Silicon

Silicon Breast
Affordable Plastic Surgery Financing with Easy Monthly Payment Plans.
www.NewImage.com

Biosil from $15.19 New
Nourish Your Body's Beauty Proteins New Manufacturer. Free Shipping.
MyVitaNet.com

Wafer World Silicon Wafers
1"-6" Silicon Wafers avaialable using our online shopping cart. View our entire inventory on line and make your selections quickly and easily.
www.waferworld.com

Mother Earth News
Discover dozens of ways to slash your heating bill this winter! $10.
www.motherearthnews.com

High-Quality Silicone Injection Molding
Find liquid injection molding services and Silicone molding products.
www.medcoproducts.com

Silicon Wafers at PCASilicon.com
PCA supplies silicon wafers for the semiconductor industry. Our products include wafers, thin films and more. We also offer polishing, reclaiming, slicing and lapping of wafers.
www.pcasilicon.com

Silica Gel in Large Quantity/Low Price
Silica Gel-large quantity orders. Lowest pricing. Molecular sieve.
www.biof.com

Silicone
Compare Prices and Stores silicone.
shopping.yahoo.com

Silicone Breast Implants
Find Silicone Breast Implant Docs. Compare Doctors. Read Bios. Free.
SelectPlasticSurgeons.com

Silicon Breast
Silicon breast. Find more information on it.
OneHealthyLifestyle.com




Warning: mkdir() [function.mkdir]: Permission denied in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 12

Warning: mkdir() [function.mkdir]: No such file or directory in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 12

Warning: fopen(/home/templatecore2cache//*cluesnet.com/df/dfa7fae405734f6111c2c27278a83dbb163b1dba.tc2cache) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 130

Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 131

Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line 132



Silicon (International Phonetic Alphabet: or , ) is the chemical element that has the symbol Si and atomic number 14. A tetravalent metalloid, silicon is less reactive than its chemical analog carbon. As the eighth most common element in the universe by mass, silicon occasionally occurs as the pure free element in nature, but is more widely distributed in dusts, planetoids and planets as various forms of silicon dioxide or silicate. On Earth, silicon is the second most abundant element (after oxygen) in the crust, making up 25.7% of the crust by mass.

Silicon has many industrial uses. Elemental silicon is the principal component of most semiconductor devices, most importantly integrated circuits or microchips. Silicon is widely used in semiconductors because it remains a semiconductor at higher temperatures than the semiconductor germanium and because its passivation is easily grown in a furnace and forms a better semiconductor/dielectric interface than almost all other material combinations.

In the form of silica and silicates, silicon forms useful glasses, cements, and ceramics. It is also a component of silicones, a class-name for various synthetic plastic substances made of silicon, oxygen, carbon and hydrogen, often confused with silicon itself.

Silicon is an essential element in biology, although only tiny traces of it appear to be required by animals. It is much more important to the metabolism of plants, particularly many grasses, and silicic acid (a type of silica) forms the basis of the striking array of protective shells of the microscopic diatoms.

Notable characteristics Having the same structure to the outer electron orbitals (half filled subshell holding up to eight electrons) as carbon, the two elements are very similar chemically and both are semiconductors readily either donating or sharing their four outer electrons allowing many different forms of chemical bonding. Pure silicon has a negative temperature coefficient of electrical resistance, since the number of free charge carriers increases with temperature. The electrical resistance of single crystal silicon significantly changes under the application of mechanical stress due to the piezoresistive effect.

In its elemental crystalline form, silicon has a gray color and a metallic luster which increases with the size of the crystal. It is similar to glass in that it is rather strong, very brittle, and prone to chipping. Even though it is a relatively inert element, silicon still reacts with halogens and dilute alkalis, but most acids (except for some hyper-reactive combinations of nitric acid and hydrofluoric acid) do not affect it. Having four bonding electrons however gives it, like carbon, many opportunities to combine with other elements or compounds under the right circumstances.

Applications As the second most common element on earth, silicon is a very useful element that is vital to many human industries, and impacts much of modern life as a principal component in glass, concrete and cements of many kinds. Outside of the many modern world features its construction uses enable, perhaps silicon's most lifestyle affecting application is its use as the fundamental substrate in manufacturing electronics integrated circuits such as computer chips, and discrete active devices such as power transistors. Further, the element and its compounds find widespread use in explosives and pyrotechnics , E.-C. Koch, D. Clement, Special Materials in Pyrotechnics: VI. Silicon - An Old Fuel with New Perspectives and further uses in mechanical seals, high temperature silicon based greases, caulking compounds and so forth.

Alloys

Compounds

See also :Category:Silicon compounds

History Silicon was first identified by Antoine Lavoisier in 1787 (as a component of the Latin , or silicis (meaning what were more generally termed "the flints" or "Hard Rocks" during the Early Modern era where nowadays as we would say "silica" or "silicates"), and was later mistaken by Humphry Davy in 1800 for a compound. In 1811 Gay-Lussac and Louis Jacques Thénard probably prepared impure amorphous silicon through the heating of potassium with silicon tetrafluoride. It was first discovered as an element by Jöns Jakob Berzelius in 1823. In 1824, Berzelius prepared amorphous silicon using approximately the same method as Lussac. Berzelius also purified the product by repeatedly washing it.

Because silicon is an important element in semiconductors and high-tech devices, the high-tech region of Silicon Valley, California, is named after this element.

Occurrence Measured by mass, silicon makes up 25.7% of the Earth's crust and is the second most abundant element on Earth, after oxygen. Pure silicon crystals are only occasionally found in nature; they can be found as inclusions with gold and in volcanic exhalations. Silicon is usually found in the form of silicon dioxide (also known as silica), and silicate.

Silica occurs in minerals consisting of (practically) pure silicon dioxide in different crystalline forms. Sand, amethyst, agate, quartz, rock crystal, chalcedony, flint, jasper, and opal are some of the forms in which silicon dioxide appears. (They are known as "lithogenic silica", as opposed to "biogenic silica", silicas.)

Silicon also occurs as silicates (various minerals containing silicon, oxygen and one or another metal), for example feldspar. These minerals occur in clay, sand and various types of rock (geology) such as granite and sandstone. Asbestos, feldspar, clay, hornblende, and mica are a few of the many silicate minerals.

Silicon is a principal component of aerolites, which are a class of meteoroids, and also is a component of tektites, which are a natural form of glass.

See also :Category:Silicate minerals

Production Silicon is commercially prepared by the reaction of high-purity silica with wood, charcoal, and coal, in an electric arc furnace using carbon electrodes. At temperatures over 1900 °C, the carbon reduces the silica to silicon according to the chemical equation

SiO2 + C → Si + CO2.

Liquid silicon collects in the bottom of the furnace, and is then drained and cooled. The silicon produced via this process is called metallurgical grade silicon and is at least 98% pure. Using this method, silicon carbide, SiC, can form. However, provided the amount of SiO2 is kept high, silicon carbide may be eliminated, as explained by this equation:

2 SiC + SiO2 → 3 Si + 2 CO.

In 2005, metallurgical grade silicon cost about United States dollar 0.77 per pound ($1.70/kg).

Purification The use of silicon in semiconductor devices demands a much greater purity than afforded by metallurgical grade silicon. Historically, a number of methods have been used to produce high-purity silicon.

Physical methods Early silicon purification techniques were based on the fact that if silicon is melted and re-solidified, the last parts of the mass to solidify contain most of the impurities. The earliest method of silicon purification, first described in 1919 and used on a limited basis to make radar components during World War II, involved crushing metallurgical grade silicon and then partially dissolving the silicon powder in an acid. When crushed, the silicon cracked so that the weaker impurity-rich regions were on the outside of the resulting grains of silicon. As a result, the impurity-rich silicon was the first to be dissolved when treated with acid, leaving behind a more pure product.

In zone melting, also called zone refining, the first silicon purification method to be widely used industrially, rods of metallurgical grade silicon are heated to melt at one end. Then, the heater is slowly moved down the length of the rod, keeping a small length of the rod molten as the silicon cools and re-solidifies behind it. Since most impurities tend to remain in the molten region rather than re-solidify, when the process is complete, most of the impurities in the rod will have been moved into the end that was the last to be melted. This end is then cut off and discarded, and the process repeated if a still higher purity is desired.

Chemical methods Today, silicon is purified by converting it to a silicon chemical compound that can be more easily purified than in its original state, and then converting that silicon element back into pure silicon. Trichlorosilane is the silicon compound most commonly used as the intermediate, although silicon tetrachloride and silane are also used. When these gases are blown over silicon at high temperature, they decompose to high-purity silicon.

At one time, DuPont produced ultra-pure silicon by reacting silicon tetrachloride with high-purity zinc vapors at 950 °C, producing silicon according to the chemical equation

SiCl4 + 2 Zn → Si + 2 ZnCl2.

However, this technique was plagued with practical problems (such as the zinc chloride byproduct solidifying and clogging lines) and was eventually abandoned in favor of the Siemens process.

In the Siemens process, high-purity silicon rods are exposed to trichlorosilane at 1150 °C. The trichlorosilane gas decomposes and deposits additional silicon onto the rods, enlarging them according to chemical reactions like



2 HSiCl3 → Si + 2 HCl + SiCl4.

Silicon produced from this and similar processes is called polycrystalline silicon. Polycrystalline silicon typically has impurity levels of less than 10−9.

In 2006 REC announced construction of a plant based on fluidized bed technology using silane http://hugin.info/136555/R/1115224/203491.pdf REC presentation to investors accessed 8 July 2007.

3SiCl4 + Si + 2H2 → 4HSiCl3 4HSiCl3 → 3SiCl4 + SiH4 SiH4 → Si + 2H2

Crystallization The majority of silicon crystals grown for device production are produced by the Czochralski process, (CZ-Si) since it is the cheapest method available and it is capable of producing large size crystals. However, silicon single-crystals grown by the Czochralski method contain impurities since the crucible which contains the melt dissolves. For certain electronic devices, particularly those required for high power applications, silicon grown by the Czochralski method is not pure enough. For these applications, float-zone silicon (FZ-Si) can be used instead. It is worth mentioning though, in contrast with CZ-Si method in which the seed is dipped into the silicon melt and the growing crystal is pulled upward, the thin seed crystal in the FZ-Si method sustains the growing crystal as well as the polysilicon rod from the bottom. As a result, it is difficult to grow large size crystals using the float-zone method. Today, all the dislocation-free silicon crystals used in semiconductor industry with diameter 300mm or larger are grown by the Czochralski method with purity level significantly improved.

Different forms of silicon Image:Silicon granular 640x480.jpg|Granular siliconImage:Silicon poly 640x480.jpg|Polycrystal siliconImage:Silicon crystal 4 inch interferences 640x480.jpg|Silicon monocrystalImage:Nano Si 640x480.jpg|Nanocrystalline siliconImage:Monokristalines Silizium für die Waferherstellung.jpg], Quantum dot, and Nanoparticle.

Isotopes Silicon has numerous known isotopes, with mass numbers ranging from 22 to 44. 28Si (the most abundant isotope, at 92.23%), 29Si (4.67%), and 30Si (3.1%) are stable; 32Si is a radioactive isotope produced by argon decay. Its half-life has been determined to be approximately 170 years (0.21 MeV), and it decays by beta - emission to 32phosphorus (which has a 14.28 day half-life ) and then to 32sulfur.

Silicon-based life Since silicon is similar to carbon, particularly in its valency, some people have proposed the possibility of silicon-based life. One main detraction for silicon-based life is that unlike carbon, silicon does not have the tendency to form double and triple bonds.

Although there are no known forms of life that rely entirely on silicon-based chemistry, there are some that rely on silicon minerals for specific functions. Some bacteria and other forms of life, such as the protozoa radiolaria, have silicon dioxide skeletons, and the sea urchin has spines made of silicon dioxide. These forms of silicon dioxide are known as biogenic silica. Silicate bacteria use silicates in their metabolism.

Life as we know it could not have developed based on a silicon biochemistry. The main reason for this fact is that life on Earth depends on the carbon cycle: autotrophic entities use carbon dioxide to synthesize organic compounds with carbon, which is then used as food by heterotrophic entities, which produce energy and carbon dioxide from these compounds. If carbon was to be replaced with silicon, there would be a need for a silicon cycle. However, silicon dioxide precipitates in aqueous systems, and cannot be transported among living beings by common biological means.

As such, another solvent would be necessary to sustain silicon-based life forms; it would be difficult (if not impossible) to find another common compound with the unusual properties of water which make it an ideal solvent for carbon-based life. Larger silicon compounds analogous to common hydrocarbon chains (silanes) are also generally unstable owing to the larger atomic radius of silicon and the correspondingly weaker silicon-silicon bond; silanes decompose readily and often violently in the presence of oxygen making them unsuitable for an oxidizing atmosphere such as our own. Silicon also does not readily participate in pi-bonding (the second and third bonds in triple bonds and double bonds are pi-bonds) as its p-orbital electrons experience greater shielding and are less able to take on the necessary geometry. Furthermore, although some silicon rings (cyclosilanes) analogous to common the cycloalkanes formed by carbon have been synthesized, these are largely unknown. Their synthesis suffers from the difficulties inherent in producing any silane compound, whereas carbon will readily form five-, six-, and seven-membered rings by a variety of pathways (the Diels-Alder reaction is one naturally-occurring example), even in the presence of oxygen. Silicon's inability to readily form long silane chains, multiple bonds, and rings severely limits the diversity of compounds that can be synthesized from it. Under known conditions, silicon chemistry simply cannot begin to approach the diversity of organic chemistry, a crucial factor in carbon's role in biology.

However, silicon-based life could be construed as being life which exists under a computational substrate. This concept is yet to be explored in mainstream technology but receives ample coverage by sci-fi authors.

Graham Cairns-Smith has proposed that the first living organisms to exist were forms of clay minerals—which were probably based around the silicon atom.

Compounds For examples of silicon compounds see silicate, silane (SiH4), silicic acid (H4SiO4), silicon carbide (SiC), silicon dioxide (SiO2), silicon tetrachloride (SiCl4), silicon tetrafluoride (SiF4), and trichlorosilane (HSiCl3).

See also :Category:Silicon compounds

References

See also

External links



Welcome to Silicon Systems
Latest News : Point 6 use Flowmation to Rebrand Avent Product Range after Philips Merger : Silicon Systems Announces the Release of Flowmation Version 2.9 with Web-based Annotation ...

Welcome to Silicon Systems
Sales. For all queries relating to Sales please contact Paul Rowley, Sales Director on +44 (0) 118 377 6060. Email: paul.rowley@silicon.co.uk. Finance & Logistics

Breaking Business and Technology News at silicon.com
Business and technology news on key IT issues.

silicon from FOLDOC
silicon. 1. < electronics > The material used as the base (or "substrate") for most integrated circuits. 2. < jargon > Hardware, especially integrated circuits or microprocessor ...

Welcome to Silicon-Group.co.uk
The Silicon Group: Providers of Components & IT Systems: Media & Supplies ... Please note: Every care is taken in maintaining this website but errors and omissions in the ...

Networks - Breaking Business and Technology News at silicon.com
Latest business technology news, comment and analysis from silicon.com on networks for IT and business professional.

Hardware - Breaking Business and Technology News at silicon.com
Latest business technology news, comment and analysis from silicon.com on hardware for IT and business professional.

Management - Breaking Business and Technology News at silicon.com
Latest business technology news, comment and analysis from silicon.com on management for IT and business professional.

Software - Breaking Business and Technology News at silicon.com
Latest business technology news, comment and analysis from silicon.com on software for IT and business professional.

Silicon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Silicon (pronounced /ˈsɪl ɪ kən/ or /ˈsɪl ɪ kɒn/, Latin: silicium) is the chemical element that has the symbol Si and atomic number 14. A tetravalent metalloid, silicon is ...





 
Copyright © 2008 opini8.com - All rights reserved.
Home | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
All Trademarks belong to their repective owners.
Many aspects of this page are used under
commercial commons license from Yahoo!