The advantages of flexible thin-film solar modules

Posted by Sammy on June 17th, 2019

The lightweight and flexible solar panels of today have efficiencies that rival that of traditional rigid silicon panels, while their flexible format and non-penetrating peel-and-stick installation make them ideal for a wide variety of applications unsuitable for heavy silicon panels.

Flexible thin-film solar has been around for a number of years. The first generation flexible thin-film photovoltaic (PV) modules were developed around amorphous silicon (a-Si), a non-crystalline form of silicon. The early generation a-Si thin-film modules, while lightweight and flexible, providing a low power output—only about 5 to 6% power efficiency—meaning only 5 to 6% of the sun’s energy was converted into electricity. The result was very low power density, requiring a large area to produce a power output equal to that of crystalline silicon modules. Even with the low power output, a-Si modules were popular because the peel-and-stick adhesive application did not require racking assembly, ballast or roof penetrations. To solar installers, this meant an easier installation with a faster learning curve. Labor costs were also lower because project staging, loading, and installation could be completed faster with fewer workers than with conventional rack-mounted glass modules.

Flexible solar modules are ideal for membrane roofs, including TPO and EPDM low-slope roof systems. Because these thin-film modules can weigh as little as 7-oz per sq. ft, they can be installed over low-load-capacity roofs that prove challenging for conventional crystalline panels and rack systems because the roofs can’t support the added weight. Today’s flexible modules use a factory-applied butyl-based self-adhesive with a 30-year proven performance history. Installed with this simple peel-and-stick adhesive, flexible modules become an integrated part of the roof system and have the same wind uplift and seismic performance characteristics of the roof system itself. From an installer perspective, without racks to assemble, ballast to carry and place, or leak-causing roof penetrations, peel-and-stick thin-film modules are the simplest, fastest and lowest labor cost rooftop solar solution.

Some flexible modules are also designed for architectural standing seam metal roofs, where the module can be adhered directly to the metal roof surface in between the raised seams. The result is an aesthetically pleasing solar roof that doesn’t have obtrusive racks mounted to the outside of the metal seams that detract from a clean, streamlined look.

The benefits of thin-film modules extend well beyond roofing. Lightweight and flexible modules with no-penetration-installation enable solar power generation in a wide variety of non-roofing applications. A good example is landfilled. Flexible modules with a large format make PV landfill installations over geo-membranes both practical and cost-effective compared to traditional Subtitle D closures and ballasted crystalline rack systems. Large-scale geo-membrane panels can be factory-assembled with flexible solar modules laminated directly onto the geo-membrane surface. Then the combined solar membrane package can be rolled up and transported to the landfill site. This greatly speeds up installation time while reducing labor costs, especially on state and county projects that require Davis-Bacon wages to be paid on site. Often the cost savings of using the geo-membrane compared to a full Subtitle D closure alone can offset a significant percentage of the solar cost.

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Sammy

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Sammy
Joined: June 17th, 2019
Articles Posted: 4

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