1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to an oven for non-metal melting, a method for operating said oven and non-metal blocks produced by the method.
2. Background Art
A crystal growing unit is known from DE 103 49 339 A1. This has a round mould which is encompassed by a cylindrical coil mantle. This oven generates silicon worthy of improvement in a number of respects.
The problem of the invention is to create an oven for non-metal melting which can generate non-metal blocks which are as suitable as possible for further processing.
The object is solved by an oven for non-metal melting with a housing enclosing an interior, at least one mould arranged in the interior for receiving a non-metal melt, at least one electrical heating device enclosing at least partially the at least one mould for influencing the temperature of the non-metal melt, and a power supply device coupled in an electrically conductive manner to the at least one heating device for supplying the heating device with a time-variable current I(t), wherein the current I(t) has a frequency of 0.1 Hz to 1000 Hz and the current I(t) is of a magnitude suitable for setting a predetermined temperature of the non-metal melt. The object is also solved by a method for at least one of melting non-metals and solidifying non-metal melts comprising the following steps: providing an oven according to any one of the preceding claims, applying a time-variable current I(t), generating a time-variable magnetic field in the non-metal melt. The crux of the invention consists in using the lines which in any case are present in an electrical heating device to generate a time-variable magnetic field in the non-metal melt. To do this, a time-variable current must be applied to the lines. Convections arise in the non-metal melt by means of the time-variable magnetic field which even out the distribution of foreign atoms.
Additional features and details of the invention result from the description of a plurality of embodiments by reference to the drawings.
Referring to
The oven 1 has an electric heating device 12 consisting of an overhead heating device 13 disposed above the mould 9, a side heating device 14 encompassing the mould 9 on the circumferential face and a floor heating device 15 disposed below the mould 9, not all the devices 13, 14, 15 needing to be present simultaneously. The heating device 12 encompasses the mould 9 at least partially, i.e. it is arranged at least above it and/or below it and/or laterally to the mould 9. The devices 13, 14 and 15 are connected to a power supply device 16, shown only in
The side heating device 14 has two superposed line loops 25, 26 encompassing the mould 9 on the circumferential face.
The loops 25, 26 substantially follow the rectangular outer contour of the mould 9 and to this extent, apart from the feed portions 22, are substantially rectangular. The feed portions of the floor heating device 15 or over-head heating device 13 led through the graphite insulation 4 on the one hand, and of the side heating device 14 are displaced at 90° from one another with respect to a vertical axis, as shown in
The manner in which the oven is operated is described below. The mould 9 is filled with silicon. The interior of the oven 1 is evacuated. The interior can also be filled with an inert gas, for example argon. The power supply device 16 supplies the heating device 12 with electrical current I(t). The time-variable current I(t) may preferably consist of a direct current component IDC and an alternating current component IAC(t), so that the following applies: I(t)=IDC+IAC(t). The alternating current component IAC(t) may comprise a normal sinusoidal alternating current. It is also possible for there to be other time-variable currents, for example sawtooth or rectangular current. The alternating current component IAC(t) has a frequency of 0.1 Hz to 1000 Hz, in particular 1 to 500 Hz, in particular 10 to 300 Hz, in particular 75 Hz to 250 Hz. It is also possible to operate at approx. 50 Hz. The alternating current portion IAC(t) lies approximately between 100 and 5000 ampere-turns. The direct current portion IDC may lie between 0 and 5000 ampere-turns. The current portions are referred to in units of “ampere-turn”, this actually being a unit of the magnetomotive force generated by a current of 1 ampere in a single conductor loop. In the case of a plurality of conductor loops, the current is multiplied by the number of turns. Specifying the “ampere-turns” is more meaningful than specifying the currents in the individual loops because ultimately the number of conductor loops—in the case of the side heating device 14, for example—may be freely selected. The various heating devices 13, 14 and 15 can all be operated in phase or with a corresponding phase shift, in particular of 60° or 120°. Travelling fields can also be generated with the various heating devices 13, 14 and 15.
In the present embodiment, the phase shift amounts to 0° between the two loops 25, 26. The phase shift of the current through the floor heating device 15 and overhead heating device 13 on the one hand and the side heating device 14 on the other hand amounts to +60°. The actual frequency used is 50 Hz. The phase shift 4 between a comparison current IV(t) and a reference current IB(t) is defined as follows: assuming the reference current can be represented as IB(t)=IB0 sin(2 πft), then the comparison current has a phase shift φ, where it can be represented as IV(t)=IV0 sin (2 πft+2πφ/360°). Here, f represents the frequency and φ the phase shift.
It is shown below by reference to an illustration how the alternating current portion IAC(t) enhances the quality of the polycrystalline silicon (mc-Si) blocks.
By applying a time-variable current to the heating device 12, time-variable magnetic fields are generated in the silicon melt 24 which lead to increased convection of the melt 24. By this means it is possible to achieve a more homogeneous mixing of the melt 24 and therefore reduced inclusions of foreign atoms in the polycrystalline silicon. The heating device 12 may also have lines for heating purposes—hot during operation—for heating the melt, for example through direct current, and additional lines—cold during operation—for generating the travelling magnetic field. In this case, the electrical heating and generation of the magnetic fields would be decoupled from one another.
A second embodiment of the invention is described below with reference to
It is shown that the highest yield is obtained when a travelling magnetic field, in particular a current with a phase shift of +60° or +120°, is applied to the loops 25a, 26a and 27a and when the overhead heating device 13a is operated in phase with the current in the upper line loop 25a.
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The heating device geometries shown in the previously described embodiments may substantially be combined freely with one another, for example a floor or overhead heating device according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2006 020 234 | Apr 2006 | DE | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20050087125 | Muhe et al. | Apr 2005 | A1 |
20050275144 | Muhe et al. | Dec 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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32 01 181 | Jul 1983 | DE |
10339402 | Apr 2005 | DE |
103 49 339 | Jun 2005 | DE |
1072696 | Jan 2001 | EP |
156 133 | Feb 1922 | GB |
7 49185 | Feb 1995 | JP |
2002-243370 | Aug 2002 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20070251937 A1 | Nov 2007 | US |