This collection includes both ASU Theses and Dissertations, submitted by graduate students, and the Barrett, Honors College theses submitted by undergraduate students. 

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This is a two-part thesis.Part-I: This work investigated the long-term reliability of a statistically significant number of two different commercial module-level power electronics (MLPE) devices using two input power profiles at high temperatures to estimate their reliability and service life in field-use conditions. Microinverters underwent a period of 15,000 accelerated stress

This is a two-part thesis.Part-I: This work investigated the long-term reliability of a statistically significant number of two different commercial module-level power electronics (MLPE) devices using two input power profiles at high temperatures to estimate their reliability and service life in field-use conditions. Microinverters underwent a period of 15,000 accelerated stress hours, whereas the power optimizers underwent a period of 6,400 accelerated stress hours. None of the MLPE devices failed during the accelerated test; however, the optimizers degraded by about 1% in output efficiency. Based on their accelerated stress temperatures, the estimated field equivalent service life approximated using the Arrhenius model ranges between 24-48 years for microinverters and 39-73 years for optimizers, with a reliability of 74% and a lower one-sided confidence level of 95%. Furthermore, using the Weibull distribution model, the reliability and service lifetimes of MLPE devices are statistically analyzed. MLPE lifetimes estimated using Weibull slope and shape parameters with a 95% lower one-sided confidence level indicate a similar, or possibly exceeding, the 25-year lifetime of the associated photovoltaic (PV) modules. Part–II:This study investigated the impact of the hotspot stress test on glass-backsheet and glass-glass modules. Before the hotspot testing, both modules were pre-stressed using 600 thermal cycles (TC600) to represent decades of field-exposed modules experiencing hotspot effects in field-use conditions. The glass-glass module reached a hotspot temperature of nearly 200°C, whereas the glass-backsheet module's maximum hotspot temperature was almost 150°C. After the hotspot experiment, electroluminescence imaging showed that most of the cells in the glass-glass module appeared to have experienced significant damage. In contrast, the stressed cells in the glass-backsheet module appeared to have experienced insignificant damage. After the sequential stress testing (hotspot testing after TC600), the glass-glass module degraded by nearly 8.3% in maximum power, whereas the glass-backsheet module experienced 1.3% degradation. This study also incorporated hotspot endurance in fresh (without being subjected to prior TC600) glass-glass and glass-backsheet modules. The test outcome demonstrated that both module types exhibited marginal maximum power loss.
ContributorsAfridi, Muhammad Zain Ul Abideen (Author) / Tamizhmani, Govindasamy (Thesis advisor) / Kiaei, Sayfe (Thesis advisor) / Bakkaloglu, Bertan (Committee member) / Flicker, Jack (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023