Characterization of granular silicon,powders, and agglomerates from a fluidized bed reactor |
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Authors: | M. B. Zbib M. M. Dahl U. Sahaym M. G. Norton E. W. Osborne D. F. Bahr |
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Affiliation: | (1) School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering, Washington State University, PO Box 642920, Pullman, WA 99164, USA;(2) REC Silicon, Moses Lake, WA 98837, USA; |
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Abstract: | Growth of polycrystalline silicon from fluidized bed reactors (FBR) produces two general types of silicon products: granular material (diameters on the order of mm) and homogeneously nucleated material often called nanopowder (diameters in the range 10–100 nm). Nanopowder particles tend to be amorphous and have a spherical morphology with an average
particle diameter of ~80 nm. Granular material is generally spherical, highly twinned, polycrystalline with crystallite sizes
that can reach 200 nm, and includes regions of porosity. The porosity is ~1–4 volume percent, and only the smallest pores
exhibit evidence of amorphous regions along the pore surface. The amount of nanopowder that agglomerates on the granular material
has been identified using transmission electron microscopy, but agglomeration plays only a minor role in the overall growth
process. Therefore, it is proposed that the primary mechanism for granular formation in commercial FBR is chemical vapor deposition,
and the pores are associated with nanopowder agglomeration and incomplete sintering. |
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