaying the measured power curve as data accumulated in either a bin sort mode or polynomial curve fit. Approximately 270 hr of perormance data were collected over a three-month period. The sampling interval was 2.4 sec; thrus over 400,000 raw data points were logged. Results for each of the three new tip devices, compared with the original tip, showed a small decrease (of the order of 1 kW) in power output over the measured range of wind speeds from cut-in at about 4 m/s to over 20 m/s, well into the stall limiting region. Changes in orientation and angle-of-attack of the winglets were not made. For aircraft wing tip devices, favorable tip shapes have been reported and it is likely that the tip devices tested in this program did not improve rotor performance because they were not optimally adjusted.
    Keywords: ENERGY PRODUCTION AND CONVERSION
    Type: NASA-CR-174991 , DOE/NASA/0341-1 , NAS 1.26:174991 , AV-FR-85/802
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