Kyropoulos method

The Kyropoulos method, or Kyropoulos technique, is a method of bulk crystal growth used to obtain single crystals. It is named for Spyro Kyropoulos, who proposed the technique in 1926 as a method to grow brittle alkali halide and alkali earth metal crystals for precision optics.[1] [2]

Crystallization
Fundamentals
Crystal · Crystal structure · Nucleation
Concepts
Crystallization · Crystal growth
Recrystallization · Seed crystal
Protocrystalline · Single crystal
Methods and technology
Boules
Bridgman–Stockbarger method
Crystal bar process
Czochralski method
Epitaxy · Flux method
Fractional crystallization
Fractional freezing
Hydrothermal synthesis
Kyropoulos method
Laser-heated pedestal growth
Micro-pulling-down
Shaping processes in crystal growth
Skull crucible
Verneuil method
Zone melting

The largest application of the Kyropoulos method is to grow large boules of single crystal sapphire used to produce substrates for the manufacture gallium nitride-based LEDs, and as a durable optical material.[3]

History

The method (often referred to as the KY method) was proposed in 1926 as continuation of the Czochralski and Verneuil methods due to their basic dimensional limitations of grown crystals.[4] Initially it was used to grow mono-crystals of alkali metal halides.[5] The process of direct crystallization of melted material differed by decreasing the boule's temperature while still in the crucible. Compared to others the technique allowed to produce very large single crystals that were free of cracks and damage due to restricted containment.[4]

Application

Currently it is used by several companies around the world to produce sapphire for the electronics and optics industries.[6]

The method

Single crystal sapphire boule grown by Kyropoulos method. Approximately 200 mm diameter and approximately 30 kg. (A second boule is visible in the background.)

High purity aluminum oxide (only a few parts per million of impurities) is melted in a crucible at over 2100 °C. Typically the crucible is made of tungsten or molybdenum. A precisely oriented seed crystal is dipped into the molten alumina. The seed crystal is slowly pulled upwards and may be rotated simultaneously. By precisely controlling the temperature gradients, rate of pulling and rate of temperature decrease, it is possible to produce a large, single-crystal, roughly cylindrical ingot from the melt. In contrast with the Czochralski method, the Kyropoulos technique crystallizes the entire feedstock volume into the boule. The size and aspect ratio of the crucible is close to that of the final crystal, and the crystal grows downward into the crucible, rather than being pulled up and out of the crucible as in the Czochralski method. The upward pulling of the seed is at a much slower rate than the downward growth of the crystal, and serves primarily to shape the meniscus of the solid-liquid interface via surface tension. The growth rate is controlled by slowly decreasing the temperature of the furnace until the entire melt has solidified. Hanging the seed from a weight sensor can provide feedback to determine the growth rate, although precise measurements are complicated by the changing and imperfect shape of the crystal diameter, the unknown convex shape of the solid-liquid interface, and these features' interaction with buoyant forces and convection within the melt.[7] The Kyropoulos method is characterized by smaller temperature gradients at the crystallization front than the Czochralski method. Like the Czochralski method, the crystal grows free of any external mechanical shaping forces, and thus has few lattice defects and low internal stress.[3] This process can be performed in an inert atmosphere, such as argon, or under high vacuum.

Advantages

The major advantages include technical simplicity of the process and possibility to grow crystals with large sizes (≥30 cm).[5][8] The method also shows low dislocation density.[9]

Crystal sizes

The sizes of sapphire crystals grown by the Kyropoulos method have increased dramatically since the 1980s. In the mid-2000s sapphire crystals up to 30 kg were developed which could yield 150 mm diameter substrates. By 2017, the largest reported sapphire grown by the Kyropoulos method was 350 kg, and could produce 300 mm diameter substrates.[10] Because of sapphire's anisotropic crystal structure, the orientation of the cylindrical axis of the boules grown by the Kyropoulos method is perpendicular to the orientation required for deposition of GaN on the LED substrates. This means that cores must be drilled through the sides of the boule before being sliced into wafers. This means the as-grown boules have a significantly larger diameter than the resulting wafers. As of 2017 the leading manufacturers of blue and white LEDs use 150 mm diameter sapphire substrates, with some manufacturers still using 100 mm, and 2 inch substrates.

Disadvantages

The most significant disadvantage of the method is an unstable speed of growth which happens due to heat exchange changes incurred by a growing boule size and which are difficult to predict. Due to this problem the crystals are typically grown at very slow speed in order to avoid unnecessary internal defects.[5][8]

gollark: Yay OLEDs!
gollark: <@392702691459072010> It might help. Running it on a different computer means more CPU can be dedicated to the server. But a random old AMD CPU will have awful single core perf.
gollark: It's entirely possible that you came up with an idea *so insane* that nobody else made a library for it!
gollark: <@111569489971159040> Maybe just have it use some sort of CLI partitioning tool as a backend?
gollark: 🌵 🌵

See also

References

  1. "Evolution and Application of the Kyropoulos Crystal Growth Method", David F. Bliss, in "50 Years of Progress in Crystal Growth: A Reprint Collection", Ed. Robert Feigelson, Elsevier, 2005 ISBN 0080489931
  2. Kyropoulos, S. (1926). "Ein Verfahren zur Herstellung großer Kristalle". Zeitschrift für Anorganische und Allgemeine Chemie (in German). 154: 308–313. doi:10.1002/zaac.19261540129.
  3. Dobrovinskaya, Elena R., Leonid A. Lytvynov, and Valerian Pishchik. Sapphire: material, manufacturing, applications. Springer Science & Business Media, 2009. ISBN 0387856943
  4. "Growth". clearlysapphire. Retrieved 2019-04-29.
  5. "МЕТОД КИРОПУЛОСА" [Kyropoulos method]. mathscinet.ru. Retrieved 2019-04-29.
  6. "Status Of the Sapphire Industry." Eric Virey. Yole-CIOE Sapphire Forum, Shenzhen, August 31st 2015. Yole Development. p. 32.
  7. Winkler, Jan; Neubert, Michael (2015). "Automation of Crystal Growth from Melt". In Rudolph, Peter (ed.). Handbook of Crystal Growth (2nd ed.). Elsevier B.V. pp. 1176–1178. doi:10.1016/B978-0-444-63303-3.00028-6. ISBN 9780444633033.
  8. Синтез регуляторов простой структуры для управления процессами кристаллизации (PDF). Kharkiv, Ukraine: Вісник національного технічного университету "ХПІ" №15 (1058). 2014. pp. 3–11.
  9. Duffar, Thierry; Sen, Gourav; Stelian, Carmen; Baruchel, José; Tran Caliste, Thu Nhi; Barthalay, Nicolas. Kyropoulos Crystal Growth Presentation (PDF) (pdf). France: Grenoble Institute of Technology. p. 4.
  10. "Monocrystal introduced world's first 350 kg KY sapphire crystal" (PDF). Monocrystal. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
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