A numerical investigation of the axial flow and heat transfer in a barrel-type chemical vapor deposition (CVD) reactor

1988 ◽  
Author(s):  
PING-HO SHIH ◽  
KUAN CHEN
1999 ◽  
Vol 121 (3) ◽  
pp. 757-761 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. K. S. Chiu ◽  
Y. Jaluria

The fluid flow and heat transfer in the chemical vapor deposition (CVD) manufacturing process are studied numerically. Several crucial aspects such as thermal buoyancy, continuous processing, and conjugate transport are considered. For each aspect, the predicted heat transfer rate and the susceptor temperature are computed and qualitatively linked with the rate and uniformity of film deposition. It is shown that buoyancy effects in helium carrier gas commonly used in diffusion-limited CVD has a negligible effect on deposition rates. Susceptor motion is shown as a feasible alternative to improving the productivity. Conjugate heat transfer effects that arise demonstrate that reactor wall thickness and material may be judiciously chosen to improve temperature uniformity and enhance heat transfer rates, thereby improving deposition rate, film uniformity, and quality.


1987 ◽  
Vol 109 (4) ◽  
pp. 928-935 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Evans ◽  
R. Greif

Steady, laminar, axisymmetric, and circumferentially uniform flow and heat transfer, including the effects of variable properties and buoyancy, have been modeled within a rotating disk chemical vapor deposition (CVD) reactor. The reactor is oriented vertically, with the hot, isothermal, spinning disk facing upward. The Navier–Stokes and energy equations have been solved for the carrier gas helium. The solutions have been obtained over a range of parameters, which is of importance in CVD applications. The primary parameters are the ratio of the disk temperature to the free stream temperature Tw/T∞, the disk Reynolds number Re = rd2ω/ν∞, a mixed convection parameter Gr/Re3/2 = g(ρ∞ − ρw)/(ρwωων∞), the dimensionless inlet velocity u∞/ων∞, and two geometric parameters ro/rd and L/rd. Results are obtained for the velocity and the temperature fields and for the heat flux at the surface of the rotating disk. Comparisons are made with the one-dimensional, variable-property (excluding buoyant effects), infinite rotating disk solutions of Pollard and Newman. Results are presented in terms of a local Nusselt number. The potential uniformity of CVD in this geometry can be inferred from the variation of the Nusselt number over the surface of the rotating disk. The effects of buoyancy and the finite size of the rotating disk within the cylindrical reactor are clearly evident in the present work.


1995 ◽  
Vol 151 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 375-383 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hitoshi Habuka ◽  
Masanori Mayusumi ◽  
Naoto Tate ◽  
Masatake Katayama

2020 ◽  
Vol 56 (12) ◽  
pp. 3229-3241
Author(s):  
Vamsi Krishna Bhasuru ◽  
Shivasheesh Varshney ◽  
Yashasvi Agarwal ◽  
P. Kalaichelvi

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