January 29, 2015
Journal Article

The Influence of Constitutional Supercooling on the Distribution of Te-particles in Melt-Grown CZT

Abstract

A section of a vertical gradient freeze Cd0.9Zn0.1Te boule approximately 2100-mm3 with a planar area of 300-mm2 was prepared and examined using transmitted IR microscopy at various magnifications to determine the three-dimensional spatial and size distributions of Te-particles over large longitudinal and radial length scales. Te-particle density distributions were determined as a function of longitudinal and radial positions in these strips and exhibited a multi-modal lognormal size density distribution that indicated a slight preference for increasing size with longitudinal growth time, while showing a pronounced cellular network structure. Higher magnification images revealed a typical Rayleigh-instability pearl string morphology with large and small satellite droplets. This study includes solidification experiments in small crucibles of 30:70 mixtures of Cd:Te performed over a wide range of cooling rates that clearly demonstrated a growth instability with Te-particle capture that is suggested to be responsible for one of the peaks in the size distribution using size discrimination visualization. The results are discussed with regard to a manifold Te-particle genesis history as Te-particle direct capture from melt-solid growth instabilities due to constitutional supercooling and as Te-particle formation from the breakup of Te-ribbons via a Rayleigh-Plateau instability.

Revised: October 30, 2015 | Published: January 29, 2015

Citation

Henager C.H., K.J. Alvine, M. Bliss, B.J. Riley, and J.A. Stave. 2015. The Influence of Constitutional Supercooling on the Distribution of Te-particles in Melt-Grown CZT. Journal of Electronic Materials 44, no. 11:4604-4621. PNNL-SA-107729. doi:10.1007/s11664-015-3995-y