(711g) Analyzing the Dynamics of the Horizontal Ribbon Growth Process for Solar Silicon | AIChE

(711g) Analyzing the Dynamics of the Horizontal Ribbon Growth Process for Solar Silicon

Authors 

Daggolu, P. - Presenter, University of Minnesota
Yeckel, A., University of Minnesota
Derby, J. J., University of Minnesota


Horizontal ribbon growth (HRG) promises the growth of crystalline silicon at rates that are orders of magnitude greater than vertical ribbon growth technologies. If successful, this process would enable the production of higher-quality, near-single-crystalline silicon wafers at fraction of the cost of current production techniques.  This fascinating process was first conceived by Shockley in late 1950's for silicon growth and was practiced by Bleil on the late 1960's for germanium growth. Large-scale development efforts were subsequently carried out by Kudo in Japan in the late 1970's and by the Energy Materials Corporation in the US in the early 1980's. However, after encouraging early results, experimental advances and process development efforts stalled, and this technique was abandoned in favor of growth methods that were easier to develop.

Unlike vertical meniscus-defined crystal growth processes, such as edge-defined film-fed growth (EFG), which are inherently stable, there are many failure modes that must be avoided in the HRG process. We argue that its successful operation will rely on a thorough understanding of system design and control–issues that are perhaps only feasibly addressed via computational modeling of the system. Towards these ends, we present a comprehensive thermal-capillary model based on finite-element methods to study the coupled phenomena of heat transfer and interfacial phenomena (solidification and capillarity) in the HRG process. Bifurcation analysis coupled with transient computations using this model reveals process limitations consistent with known failure modes and suggests operating windows that may allow for stable process operation.

See more of this Session: Nanoelectronic Materials and Devices II

See more of this Group/Topical: Materials Engineering and Sciences Division

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