Surface characteristics and damage distributions of diamond wire sawn wafers for silicon solar cells
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2016
Abstract
This paper describes surface characteristics, in terms of its morphology, roughness and near-surface damage of Si wafers cut by diamond wire sawing (DWS) of Si ingots under different cutting conditions. Diamond wire sawn Si wafers exhibit nearly-periodic surface features of different spatial wavelengths, which correspond to kinematics of various movements during wafering, such as ingot feed, wire reciprocation, and wire snap. The surface damage occurs in the form of frozen-in dislocations, phase changes, and microcracks. The in-depth damage was determined by conventional methods such as TEM, SEM and angle-polishing/defect-etching. However, because these methods only provide local information, we have also applied a new technique that determines average damage depth over a large area. This technique uses sequential measurement of the minority carrier lifetime after etching thin layers from the surfaces. The lateral spatial damage variations, which seem to be mainly related to wire reciprocation process, were observed by photoluminescence and minority carrier lifetime mapping. Our results show a strong correlation of damage depth on the diamond grit size and wire usage.
Identifier
85031906529 (Scopus)
Publication Title
Aims Materials Science
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.3934/matersci.2016.2.669
e-ISSN
23720468
ISSN
23720484
First Page
669
Last Page
685
Issue
2
Volume
3
Recommended Citation
Sopori, Bhushan; Devayajanam, Srinivas; and Basnyat, Prakash, "Surface characteristics and damage distributions of diamond wire sawn wafers for silicon solar cells" (2016). Faculty Publications. 10817.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/10817
