Papers by Author: John D. Murphy

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Abstract: Transient and quasi-steady-state photoconductance methods were used to measure minority carrier lifetime in p-type Czochralski silicon processed in very clean conditions to contain oxide precipitates. Precipitation treatments were varied to produce a matrix of samples, which were then characterised by chemical etching and transmission electron microscopy to determine the density and morphology of the precipitates. The lifetime component associated with the precipitates was isolated by preventing or factoring out the effects of other known recombination mechanisms. The lifetime component due to unstrained precipitates could be extremely high (up to ~4.5ms). Recombination at unstrained precipitates was found to be weak, with a capture coefficient of ~8 x 10-8cm3s-1 at an injection level equal to half the doping level. Strained precipitates and defects associated with them (dislocations and stacking faults) act as much stronger recombination centres with a capture coefficient of ~3 x 10-6cm3s-1 at the same level of injection. The lifetime associated with strained precipitates increases with temperature with a ~0.18eV activation energy over the room temperature to 140°C range. The shape of the injection level dependence of lifetime was similar for all the specimens studied, with the magnitude of the lifetime being dependent on the precipitate density, strain state and temperature, but independent of precipitate size.
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Abstract: As the thickness of multi-crystalline silicon solar cells continues to reduce, understanding the mechanical properties of the material is of increasing importance. In this study, a variety of techniques are used to study multi-crystalline silicon. Fracture tests are performed using four- and three-point bending. The fracture stress of as-sawn material reduces with increasing beam width and is increased in beams with a polished front surface. This indicates that fracture initiates from surface flaws. Modifications to standard fracture testing, including testing under liquid, are made so that beams fracture into just two pieces. By determining the crystallography either side of the location of fracture, multi-crystalline silicon was found to fail by transgranular fracture in the samples studied. Further evidence for this is gained from indentation experiments at grain boundaries. In order to understand the relative strength of grain boundaries, new approaches need to be considered. Therefore, a novel micromechanical technique, which enables individual grain boundaries to be studied, has started to be applied to multi-crystalline silicon. A focused ion beam is used to mill micron-scale cantilevers across notched grain boundaries, which are then loaded to fracture using the tip of a nanoindenter. The technique is shown to reproduce the known fracture toughness of {110} planes in single-crystal silicon, giving a value of 0.7 ± 0.3MPam1/2. Preliminary results are presented for fracture of multi-crystalline silicon.
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Abstract: The mechanical properties of Fe-Cr alloys were investigated in as-grown and in post-ion-implanted conditions. Sets of specimens were produced using dual implantations of Fe+ ions to give 1µm deep damaged layers with average damage levels of 0.35 displacements per atom and 5.33 displacements per atom. Nanoindentation was used to measure hardness as a function of depth and showed that implanted material had a higher hardness than unimplanted material. Additionally, micron-scale cantilevers were fabricated from the ion-damaged surface of the material and were tested using a nanoindenter for AFM-imaging and loading. The mechanical properties deduced from the controlled loading of these cantilevers pertain only to radiation-damaged material, and for the high-dose material show significant changes in Young’s modulus, yield stress and work-hardening.
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Abstract: Dislocation locking by nitrogen impurities has been investigated in float-zone silicon with nitrogen concentrations of 2.2 x 1015cm-3 and 3 x 1014cm-3. The stress required to unlock dislocations pinned by nitrogen impurities was measured as a function of annealing time (0 to 2500 hours) and temperature (550 to 830°C). For all conditions investigated the locking effect was found to increase linearly with annealing time before saturating. It is assumed that the rate of increase of unlocking stress with annealing time is a measure of transport of nitrogen to the dislocation core. This rate of increase was found to depend linearly on nitrogen concentration, which is consistent with transport by a dimeric species, whose activation energy for diffusion is approximately 1.4eV. The saturation unlocking stress has been found to be dependent on the nitrogen concentration. Additionally, the temperature dependence of the stress required to move dislocations immobilised by nitrogen impurities has been studied. By assuming a value for the binding energy of the nitrogen to the dislocation, the density of the locking species at the dislocation core has been calculated.
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