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A metallurgical route to solar-grade siliconThe aim of the process is to produce silicon for crystallization into ingots that can be sliced to wafers for processing into photovoltaic cells. If the potential purity can be realized, the silicon will also be applicable for ribbon pulling techniques where the purification during crystallization is negligible. The process consists of several steps: selection and purification of raw materials, carbothermic reduction of silica, ladle treatment, casting, crushing, leaching, and melting. The leaching step is crucial for high purity, and the obtainable purity is determined by the solidification before leaching. The most difficult specifications to fulfill are the low contents of boron, phosphorus, and carbon. Boron and phosphorus can be excluded from the raw materials, but the carbothermic reduction will unavoidably saturate the silicon with carbon at high temperature. During cooling carbon will precipitate as silicon carbide crystals, which will be harmful in solar cells. The cost of this solar silicon will depend strongly on the scale of production. It is as yet premature to give exact figures, but with a scale of some thousand tons per year, the cost will only be a few times the cost of ordinary metallurgical silicon.
Document ID
19860017221
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Schei, A.
(Elkem A/S Kristiansand, Norway)
Date Acquired
August 12, 2013
Publication Date
February 1, 1986
Publication Information
Publication: JPL Proceedings of the Flat-Plate Solar Array Project Workshop on Low-Cost Polysilicon for Terrestrial Photovoltaic Solar-Cell Applications
Subject Category
Energy Production And Conversion
Accession Number
86N26693
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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