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On Sat, 04 Jun 2005 18:47:44 GMT, James Meyer
wrote: On Sat, 04 Jun 2005 09:47:36 GMT, Matt Giwer wroth: Asad wrote: HI, How can I perform doping of silicon manually? You can't. I remember that back in the late 50's that Bell Labs was distributing science project kits to schools to promote education. Remember that this was back when the US was playing catch-up to the Russians. One of the lits was put together to allow school kids to make silicon solar cells right in the classroom with ordinary stuff found there. The kit included silicon wafer slices, some chemicals, a 115 volt heating element similar to the ones used in small radiant room heaters, some asbestos sheets for insulation, some fine carbide sandpaper, and a list of instructions. You built an oven from the heater and the asbestos sheets. The heater was a ceramic cylinder with nichrome wire coiled around the outside and an Edison screw base. The inside of the cylinder was open and you broke the silicon wafer into pieces small enough to fit inside. The wafer pieces were dipped into a water slurry of the chemical, I forget exactly which chemical (probably something with phosphorous in it), and placed in the heater/oven to get red hot. The original wafer pieces were probably grown with an N or P dopant and the subsequent difusion created a complemental doping. The wafers were allowed to cool and then the carbide was used to remove the surface on one side of the wafer to get back down the original silicon. I forget exactly how the wires were added to each side, probably a loose flat spiral of bare copper held in contact mechanically. When finished the kids had a working solar cell. My brother was given the kit by his science teacher to put together on his own for "extra credit". I suspect the teacher just wasn't up to the task of using the kit the way it was intended. I got the kit and played around with it. So, in short, you CAN manually dope silicon without Billions of dollars of equipment. I know because I've done it. Jim Thanks, Jim, for that post. I had started to respond similarly here, with my own twists and then read what you wrote -- with more detail than I remembered, actually. I think the kit that Bell Labs put out was back in the early-to-mid 1960's. I recently spoke with the people who currently own the rights to this kit (recently being a few years ago) and they are/were still selling it. Unfortunately, it would be very difficult for me to find the phone number, today -- it was in 2001 when I last had this information at hand. But they were on the east coast. to the OP: Modern, pure silicon wafers are rather cheap, thanks to the number of them being processed. I haven't directly purchased any, but someone at HP's Deer Creek facility told me they were only a "few dollars each" (my memory says the figure was near $4) when I pointed to the boxes and boxes of them they had laying around. This is sliced, polished, and cleaned so that no particles larger than a micron remained, if memory serves. Perhaps you could contact a fab or someone who might know someone at one who might help you get fragments of broken ones. I use such broken pieces (which I treat rather poorly) as convenient and well studied reflectors/filters, sometimes. However you proceed, if it is based on choices you are making and not on someone else's well-thought-out design, you should research it well. If you are considering doing this "manually," then you should study how these things were done when there were no fabs and they were just experiments in laboratories. And run anything you come up with by a knowledgeable chemist before you try it. You will want an informed opinion about the risks and mitigations and advise about what to consider trying. Hot materials can easily produce noxious gases. As a side bar, I've built ovens from spare parts that could easily raise a wafer to passivating temperatures, such as near 1500 C for rapid oxide growth, that sat in my garage. Just for testing some optical ideas, not for making wafers, though. Got plenty of free wafers from fabs, no problem. Used 'plenty' of dry nitrogen gas to fill the chamber (1500 C and open air with 20% oxy isn't so good an idea) and keep it at slightly higher pressure than ambient so oxygen doesn't get inside. Cripes, do things become a mess if you forget to run the nitrogen! You can construct quite a nice little "oven" of your own with a water cooled quartz jacket and some tungsten lamps from your local hardware or home construction store, a power controller, and a nickel plated chamber (much, much cheaper than gold and works "pretty good".) Just a tap water flow is usually enough. You don't want the quartz to get too hot, as it grows more opaque where it counts when it does and absorbs even more energy and melts in the resulting positive feedback. With a few kW of lamp energy and not enough cooling, bad things happen. In any case, don't plan on building much other than a solar cell to start. And keep things really simple and as safe as you can, as you learn. Jon |