Casting Light on Solar Panel Backsheet Degradation

 

Different tests

The researchers have tried to understand the causes of premature cracking in polyamide-based backsheets and how polyamide materials interact with solar panel architecture. They have used chemical and mechanical tests on backsheet samples from solar panels used in the United States, China, Thailand and Italy. Most of them show clear signs of premature cracking, they said.

Their analysis has also shown that the backsheet areas most affected by cracking and degradation are inner layers. “Curiously, the most brittle areas were on the inner side of the sheets,” said Xiaohong Gu, a co-author of the paper.

EVA encapsulant

The scientists have also made another interesting discovery. They have found that backsheet degradation is accelerated by damaging chemicals from the solar cell encapsulant – the ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA) film – falling onto the backsheets.

The scientists stowed several polyamide strips away in vials of acetic acid and then, after five months, analyzed the degree to which they had decayed, compared with strips placed in either air or water. Cracks mirroring those from the weathered backsheets appeared on the surface of the plastic strips exposed to acetic acid. The cracks were much worse than those on the samples that had been exposed to air or water, the researchers said.

“The test showed the first‐time direct evidence that acetic acid can largely accelerate the chemical degradation and facilitate the cracking of the polyamide inner layer,” the researchers concluded. “This study suggests that the field cracking of polyamide‐based backsheet can be attributed to the combined effects of chemical degradation and physical reorganization (chemi‐crystallization) under cyclic thermomechanical stresses.”

The scientists also noted that panels produced in the 2010-12 period mostly used polyamide-based backsheets.

Author: Emiliano Bellini

This article was originally published in pv magazine and is republished with permission.

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