This paper presents defect inspection of multicrystalline solar cells in electroluminescence (EL) images. A solar cell charged with electrical current emits infrared light, whose intensity is lower at intrinsic crystal grain boundaries and extrinsic defects of small cracks, breaks, and finger interruptions.
The EL image can distinctly highlight barely visible defects as dark objects, but it also shows random dark regions in the background, which makes automatic inspection in EL images very difficult. A self-reference scheme based on the Fourier image reconstruction technique is proposed for defect detection of solar cells with EL images.
In, a fusion model of Faster R-CNN and R-FCN is proposed to detect solar cell surface defects. In, an efficient method for defects inspection has been proposed that leverages the multi-attention network and the hybrid loss to improve the performance. In, a pipeline is developed to extract and classify the cell from the PV module.
Some obvious defects, such as large breaks, can be directly observed from the imaged surface of a solar cell, although the random crystal grain background can camouflage the defects.
Can a near-infrared camera detect defects in crystalline silicon solar panels?
Based on electroluminescence theory (EL, Electroluminescence), this article introduces a daytime EL test method using a near-infrared camera to detect potential defects in crystalline silicon solar panels. At the same time, the causes are analyzed and summarized based on the defects found during the component testing process.
Do multicrystalline solar cells have defects in electroluminescence images?
This paper presents defect inspection of multicrystalline solar cells in electroluminescence (EL) images. A solar cell charged with electrical current emits infrared light, whose intensity is lower at intrinsic crystal grain boundaries and extrinsic defects of small cracks, breaks, and finger interruptions.
Since defects in solar cells critically reduce their conversion efficiency and usable lifetime, the inspection of solar cells is very important in the manufacturing process. A solar wafer is a thin slice of a cubic silicon ingot. It is further processed and fabricated into a solar cell, which forms the basic unit of a solar power system.