LORD Corporation develops ingot bonding material for solar market

Pigment & Resin Technology

ISSN: 0369-9420

Article publication date: 16 March 2012

159

Citation

(2012), "LORD Corporation develops ingot bonding material for solar market", Pigment & Resin Technology, Vol. 41 No. 2. https://doi.org/10.1108/prt.2012.12941baa.006

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2012, Emerald Group Publishing Limited


LORD Corporation develops ingot bonding material for solar market

Article Type: New products From: Pigment & Resin Technology, Volume 41, Issue 2

LORD Corporation – a leading supplier of thermal management materials, adhesives, coatings and encapsulants to the electronics, LED and solar industries – has announced the availability of a new silicon ingot bonding material developed for the solar market.

Developed to meet the needs of ingot manufacturers requiring the use of an automatic slicing machine, LORD 781 epoxy adhesive allows manufacturers to address the continued pressure to reduce waste, improve utilization and lower operating costs. All of these are accomplished while increasing the life of the slicing wire. LORD 781 is an ingot adhesive that can join dissimilar ingot lengths together to facilitate easy slicing and minimize waste. This epoxy adhesive is a two-component, thixotropic adhesive system designed to temporarily bond silicon ingots to a holding fixture for the purpose of wafer slicing. Providing excellent adhesion to a wide variety of surfaces, LORD 781 remains in position when applied on vertical or overhead surfaces, allowing for greater process flexibility. Further, it develops high bond strength in 12-16 h at room temperature.

The process of slicing the ingot involves adhering two or more ingot blocks onto a piece of glass and then mounting the joined blocks onto the wire sawing equipment. The new combined ingot will be sawn into a slice, or wafer by a steel wire with a cutting liquid. LORD 781 is an adhesive that bonds and fills the gaps between the ingots. The adhesive alleviates the movement caused by the steel wire interacting with the ingot gap, which can lead to breaks in the wire, failure and excess waste of up to four to six silicon slices for every gap. Excess ingot waste also increases cost and repair time. For example, it can take approximately 20 min to reset the sawing wire, and then an additional nine hours to repeat the cutting operation.

To combat these challenges, LORD 781 acts as a plaster on the end-face of the ingot to fill the slopes, fasten ingot to ingot and increase wire saw stability at elevated temperatures. The adhesive maintains excellent hardness and adhesion at these high temperatures and largely reduces the risk of wire jump. The reduced waste during the slicing process and cost savings are significant benefits to the solar market with the use of LORD 781. In addition, it can reduce total thickness variation (TTV) and warping of silicon slices.

According to Larry Wang, Staff Scientist at LORD Corporation, LORD 781 builds on a long history of innovation and technical leadership in semiconductor and solar technology.

“We discovered the need for an advanced process for cutting ingots, based on a client’s work in the semiconductor market. At the time, the ingot bonding material needed to be fully cured and had to withstand the sawing process. Through extensive research and development at LORD Corporation, we were able to create a material that solved the client’s problem,” said Wang.

Today, LORD Corporation’s research helped develop a new method of cutting ingots with bonding strength, curing speed and temperature tolerance in mind, which can be applied to the solar market. The recommended curing speed created ensures bonding strength and reduces the stress on the ingot during the slicing process. In addition, LORD 781 is a high viscosity material that reduces adhesive flow to avoid ingot contamination and is low odor-emitting.

According to Jianping Zhao, Sales Manager, LORD China, LORD 781 has demonstrated scrap and cost saving results when compared to other materials. “When we tested competitive adhesive materials, the results showed higher occurrence of wire breakage, increased waste and costs. Without the use of an adhesive, these results were increasingly negative. With LORD 781, there was a low risk of wire breakage and no ingot scrap,” said Zhao.

Harnessing the sun’s energy to produce electricity is once again garnering interest from eager consumers looking for a cheaper, environmental friendly power source. During the last energy crisis of the 1970s, solar power gained attention as an alternative to more costly fossil fuels, but the high cost of producing solar energy at that time made it impractical for most consumers, especially for large installations. However, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA), due to current concerns about rising costs, energy security and supplies, coupled with new state and federal incentives, the solar energy industry has seen tremendous growth since 2005. The USA now ranks fourth in the world for cumulative installed solar capacity, after Germany, Spain, and Japan. Solar energy is the cleanest, most abundant, renewable energy source available, and making solar systems more cost-effective will expand consumer availability.

More information on LORD 781 can be found at: www.lord.com/solarenergy

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