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October 31, 2007

From Silicon Trash to Solar Energy

Burlington, Vermont [RenewableEnergyAccess.com]

Yesterday IBM announced a new semiconductor wafer reclamation process pioneered at its Burlington, Vermont manufacturing facility. The new process uses a specialized pattern removal technique to repurpose scrap semiconductor wafers -- thin discs of silicon material used to imprint patterns that make finished semiconductor chips for computers, mobile phones, video games, and other consumer electronics -- to a form used to manufacture silicon-based solar panels.

"One of the challenges facing the solar industry is a severe shortage of silicon, which threatens to stall its rapid growth. This is why we have turned to reclaimed silicon materials sourced primarily from the semiconductor industry to supply the raw material our company needs to manufacture solar panels."

-- Charles Bai, CFO, ReneSola

Through this new reclamation process, the company says it is now able to remove more efficiently, the intellectual property from the wafer surface, making these wafers available either for reuse in internal manufacturing calibration as "monitor wafers" or for sale to the solar cell industry, which must meet a growing demand for the same silicon material to produce photovoltaic cells for solar panels.

"One of the challenges facing the solar industry is a severe shortage of silicon, which threatens to stall its rapid growth," said Charles Bai, chief financial officer of ReneSola, one of China's fastest growing solar energy companies. "This is why we have turned to reclaimed silicon materials sourced primarily from the semiconductor industry to supply the raw material our company needs to manufacture solar panels."

Because the wafers contain intellectual property, without this new process, most cannot be sent to outside vendors to reclaim and are crushed and sent to landfills, or melted down and resold.

According to the Semiconductor Industry Association, worldwide 250,000 wafers are started per day across the industry. IBM estimates, based on its own manufacturing data, that up to 3.3% of these started wafers are scrapped. In the course of the year, this could amount to somewhere in the vicinity of three million discarded wafers.

The new wafer reclamation process produces monitor wafers from scrap product wafers—which IBM says generate an overall energy savings of up to 90% because repurposing scrap means that IBM no longer has to procure the usual volume of net new wafers to meet manufacturing needs.

When monitors wafers reach end of life they are sold to the solar industry. Depending on how a specific solar cell manufacturer chooses to process a batch of reclaimed wafers—IBM says it could save between 30 - 90% of the energy that it would have needed if it has used a new silicon material source.

The program resulted in reduced spending on monitor wafers and increased efficiency in IBM's wafer reclaim program. For the IBM Burlington site, the annual savings in 2006 were more than half-a-million dollars. The projected ongoing annual savings for 2007 is nearly $1.5 million and the one-time savings for reclaiming stockpiled wafers is estimated to be more than $1.5 million.

IBM intends to provide details of the new process to the broader semiconductor manufacturing industry. It is currently in use the Burlington, Vermont, facility and in the process of being implemented at IBM's East Fishkill, New York, semiconductor fabrication plant.

Image Gallery (1)
 
Reader Comments (12)
 
No image available
November 1, 2007
Computers and small electronics are currently in high demand, and the demand for PV power is growing at an increasing rate. This also increases the demand for Silicon. As much as I support PV power, I am worried that someday all of the coal mines will be replaced by silicon mines and then later, we will be looking for a new renewable energy because there will not be enough Silicon in the world to support the worlds every increasing demand for energy.

Is this a legitimate concern?

I honestly have no idea how abundant Silicon is or how easily it is obtained. But I feel that even with this new recycling program, we will still one day discover that Silicon is a limited resource just like coal. Any thoughts anyone?

Matt
Comment 1 of 12
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November 2, 2007
I have been in silicon materials (both crystalline and amorphous) and solar cell research for more than 36 years. I feel that there is a large volume of rejected silicon solar cells with silicon solar cell manufacturing companies which can be reprocessed and made available again for making solar cells, of course the thickneses will be low and may create problem in wafer handling but to reuse this low effeciency rejected solar cells will be profitable.
Comment 2 of 12
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November 2, 2007
I am in New Mexico. Is there any company interested in buying the raw material for silicon from my state? Or any pv companies interested in relocating or expanding to a state in the desert with extreme sunlight? Please respond to faith88012@q.com.
Comment 3 of 12
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November 2, 2007
Anyone who could refer me to right people to buy the scrapped silicon? Please contact me at may_guan@aaeResources.com. Thank you.
We are looking for lager volume recyclied silicon.
Comment 4 of 12
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November 2, 2007
There is no shortage of sand which is the starting material for making semiconductor silicon. Although silicon is still the least expensive semiconductor material, it is not cheap. The processes used in reducing and refining silicon are energy intensive and involve large capital investment. As a result conventional PV modules rely on subsidies for sales and years to payback the manufacturing energy expended.

Fortunately high intensity PV concentrator technologies are developed that are capable of making PV power fully competitive with conventional power without subsidies. Silicon vertical multi-junction (VMJ) cells with output power exceeding 200,000 watts/m2 at 1000X suns have been demonstrated (www.photovolt.us). An output power a thousand times greater completely alters the economics in solar cells for the better. There would be no silicon shortage if you can install 1000 MW of PV concentrators using the silicon now needed for 1 MW of conventional PV modules.
Comment 5 of 12
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November 2, 2007
The bottom title for the picture should say "TA-DA!" It is great to hear about more recycling and how obviously important it is to both industry and consumers. Even if silicon were extremely abundant the energy savings from recycling still trump the costs of additional procurement and processing.
Comment 6 of 12
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November 2, 2007
According to
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9067764/silicon
Silicon makes up 27.7 percent of the Earth's crust; it is the second most abundant element in the crust, being surpassed only by oxygen.
Comment 7 of 12
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November 2, 2007
silicon is about the most abundant mineral (sand etc) so no worries about it ever running out. The problem is refining it to high grade silicon metal which has to be something like 99.99999% pure for electronics industry but about a thousand times less pure for photovoltaics.
Comment 8 of 12
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November 2, 2007
Although I am no scientist either Matt I know that silicon is not the only material which can be used in the making of photovoltaic panels. Other reflective light absorbing materials such as gallium arsenide, cadmium telluride and copper indium diselenide can also be used, maybe even more effectively but they are more expensive. Making photovoltaic panels is putting the world's resources of silicon to far better use than making breast augmentation implants for vain women or putting silicon in little sachets to put inside how many millions of pairs of shoes to keep them dry??
Comment 9 of 12
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November 2, 2007
Yes Matt > you are right , but each day inventors like our little team are working hard to find better ways to make renewable energy.Without ripping our planet apart to find the basics . Recyling and reuse is the answer and far more funding in the smaller end of the R&D networks is needed .Because this is where most of the new ideas come from ,later to be developed by the bigger and more powerfull universitys' and big companies that exploit them . Ken 4paz.org
Comment 10 of 12
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November 5, 2007
See the top item here
http://lowcarbonkid.blogspot.com/2007_09_01_archive.html
and also http://www.csptoday.com/
Comment 11 of 12
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November 5, 2007
Bernard Sater, What is the status of the concentrator technology now? Is it commercially practical? Where can one learn more? fuzzrabbit@hotmail.com
Comment 12 of 12
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