The impact of silicon brick polishing on thin (120 μm) silicon wafer sawing yields and fracture strengths in diamond-wire sawing

2020 ◽  
Vol 105 ◽  
pp. 104751 ◽  
Author(s):  
Halubai Sekhar ◽  
Tetsuo Fukuda ◽  
Katsuto Tanahashi ◽  
Hidetaka Takato
Author(s):  
Erick Cardoso Costa ◽  
Caroline Piesanti dos Santos ◽  
Fabio Antonio Xavier ◽  
Walter Lindolfo Weingaertner

Micromachines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 429
Author(s):  
Tengyun Liu ◽  
Peiqi Ge ◽  
Wenbo Bi

Lower warp is required for the single crystal silicon wafers sawn by a fixed diamond wire saw with the thinness of a silicon wafer. The residual stress in the surface layer of the silicon wafer is the primary reason for warp, which is generated by the phase transitions, elastic-plastic deformation, and non-uniform distribution of thermal energy during wire sawing. In this paper, an experiment of multi-wire sawing single crystal silicon is carried out, and the Raman spectra technique is used to detect the phase transitions and residual stress in the surface layer of the silicon wafers. Three different wire speeds are used to study the effect of wire speed on phase transition and residual stress of the silicon wafers. The experimental results indicate that amorphous silicon is generated during resin bonded diamond wire sawing, of which the Raman peaks are at 178.9 cm−1 and 468.5 cm−1. The ratio of the amorphous silicon surface area and the surface area of a single crystal silicon, and the depth of amorphous silicon layer increases with the increasing of wire speed. This indicates that more amorphous silicon is generated. There is both compressive stress and tensile stress on the surface layer of the silicon wafer. The residual tensile stress is between 0 and 200 MPa, and the compressive stress is between 0 and 300 MPa for the experimental results of this paper. Moreover, the residual stress increases with the increase of wire speed, indicating more amorphous silicon generated as well.


Author(s):  
Hagen Klippel ◽  
Stefan Süssmaier ◽  
Matthias Röthlin ◽  
Mohamadreza Afrasiabi ◽  
Uygar Pala ◽  
...  

AbstractDiamond wire sawing has been developed to reduce the cutting loss when cutting silicon wafers from ingots. The surface of silicon solar cells must be flawless in order to achieve the highest possible efficiency. However, the surface is damaged during sawing. The extent of the damage depends primarily on the material removal mode. Under certain conditions, the generally brittle material can be machined in ductile mode, whereby considerably fewer cracks occur in the surface than with brittle material removal. In the presented paper, a numerical model is developed in order to support the optimisation of the machining process regarding the transition between ductile and brittle material removal. The simulations are performed with an GPU-accelerated in-house developed code using mesh-free methods which easily handle large deformations while classic methods like FEM would require intensive remeshing. The Johnson-Cook flow stress model is implemented and used to evaluate the applicability of a model for ductile material behaviour in the transition zone between ductile and brittle removal mode. The simulation results are compared with results obtained from single grain scratch experiments using a real, non-idealised grain geometry as present in the diamond wire sawing process.


2020 ◽  
Vol 265 ◽  
pp. 121911 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yaohao Zhang ◽  
Wang Sheng ◽  
Liuqing Huang ◽  
Chentong Zhang ◽  
Xueyuan Tang ◽  
...  

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