IBM Recycles Waste CPU Wafers Into Solar Panels 122
Luyseyal writes "IBM has developed a process for scrubbing waste silicon wafers clean, allowing the otherwise highly secret waste to be sold. The silicon quality usually necessary for solar production is very high and the cost of solar panels reflects it. Recycling this waste should help bring down the cost in the long run and add a new profit vector for chip manufacturers. The article notes that IBM has such a high profile in the chip business that this recycling tech should spread rapidly."
Re:Not real news (Score:4, Interesting)
Seriously, a 1x2, slotted to hold wafers, A-framed, and backstopped by a heavy tarp fed to a 55 gal drum is the most awesome way to dispose of scrap wafers ever. We generate about 100 a year at my site and they pile up in 5 gallon buckets waiting to be sent to scrap, I just like helping along the process...
-nB
Re:Not real news (Score:5, Informative)
Right. I heard the same thing from an Applied Materials VP.
Besides, the serious players in the solar business are now making solar cells five square meters at a time, using gear based on LCD panel fab technology. Solar panel production has gone way beyond using recycled IC wafers.
There's been commercial wafer recycling [processpecialties.com] for years.
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I am not a professional writer or editor, though I think that's a rea
As the 8th Most Common Element (by Mass)... (Score:1, Insightful)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silicon [wikipedia.org]
Re:As the 8th Most Common Element (by Mass)... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:As the 8th Most Common Element (by Mass)... (Score:5, Insightful)
Is it any surprise that silicon, being so expensive to purify, would ultimately start to see at least some measure of waste recovery?
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One of the cool ways of recycling steel is in an electric arc furnace. You jump an arc from a carbon electrode to the pile of scrap steel, and of course it becomes a puddle. But there's more! Shine the light through a prism
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apparently u couldn't even bother to RTFS
Re:As the 8th Most Common Element (by Mass)... (Score:5, Insightful)
With Silicon you have the added problem that you want really big crystals since you do not want a grain boundary halfway across your electronic component. The wafers are cut from a single large crystal and it takes a lot of effort to grow this crystal. Silicon is very hard so cutting it into wafers is not that easy either.
Forgive me, this is a bit offtopic (Score:2, Interesting)
And for this he/she was modded Troll. That the AC missed the point that recycling the CPU wafers is about not wasting the effort and energy that went into creating them and is not about the abundance of unrefined silicon is most likely a simple careless mistake and there is no evidence to the contrary. Assuming that it's a deliberate troll attempt and wasting mod points that could have be
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There are more trolls moderating... than there are posting. Just
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The thing about that, is that there is no homogenized baseline unless people choose to comply with it, so the antidote to that is clear.
I also think a big part of that problem is that people no longer seem to understand that when you read a book, an article, or a Slashdot post, you are reading the perspective of i
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How would you know, if you don't have an account?
Or maybe you're just being grumpy because people think you're an asshole and mod you down, thus posting as AC gives you a higher starting score?
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I'll wait for AMD to do this (Score:5, Funny)
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Consider the power consumption in another way (Score:2, Interesting)
Silicon wafers are not the answer for longterm PV (Score:5, Informative)
How Much? (Score:2)
Re:How Much? (Score:5, Informative)
That's a lot of heating that needs to be done very cleanly so uses electrical power which is far more wasteful than trying to get the same heat from a primary source (gas/oil etc).
No wonder PV has such long energy payback times and costs so much.
To get energy input (and thus $/watt too) to practical levels requires a change from wafer-based technology.
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And how much is saved by using these IBM "scrubbed chips" instead of starting from scratch, for what %efficiency?
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Waste wafers get you past the boule stage. You'd need to redope them though.
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The breakeven thing is a bit of a distraction since it is no longer 1960 - the time to break even would vary depending on the process and lattitude where you use the things. I don't have any numbers on this, it needs a bit more than what is in the textbooks but in short the wide use of semiconductors resulted in it being worth making even small improvements to save a lot of energy and money.
Prior Art (Score:4, Informative)
--
Rent solar and save: http://mdsolar.blogspot.com/2007/01/slashdot-users-selling-solar.html [blogspot.com]
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Re:How Much? (Score:5, Funny)
God damn it! No wonder my attempts have never worked. You have no idea how many different types of cheese I have tried...
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No, it just requires a more efficient way to heat things to tremendous temperatures. Solar concentrators may come in handy for this purpose in the future, but at the very least they could build a solar panel farm next to the solar panel factory and use the energy directly in their current processes, which would be much more efficient.
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Truly. Energy efficiency in solar cell production is a good thing. There are some companies which are attempting to be more efficient.
Evergreen Solar [evergreensolar.com]Their production method is not wafer based. Much more efficient in both energy and material, in spite of the fact that they grow the ribbons in mid-air ! Be sure and watch the video on their site, it's fun.
Use solar to produce PV? (Score:1)
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After cooking silicon dioxide (sand) with carbon, the silicon has to be reacted with hydrogen chloride to form dichlorosilane. The dichlorosilane is distilled to purify it. This process is not too energy intensive as the boiling point of dichlorosilane is near room temperature. Then the dichlorosilane is decomposed at high temperature onto huge mandrels, another highly energy intensive step. The polysilicon this produces is melted again and the single crystal silicon
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That's only true with the old, basic, resistive heating elements. Using (electric-powered) heat pumps can easily give you far more heat from than directly burning the equivalent amount of fuel.
Re:How Much? (Score:5, Informative)
I disagree with the parent's parent post. There is no reason that silicon cells are not viable renewable energy sources. They produce five units of energy over the long haul for every one put in (excluding sunlight, of course!) - and that one could be renewable itself.
Silicon for IC and solar is so expensive and energy intensive because it must be so pure. To produce it, SiO2 (quartz, sand, etc) first reduced with carbon (similar to how iron oxide is made into iron). This requires lots of energy. This product, however, is crude. To purify it, it must be gassified to various chlorosilane molecules and then distilled (lots of energy in both steps). The highly pure gas species are again reduced to silicon metal and then recrystallized carefully to eliminate even more impurities...again, energy intensive. In most cases, these steps are undertaken at different facilities or companies, requiring shipment at each step as well.
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Transport cost for silicon (Score:2)
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And how much is saved by using these IBM "scrubbed chips" instead of starting from scratch, for what %efficiency?
You say about 20% of the energy the PV will produce is consumed in construction and installation - 10% in manufacturing the silicon. A square meter of PV will last maybe 30 years, getting may
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Putting things into space is enormously energy intensive. You would never come out ahead unless you built a space elevator first. Unfortunately, no material known to man is strong enough to build one, not even in theory (c
Re:How Much? (Score:5, Interesting)
I left out the only 20% efficiency solar -> DC conversion factor, so the cells I described produce only about 50Gj in their lifetime, or 37% total energy inefficiency from manufacturing. Seems like a lot.
I'm not sure we'd have to put the silicon into space. I saw reports of a NASA demo a few years ago of a lunar robot making solar cells from lunar dust. There's about 20 trillion square meters of Moon facing the Sun at any time, getting about 1.3KW:m^2, or 26 petawatts. Even at 1% conversion/transmission/conversion efficiency, that's 260TW, or 17x total human energy consumption. Which means well under 6%, perhaps even 0.6%, of the Moon's surface would replace all Earth power generation. Of course, orbiting solar platforms could offer even larger energy return. And consider the amount of energy wasted on war and fuel distribution that could be saved. If the space "factories" are productive enough, the energy budget balances well in favor of doing it.
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When the platform has a "structural failure" or other defect, we repair it, or perhaps we use it for something else, or maybe even scuttle it into the atmosphere to burn up. Like we do with any orbital object.
In your "physics", satellites and lunar telecoms are impossible. I'm glad I failed your physics, because it's nonsense.
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One interesting thing about a space elevator is that you Don't have to go all the way from geo to ground. You could build a chain of them in different orbits. This should enable us to use non-theoretical mate
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What year was this written? What estimate did they have for the lifetime of the cell? Is it possible that it was written longer ago than their estimate for the lifetime of a cell and that improvements in the dec
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Another sign of the post literate society that unfortunately I'm part of too :( Is anybody out there literate enough to have some reference to cite and not just rumours?
Re:How Much? (Score:5, Informative)
As for recyling - it would be a matter of grinding the top off by whatever method is easiest (eg. Silicon carbide grinding and finer particles of the same to polish) to give you a single silicon crystal to turn into whatever you want it to be. In a lab progressively finer grades of normal sandpaper and a retail brass cleaner gets enough of a polish to see a mirror finish under a microscope at 400x.
To add an answer to somebody else's question here there are other methods like "sol-gel", the name actually somes from solution and not solar. This method for multi-crystalline coatings including some solar cell materials is effectively mixing up some goo in a bucket, painting it on and then heating it up in an oven. The solar materials made this way are not as effective but really cheap due to not needing very high temperatures to fabricate - you don't have to melt silicon.
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An 8" wafer (like the one in the IBM story's pic) at 0.5mm thick is about 16246.5736 cubic millimeters, 16.2465736 cubic centimeters, (at 2.57g:cm^3), about 41.75g, or 18.624Gj [google.com] to produce. That's about 145 gallons of gasoline [google.com] to make a wafer that can produce something like 50Gj (using those numbers *
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Then the other machines are required to grind and slice the ingot into wavers. These will use a standard industrial supply since they are just doing mechanical motion and maybe some water/gas cooling.
But that wouldn't tak
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Re:Silicon wafers are not the answer for longterm (Score:2)
Re:Silicon wafers are not the answer for longterm (Score:2)
Great point...except this article is talking about using wafers that were already made for CPUs. So all this energy it takes to make the wafer has already been expended, it is done, over with, can't be returned, end of story...except now they can get some of it back if they use the wafer for so
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-l
Huh? Wotthehell are you talking about? (Score:2)
While most PV is currently constructed from wafer silicon, this is not a viable long-term strategy because it takes so much energy to make a wafer. To make real progress, PV needs to move to alternative technologies.
Care to explain this statement to mere humans? It sounds like you are saying that there's no such thing as entropy, or that the sun is going to suddenly go out tomorrow.
There are enough existing solar panels to produce more solar panels with existing technologies forever, or at least until the sun burns out. There is no need to use any energy input other than the sun, and if there were, manufacturers could just use their first production runs to power subsequent runs. It's called up-front investment and
Dear IBM, (Score:5, Funny)
signed,
Nigeria
Laundry (Score:1)
Looks like Intel and AMD just found themselves a new dry cleaner
ha ha bad pun (Score:3, Funny)
This is great (Score:4, Interesting)
What do they do with SOI wafers? (Score:2)
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Sure, why not? The buried oxide layer in an SOI wafer is much thinner than the oxides in the metal stack. If they are using an aggressive CMP to polish the whole metal stack away (which is what I am assuming they are doing, probably without the C, though - I bet it's purely a mechanical polish), removing the relatively thin buried oxide shouldn't add a whole lot to the process.
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Oh man! (Score:5, Funny)
"No way man, that's got to be silicon. There's no way it's natural."
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Ah, Hell (Score:1)
hmmm (Score:4, Informative)
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The best part of that job was signing up for being a chaperone for "Take your Daughter to Work Day" (it was still daughters only then) and herding the kids around to the different areas. We watched the ingots growing and being cut into wafers, polished, kerfed, and then
Question about solar power (Score:5, Interesting)
What sort of efficiency can we get out of focusing sunlight on water (using cheap Fresnel lenses), making steam, and using it to turn a turbine? Is this cheaper per watt of generating capacity to build?
Seems like if you did this on seawater (on a big barge or similar), you could extract the water once the steam recondensed and getting desalination for free. If desalination becomes necessary to supply freshwater this might be worth it.
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Of course, solar panels still have advantages in microgeneration and for portable devices etc.
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Look at the Stirling engine projects.
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Yes, for example, see this press release about one particular company which builds "solar thermal" power plants:
http://www.ausra.com/news/releases/070927.html [ausra.com]
Solar thermal systems have certain advantages over solar photovoltaic systems:
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You're now subject to the challenging laws of thermodynamics. Engine efficiency is directly related to temperature difference, and the temperature of the water is based on the square of the area you're using to gather sunlight. In other words, while solar-thermal is practical in very large installations, yo
No it's not. (Score:2)
No it's not.
The collector temperature is related to the sterradial average of the temperatures it "sees" in all directions around it.
If it's in space and "sees" sunlight for the sun's normal subtended angle and 4-degrees absolute empty space around it (mod a sprinkling of distant stars) its equilibrium temperature is about that of a high-orbit satellite at the earth's orbital distance from the sun - i.e. a bit bel
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You're talking power plants, now. Photovoltaics are good for rooftops, and when somebody has an acre of land they're not using somewhere. These are usually a lot closer to where the electricity is going to be used, so you save in transmission losses.
If you're just using the sunlight for heat, most of the newer projects use something other than water to collect hea
nano solar is the way to go (Score:1, Insightful)
Now, it's time to show people a nice map... (Score:1)
(it NEVER hurts)
(now, people complaining about storing energy for night-time, can start ranting NOW!)
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The storage problem only becomes critical when your nighttime energy demand can no longer be economically met by fossil fuels. In projecting when that point happens, you have to factor in the net reduction in demand for fossil fuels by
I was just thinking about solar panels (Score:2)
The next segment was on t
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No it's not. That's the way they did it on that show, but that was done at an exceedingly small shop. I think they said that shop did something like six panels a day, which would work out to a manufacturing capacity of something like 100 kW/year. By contrast, even a relatively small PV production line is fairly automated, handles as many wafers in a day as a h
Nice PR, but how much impact ? (Score:1)
But recycling is good, I guess, given the cost of making silicon in the first place.
Secret today sure, but tomorrow? (Score:1)
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IBM is bragging about having developed a cleaner way to do a wholely unneccessary process. Is that not fact?
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They want to recycle the wafers which are imprinted with their designs that they want to keep secret. We can argue about whether or not keeping these secrets is "necessary", but that's irrelevant, because obviously IBM (and presumably other chip makers) thinks it is.
In addition, the article mentions that the "cleaned" wafers can be reused internally a number of times before being shipped out to the solar cell makers. Th
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