Publications Details
Analyzing Hail Impact-Induced Glass Fracture in Photovoltaic Modules Using High Speed Video and Computational Simulation
Hartley, James Y.; Digregorio, Steven J.; Weil, Jacob; Zhang, Kevin; Braid, Jennifer L.; Trippel, Lou
Photovoltaic modules undergoing laboratory hail tests were observed using high speed video to analyze the key characteristics of impact-induced glass fracture, including crack onset time, initiation location relative to the impact site, and propagation trends. Fifteen commercially representative glass-glass thin-film modules were recorded at 300,000 frames per second during hail impacts which happened to cause glass fracture. Images were processed to identify the time between impact and first plausible glass crack appearance (average 126 μs, standard deviation 59 μs) along with the time to a confirmed crack (average 158 μs, standard deviation 77μs), during the ice ball impacts which had a median kinetic energy of 47 J delivered by 55 mm diameter balls. Limiting factors for identifying glass crack timings were ice ball fragmentation obscuring the impact site and indistinct initial crack appearance, which were inherent to the images and not improved with processing. Computational simulations corresponding to each impact event showed that glass stresses were still localized to the impact site during times with definitively identifiable fracture, and even impacts which did not induce failure created local stress magnitudes exceeding stress levels associated with static glass fracture. These observations confirm that impact-induced glass failure is a time-and rate-dependent phenomena. Results from this study provide baseline metrics for developing a glass fracture criterion to predict module damage during hail impact events, which in turn allows for analysis of design features that may affect damage susceptibility.