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    A Combined Computational and Mathematical Analysis of Interconnect Fatigue Potential in Photovoltaic Modules

    Source: Journal of Solar Energy Engineering:;2025:;volume( 147 ):;issue: 004::page 41012-1
    Author:
    Hartley, James Y.
    ,
    Khraishi, Tariq A.
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4068307
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: A finite element model of a 60-cell monocrystalline silicon glass-polymer photovoltaic module was simulated with ±1.0 kPa and ±2.4 kPa loads applied to the glass to calculate the deformation under load. Cell-to-cell displacements were used to approximate interconnect strain and stress. A mathematical fatigue cycle life relation was fitted to data for the interconnect material (copper), to generate a life prediction at each interconnect location based on the local stress means, reversal extents, and amplitudes. Interconnect stress was found to be significantly asymmetric about zero despite symmetric positive and negative module loads due to laminate thickness offsets about the neutral plane and the effects of module framing. Cycle life results indicated that interconnect fatigue failure was unlikely to occur over a 30-year lifetime of conservative wind and snow load cycles since the typical cell design feature of leaving some unconstrained length between the cell edge and first solder pad increases the effective gauge length and decreases the stress levels below the material endurance limit. Follow-up analyses found that 3.6 mm and 6.4 mm were the minimum unconstrained lengths required to survive the assumed lifetime of wind and snow cycles, respectively, confirming that typical industrial module constructions with 8–15 mm unconstrained lengths should survive conservatively. Notably, large magnitude, low-cycle snow loading was consistently the limiting factor requiring a longer unconstrained interconnect length. Insights and workflows from this study inform module interconnection design limits for survival against mechanical fatigue in deployment environments.
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      A Combined Computational and Mathematical Analysis of Interconnect Fatigue Potential in Photovoltaic Modules

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    contributor authorHartley, James Y.
    contributor authorKhraishi, Tariq A.
    date accessioned2025-08-20T09:26:44Z
    date available2025-08-20T09:26:44Z
    date copyright4/11/2025 12:00:00 AM
    date issued2025
    identifier issn0199-6231
    identifier othersol-24-1301.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4308290
    description abstractA finite element model of a 60-cell monocrystalline silicon glass-polymer photovoltaic module was simulated with ±1.0 kPa and ±2.4 kPa loads applied to the glass to calculate the deformation under load. Cell-to-cell displacements were used to approximate interconnect strain and stress. A mathematical fatigue cycle life relation was fitted to data for the interconnect material (copper), to generate a life prediction at each interconnect location based on the local stress means, reversal extents, and amplitudes. Interconnect stress was found to be significantly asymmetric about zero despite symmetric positive and negative module loads due to laminate thickness offsets about the neutral plane and the effects of module framing. Cycle life results indicated that interconnect fatigue failure was unlikely to occur over a 30-year lifetime of conservative wind and snow load cycles since the typical cell design feature of leaving some unconstrained length between the cell edge and first solder pad increases the effective gauge length and decreases the stress levels below the material endurance limit. Follow-up analyses found that 3.6 mm and 6.4 mm were the minimum unconstrained lengths required to survive the assumed lifetime of wind and snow cycles, respectively, confirming that typical industrial module constructions with 8–15 mm unconstrained lengths should survive conservatively. Notably, large magnitude, low-cycle snow loading was consistently the limiting factor requiring a longer unconstrained interconnect length. Insights and workflows from this study inform module interconnection design limits for survival against mechanical fatigue in deployment environments.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleA Combined Computational and Mathematical Analysis of Interconnect Fatigue Potential in Photovoltaic Modules
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume147
    journal issue4
    journal titleJournal of Solar Energy Engineering
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4068307
    journal fristpage41012-1
    journal lastpage41012-11
    page11
    treeJournal of Solar Energy Engineering:;2025:;volume( 147 ):;issue: 004
    contenttypeFulltext
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