Building-integrated photovoltaics

The CIS Tower in Manchester, England was clad in PV panels at a cost of £5.5 million. It started feeding electricity to the National Grid in November 2005.

Building-integrated photovoltaics (BIPV) are photovoltaic materials that are used to replace conventional building materials in parts of the building envelope such as the roof, skylights, or facades.[1] They are increasingly being incorporated into the construction of new buildings as a principal or ancillary source of electrical power, although existing buildings may be retrofitted with similar technology. The advantage of integrated photovoltaics over more common non-integrated systems is that the initial cost can be offset by reducing the amount spent on building materials and labor that would normally be used to construct the part of the building that the BIPV modules replace. These advantages make BIPV one of the fastest growing segments of the photovoltaic industry.

The term building-applied photovoltaics (BAPV) is sometimes used to refer to photovoltaics that are a retrofit – integrated into the building after construction is complete. Most building-integrated installations are actually BAPV. Some manufacturers and builders differentiate new construction BIPV from BAPV.[2]

History

PV applications for buildings began appearing in the 1970s. Aluminum-framed photovoltaic modules were connected to, or mounted on, buildings that were usually in remote areas without access to an electric power grid. In the 1980s photovoltaic module add-ons to roofs began being demonstrated. These PV systems were usually installed on utility-grid-connected buildings in areas with centralized power stations. In the 1990s BIPV construction products specially designed to be integrated into a building envelope became commercially available.[3] A 1998 doctoral thesis by Patrina Eiffert, entitled An Economic Assessment of BIPV, hypothesized that one day there would an economic value for trading Renewable Energy Credits (RECs).[4] A 2011 economic assessment and brief overview of the history of BIPV by the U.S. National Renewable Energy Laboratory suggests that there may be significant technical challenges to overcome before the installed cost of BIPV is competitive with photovoltaic panels.[5] However, there is a growing consensus that through their widespread commercialization, BIPV systems will become the backbone of the zero energy building (ZEB) European target for 2020.[6] Despite technical promise, social barriers to widespread use have also been identified, such as the conservative culture of the building industry and integration with high-density urban design. These authors suggest enabling long-term use likely depends on effective public policy decisions as much as the technological development.[7]

Photovoltaic wall near Barcelona, Spain
Projet BIPV, Gare de Perpignan, Southern France
PV Solar parking canopy, Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain

Forms

2009 Energy Project Award Winning 525 kilowatt BIPV CoolPly system manufactured by SolarFrameWorks, Co. on the Patriot Place Complex Adjacent to the Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, MA. System is installed on single-ply roofing membrane on a flat roof using no roof penetrations.
BAPV solar facade on a municipal building located in Madrid (Spain).

Building-Integrated Photovoltaic modules are available in several forms.

Transparent and translucent photovoltaics

Transparent solar panels use a tin oxide coating on the inner surface of the glass panes to conduct current out of the cell. The cell contains titanium oxide that is coated with a photoelectric dye.[10]

Most conventional solar cells use visible and infrared light to generate electricity. In contrast, the innovative new solar cell also uses ultraviolet radiation. Used to replace conventional window glass, or placed over the glass, the installation surface area could be large, leading to potential uses that take advantage of the combined functions of power generation, lighting and temperature control.

Another name for transparent photovoltaics is “translucent photovoltaics” (they transmit half the light that falls on them). Similar to inorganic photovoltaics, organic photovoltaics are also capable of being translucent.

Government subsidies

In some countries, additional incentives, or subsidies, are offered for building-integrated photovoltaics in addition to the existing feed-in tariffs for stand-alone solar systems. Since July 2006 France offered the highest incentive for BIPV, equal to an extra premium of EUR 0.25/kWh paid in addition to the 30 Euro cents for PV systems.[11][12][13] These incentives are offered in the form of a rate paid for electricity fed to the grid.

European Union

USA

China

Further to the announcement of a subsidy program for BIPV projects in March 2009 offering RMB20 per watt for BIPV systems and RMB15/watt for rooftop systems, the Chinese government recently unveiled a photovoltaic energy subsidy program “the Golden Sun Demonstration Project”. The subsidy program aims at supporting the development of photovoltaic electricity generation ventures and the commercialization of PV technology. The Ministry of Finance, the Ministry of Science and Technology and the National Energy Bureau have jointly announced the details of the program in July 2009.[15] Qualified on-grid photovoltaic electricity generation projects including rooftop, BIPV, and ground mounted systems are entitled to receive a subsidy equal to 50% of the total investment of each project, including associated transmission infrastructure. Qualified off-grid independent projects in remote areas will be eligible for subsidies of up to 70% of the total investment.[16] In mid November, China’s finance ministry has selected 294 projects totaling 642 megawatts that come to roughly RMB 20 billion ($3 billion) in costs for its subsidy plan to dramatically boost the country’s solar energy production.[17]

Other integrated photovoltaics

Vehicle-integrated photovoltaics (ViPV) are similar for vehicles.[18] Solar cells could be embedded into panels exposed to sunlight such as the hood, roof and possibly the trunk depending on a car's design.[19][20][21][22]

See also

Further reading

References

  1. Strong, Steven (June 9, 2010). "Building Integrated Photovoltaics (BIPV)". wbdg.org. Whole Building Design Guide. Retrieved 2011-07-26.
  2. "Building Integrated Photovoltaics: An emerging market". Retrieved 6 August 2012.
  3. Eiffert, Patrina; Kiss, Gregory J. (2000). Building-Integrated Photovoltaic Designs for Commercial and Institutional Structures: A Source Book for Architect. p. 59. ISBN 978-1-4289-1804-7.
  4. Eiffert, Patrina (1998). An Economic Assessment of Building Integrated Photovoltaics. Oxford Brookes School of Architecture.
  5. James, Ted; Goodrich, A.; Woodhouse, M.; Margolis, R.; Ong, S. (November 2011). "Building-Integrated Photovoltaics (BIPV) in the Residential Sector: An Analysis of Installed Rooftop System Prices." NREL/TR-6A20-53103.
  6. "Investigation of building integrated photovoltaics potential in achieving the zero energy building target". Angeliki Kylili, Paris A. Fokaides,. Indoor and Built Environment. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  7. Temby O.; Konstantinos K.; Berton H.; Rosenbloom D.; Gibson G., Athienitis A.; Meadowcroft J.(November 2014). "Building-Integrated Photovoltaics: Distributed Energy Development for Urban Sustainability." Environment Magazine
  8. Eiffert, Patrina (2000). Building-Integrated Photovoltaic Designs for Commercial and Institutional Structures: A Source Book for Architect (PDF). pp. 60–61.
  9. Henemann, Andreas (2008-11-29). "BIPV: Built- in Solar Energy". Renewable Energy Focus (Science Direct) 9 (6): 14, 16–19. doi:10.1016/S1471-0846(08)70179-3.
  10. West, Mike (November 1992). "Transparent PV Panel" (PDF). Energy Efficiency and Environmental News (Florida Energy Extension Service, Florida Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida). Retrieved October 5, 2011.
  11. "Subsidies: France moves up, Netherlands down". Eugene Standard. 2006. Retrieved 2008-10-26. 30 €ct per kilowatt-hour (40 €ct for Corsica) for twenty years, while an extra premium of 25 €ct/kWh is received for roof-, wall- or window-integrated PV. Moreover, individual households also can receive a 50% tax credit for their PV investments.
  12. 1 2 "CLER - Comité de Liaison Energies Renouvelables". CLER. 2008-06-03. Retrieved 2008-10-26. 30 à 55* c€/kWh en France continentale
  13. PV Subsidies: France up, Netherlands down | Leonardo ENERGY
  14. "DSIRE Home". dsireusa.org. 2011. Retrieved October 5, 2011.
  15. "China launches "Golden Sun" subsidies for 500 MW of PV projects by 2012". snec.org.cn. SNEC PV. 2011. Retrieved October 5, 2011. China launched its much anticipated Golden Sun program of incentives for the deployment of 500 MW of large-scale solar PV projects throughout the country on July 21.
  16. "The Golden Sun of China". pvgroup.org. PV Group. 2011. Retrieved October 5, 2011.
  17. Wang, Ucilia (November 16, 2009). "Here Comes China’s $3B, ‘Golden Sun’ Projects". Greentech Media. Retrieved October 5, 2011.
  18. Browse Conference Publications > Ecological Vehicles and Renew ... Help Working with Abstracts Back to Results Vehicle-integrated Photovoltaic (ViPV) systems: Energy production, Diesel Equivalent, Payback Time; an assessment screening for trucks and busses
  19. From BIPV to Vehicle-Integrated Photovoltaics
  20. Opportunities for Vehicle Integrated Photovoltaics
  21. VIPV and infrared harvesting
  22. Solar vehicles

External links

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