Mechanisms of Thermo-Solutal Transport and Segregation in High-Pressure Liquid-Encapsulated Czochralski Crystal Growth

1999 ◽  
Vol 121 (1) ◽  
pp. 148-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. F. Zou ◽  
G.-X. Wang ◽  
H. Zhang ◽  
V. Prasad

The mechanism of dopant transport and segregation in high-pressure liquid-encapsulated Czochralski (HPLEC) grown III-V compound crystals (e.g., GaAs, InP) has been numerically studied using an integrated model, MASTRAPP. The model approximates the melt flow in the crucible as a quasi-steady-state, laminar, and axisymmetric flow, but the gas flow is considered as turbulent. Based on the physics of the growth process, a two-time-level scheme has been implemented where the dopant transport and growth are simulated at a smaller time scale while flow and temperature solutions are obtained from quasi-static calculations. Detailed numerical analyses are performed for the conditions of pure crystal rotation, pure thermally driven natural convection, and pure crucible rotation as well as for mixed flow with all of these forces present simultaneously. The dopant transport and segregation in these cases are well correlated to the corresponding melt flow pattern. Very weak radial segregation is predicted for pure crystal rotation because the resulting melt flow leads to a fairly flat solute boundary layer. The natural convection, on the other hand, produces a nonuniform boundary layer along the melt/crystal interface. This leads to a strong radial segregation with a high concentration along the central axis of the crystal. The crucible rotation has a similar effect. The combined effect of all of these flow mechanisms produces a strong radial segregation, whose extent depends on the relative strength of the driving forces. In all of these cases, strong melt flows lead to thin boundary layers that result in decreased longitudinal segregation. The predictions agree well with the experimental observations reported in the literature.

Author(s):  
Haisheng Fang ◽  
Lili Zheng ◽  
Hui Zhang ◽  
Yong Hong ◽  
Qun Deng

Optical and laser crystals grown by Czochralski technique from a solute-rich melt usually suffer defects of melt inclusion or bubble core, which severely affects optical, thermal and mechanical properties of the material. The main purpose of this paper is to study the inclusion mechanisms and to minimize such defects. Two types of mechanisms possibly responsible for inclusion defects are presented. In the current investigation, Czochralski grown optical single crystals are examined to recognize the effects of crystal rotation and natural convection on the melt flow pattern and solidification interface shape. It is established that increasing the rotation rate of crystal or reducing natural convection in the melt will cause the solid-liquid interface change from the convex shape to concave and high concentration of the species may be pushed away from the solidification interface. Simulations were performed to establish the relationships between Gr/Re2 and growth interface shape change, and between Gr/Re2 and stagnant point location were established. A disk submerged into the melt was used to reduce natural convection by reducing the melt height. The idea was similar to the submerged baffle or submerged heater used in Bridgeman crystal growth. The effect of submerged baffle on enhancement of crystal rotation effect was demonstrated. Simulation results showed that the melt flow near the solidification interface depended strongly on the baffle location, which was not surprised. The idea of submerged heater was also examined in Czochralski growth. Different from a constant temperature close to the melting temperature used in Bridgman growth, the submerged heater temperature should be selected on a higher temperature between the melting temperature and crucible temperature. The value depended strongly on the ratio between crystal and crucible diameters. It was proved that a constant temperature was not the best choice in Czochralski growth. In fact, an optimized temperature profile could be found in numerical simulations for melt flow control and inclusion suppression.


2012 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. 585-593
Author(s):  
M. Jana ◽  
S. Das ◽  
S. L. Maji ◽  
Rabindra N. Jana ◽  
S. K. Ghosh

2016 ◽  
Vol 139 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinhu Zhao ◽  
Liancun Zheng ◽  
Xinxin Zhang ◽  
Fawang Liu ◽  
Xuehui Chen

This paper investigates natural convection heat transfer of generalized Oldroyd-B fluid in a porous medium with modified fractional Darcy's law. Nonlinear coupled boundary layer governing equations are formulated with time–space fractional derivatives in the momentum equation. Numerical solutions are obtained by the newly developed finite difference method combined with L1-algorithm. The effects of involved parameters on velocity and temperature fields are presented graphically and analyzed in detail. Results indicate that, different from the classical result that Prandtl number only affects the heat transfer, it has remarkable influence on both the velocity and temperature boundary layers, the average Nusselt number rises dramatically in low Prandtl number, but increases slowly with the augment of Prandtl number. The maximum value of velocity profile and the thickness of momentum boundary layer increases with the augment of porosity and Darcy number. Moreover, the relaxation fractional derivative parameter accelerates the convection flow and weakens the elastic effect significantly, while the retardation fractional derivative parameter slows down the motion and strengthens the elastic effect.


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