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Hydrometallurgical Purification of Metallurgical Grade Silicon with Hydrogen Peroxide in Hydrofluoric Acid Huixian Lai, Liuqing Huang, Huaping Xiong, Chuanhai Gan, Pengfei Xing, Jintang Li, and Xuetao Luo Ind. Eng. Chem. Res., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.iecr.6b02245 • Publication Date (Web): 16 Dec 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on December 20, 2016
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Hydrometallurgical Purification of Metallurgical Grade Silicon with
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Hydrogen Peroxide in Hydrofluoric Acid
3
Huixian Laia, Liuqing Huanga, Huaping Xionga, Chuanhai Gana, Pengfei Xingb,
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Jintang Lia and Xuetao Luoa,∗
5
a
University, Xiamen 361005, P R China
6 7
b
School of Materials and Metallurgy, Northeastern University, Shenyang 110004, P R China
8 9
Fujian Key Laboratory of Advanced Materials, College of Materials, Xiamen
Abstract
10
The effect of adding hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) as an oxidizing agent on purifying
11
metallurgical grade silicon (MG-Si) by leaching with hydrofluoric acid (HF) was
12
studied as a function of leaching temperature, particle size, leaching duration and
13
concentration of leaching agents. It was found that the extraction capacity for metallic
14
impurities could be significantly enhanced with introducing H2O2 into HF lixiviant
15
showing litter dependence on HF concentration. By leaching with 1 mol· L-1 HF plus
16
2 mol· L-1 H2O2 for only 0.25 h at 55 ℃, the MG-Si purity could be upgraded from
17
99.74% to 99.96%, to 99.99% with further prolonging leaching duration. The
18
sensitivity sequences of precipitates to each etchant were obtained through revealing
19
the micro-structural evolution of MG-Si before and after etching. With the help of
20
Raman spectrometry and transmission electron microscopy, the chemical etching
21
mechanism was discussed.
22
∗
Corresponding author: Xuetao Luo (E-mail:
[email protected], Tel: +86-592-2188503) 1
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Keywords: hydrometallurgical purification; hydrogen peroxide; metallurgical grade
2
silicon; extraction
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1. Introduction
2
Rising energy demands, limited reserves of fossil fuels, and the environmental
3
pollutions associated with them are the motivators of a drastic change in our fuel-base
4
energy towards alternative and renewable sources such as solar energy, wind energy
5
and biomass energy. Among them, solar energy features the most abundant renewable
6
energy. Even though many semiconductor compounds have been synthesized, solar
7
grade silicon (SOG-Si, 99.9999% in purity) is still a key material for converting solar
8
energy into electricity in the photovoltaic industry. Today, wafer-based crystalline
9
silicon solar modules account for a total market share of >90% at the global
10
photovoltaic market 1, 2. Therefore, for achieving the widespread use of solar cell, it is
11
meaningful to develop a cost-effective method to lower the cost of SOG-Si.
12
High price SOG-Si is usually produced by modified Siemens process or Fluidized
13
bed method, which purifies silicon material through converting metallurgical grade
14
silicon (MG-Si, 99% in purity) into gaseous compounds, followed by distillation,
15
reduction and deposition into high-purity silicon. Those methods are complicated,
16
energy-intensive and dangerous. Thus, the potential for cost reduction in these
17
processes is limited. A low-cost process for producing SOG-Si, metallurgical routes,
18
was developed recently using MG-Si as a starting material. Metallurgical methods
19
such as acid leaching
20
solidification
21
advantages of low cost and low level of energy consumption, among which acid
22
leaching is a method of low temperature, consuming less energy and using simple
11, 12
3-5
, plasma refining
, slag treatment
13, 14
6, 7
, vacuum refining
8-10
, directional
have been widely investigated due to the
3
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instruments. Therefore, acid leaching is one of the most commonly used methods and
2
always uses as a viable pretreatment method prior to the main metallurgical refining
3
processes. Duo to the promising advantages, acid leaching method has been widely
4
15
5
investigated for upgrading MG-Si to SOG-Si. Early in 1927, Tucker
first proposed
6
the method of acid leaching for preparing high purity silicon. After that, much effort
7
has been taken to look for effective acid leaching conditions. Hunt et al.
8
removing more than 90% of the impurities in MG-Si using an average particles size of
9
less than 50 µm by leaching with aqua regia at 75 ℃ for 12 h. Ma et al.
16
achieved
17
have
10
investigated different acids and found that the extraction yield of impurities was
11
increased by 9% with hydrofluoric acid leaching compared with hydrochloric acid
12
and nitric acid at 50 ℃ for 8 h. Up to 85% iron and 75% aluminum were removed
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using 6 mol/L undisclosed acid C at 60 ℃ for 4 days
14
removal efficiency, sequential leaching or refluxing process was adopted. Santos et al.
15
4
16
particle size, time, temperature and concentration of leaching agents (HNO3, H2SO4,
17
HCl and HF), and reported that using only hydrochloric acid (16%, 5 h, 80 ℃) and a
18
relatively coarse fraction (116 µm), it is possible to removal ~80% of the impurities
19
and to obtain 99.9% pure silicon after further leaching with hydrofluoric acid (2.5%, 2
20
h, 80 ℃). Juneja and Mukherjee
21
refluxing silicon with aqua regia and hydrofluoric acid, and found that leaching with
22
hydrofluoric acid was more efficient than leaching with aqua regia. To improve
18
. For improving impurity
made a detailed study in purification of MG-Si by acid leaching at the conditions of
19
conducted acid leaching process involving
4
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reaction kinetics of acid leaching, Xie et al.
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high pressure and reported that more than 90% extraction of iron could be achieved
3
by pressure leaching of MG-Si with hydrochloric acid. The kinetics of iron removal
4
from metallurgical grade silicon with pressure leaching have also been studied by Yu
5
et al. 21. In spite of numerous investigations on upgrading MG-Si by acid leaching, the
6
leaching efficiency was not satisfied in the case of achieving high impurity removal. A
7
more effective acid leaching solution should be found to purify MG-Si.
8 9
have conducted acid leaching under
It is reported that adding hydrogen peroxide into hydrofluoric is highly beneficial for metallic impurity removal
22
. Iron, Aluminum and Calcium were reduced by
10
98.8%, 98.0% and 81%, respectively. The present study seeks to build on this by
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mainly focus on chemical etching mechanism. It is favorable to add more
12
fundamental information about acid leaching metallurgical grade silicon. Additionally,
13
some complexing agents (acetic acid and oxalic acid) were introduced in the lixiviant
14
for enhancing impurities removal.
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2. Experiments
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2.1. Materials and reagents
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The MG-Si feedstock and analytical grade chemicals (hydrofluoric acid, hydrogen
18
peroxide, acetic acid and oxalic acid) were purchased from Run Xiang Co., Ltd.,
19
China and Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd., China, respectively. The
20
concentrations of main impurities in the as-received MG-Si with various size ranges
21
were listed in table 1. The average compositions of the different size ranges are close
22
to the compositions of the MG-Si with mixed particle size, suggesting that no 5
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significant contamination occurred during the crushing and grinding processes.
2
However, it is evident that the sieving process concentrated the impurities in the finer
3
fractions, presumably due to the fact that the impurity phases are very friable.
4
Distilled water and analytical grade chemicals were used to prepare all the leaching
5
solutions.
6
Table 1 Impurity concentration in MG-Si of various sizes Impurity concentration (ppmw) Impurity elements >154µm 74~154µm 38~74µm > Si-Al-Fe-Ni, Si-V-Ti-(Mn) > Si-Ti-Fe>Si-Fe >> Si-Al-Ni-(Cu)
6
As exhibited in Figure 7(b), the Si-Al-Fe phase is also first dissolved in HF plus
7
H2O2 solution after 5 min of etching, then Si-Al-Fe-Ni, Si-V-Ti-(Mn), Si-Ti-Fe, Si-Fe
8
and Si-Al-Ni-(Cu) after prolonging etching time. Therefore, the following sensitivity
9
sequence to the HF plus H2O2 can be deduced for these phases:
10
Si-Al-Fe>> Si-Al-Fe-Ni, Si-V-Ti-(Mn) > Si-Ti-Fe, Si-Fe, Si-Al-Ni-(Cu)
11
However, after prolonging etching time, the phenomenon of etching silicon matrix
12
will be found with some cracks and holes remaining on the smooth surface. On the
13
one hand, as metallic impurities favor to enrich at the grain boundaries due to its low
14
segregation coefficient in silicon
15
beneficial for the fragmentation of the silicon matrix exposing the impurities to the
16
action of etchants. However, etching silicon will increase silicon loss.
17
3.4 Chemical etching mechanism in etching process
4, 27
, etching silicon boundary producing cracking is
18
In order to understand the corrosion mechanism during acid leaching process, it is
19
important to detect how the chemical state of silicon surface changes in the process.
20
Surface Raman spectroscopy has some advantages in monitoring the surface bonding
21
and has been used in investigating the silicon surface bonds successfully in the
22
cleaning and texturing process for manufacturing solar cell or large-scale integration 16
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circuits
. Therefore, in this case, Raman spectroscopy was used to detect the
2
changes in silicon surface bonds before and after acid leaching, and the results were
3
present in Figure 8.
4
The bonds at 520 cm-1 and 960 cm-1 were assigned to the first and the second orders
5
of the bulk Si-Si vibration, respectively 35. However, the intensities of them decrease
6
after acid leaching with two kinds of lixiviants, and as compared to others, the
7
intensity of Si-Si vibration in the silicon after leaching with HF and H2O2 mixture is
8
lowest. This phenomenon may be attributed to the decrease in concentration of Si-Si
9
bond on silicon surface during acid leaching. Part of Si-Si bond is substituted by other
10
bonds such as Si-H, Si-F and Si-O. As we all known, silicon is hard to dissolve in HF
11
solution in oxidant-free solution, while after adding oxidizing agent, the dissolution
12
rate of silicon in HF solution is improved significantly
13
with the conclusion found in Section 3.3. Based on Raman measurement on the solid
14
state silicon wafer surface, the bonds at 300, 617 and 823 cm-1 are also assigned to the
15
silicon substrate
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intensity of this bond decreases after acid leaching as a result of dissolution by HF
17
acid. Adding H2O2 in the etchant makes the surface atoms oxidized and the silicon
18
surface is terminated by oxygen atoms. The reaction equation can be described as
19
equation (1) 37, 39, 40:
20
Si + 2H 2 O + 4h + → SiO 2 + 4H +
21
where h+ represents a hole. And then the oxygen terminations are dissolved by HF
22
and substituted by F and H atoms as following equations showed 36, 37:
36, 37
. This result is consistent
33, 34
. The position of 430 cm-1 was signified as SiO2
31, 38
. The
(1)
17
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SiO 2 + 6HF → SiF62− + 2H 2 O + 2H +
(2)
2
SiO 2 + 3HF2− → SiF62− + H 2 O + OH −
(3)
3
It should be noted that the vibration frequency of Si-F bond increases with the
4
decrease of coordinated atom number of F, which ranges from 600-900 cm-1 34, 35.
5
Thus, we assign 663 cm-1 to the stretching vibration of Si-F bond in HxSiFy. The
6
downshift of Si-Si bonds located at 520 and 960 cm-1 is also found in Figure 8. This
7
phenomenon is easy to be understood based on quantum confinement effect, which is
8
much related with the surface roughness (porosity) 35, 41. As discussed above, HF plus
9
H2O2 mixture features better property in silicon erosion than HF alone. Thus, the level
10
of grain refinement is supposed to be obvious after HF and H2O2 etching as shown in
11
Figure 9.
12 13 14
Figure 8 Raman spectra of MG-Si before and after acid leaching. (Duration: 2h; temperature: 55 ℃; HF concentration: 2 mol· L-1; H2O2 concentration: 2 mol· L-1)
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Figure 9 (a) TEM image of MG-Si after leaching by 2.0 mol· L-1 HF and 2.0 mol· L-1 H2O2 mixture and its enlarged TEM image corresponding to the rectangular red area (b).
5
As shown in Figure 9, the micro-pores are established under the attack of HF plus
6
H2O2 etchant. It is crucial to demonstrate the mechanism responsible for the porosity
7
on the silicon surface. A possible scheme for forming porous silicon is illustrated as
8
Fig. 10 based on a model of quantum confinement effect proposed by Lehmann et al.
9
42, 43
. Electron transfer is necessary for oxidation and dissolution of silicon. As
10
illustrated in Figure 10(b), the electrochemical potential of H2O2 ( E H 2O 2 / H 2O : 1.763 V)
11
is much more positive than the valence band of silicon (EVB: 0.67 V). From the energy
12
point of view, H2O2 can inject holes into the valence band of silicon through reduction
13
reaction 37:
14
H 2 O 2 + 2H + → 2H 2 O + 2h +
15
where h+ represents a hole. It should be noted that the bandgap of a silicon crystallite
16
will increase as a result of quantum confinement effects if its sizes are reduced to a
17
few nanometers. The same is true for the thin silicon walls separating the micro-pores.
18
As compared to the bandgap energy of bulk silicon, the increase in bandgap energy in
(4)
19
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the wall region produces an energy barrier for holes ∆EV, as schematically shown in
2
Figure 10(b). If ∆EV is larger than the bias-dependent energy of holes, the porous
3
region becomes depleted of holes and therefore passivated against further dissolution.
4
Thus, it is more energetically beneficial for a hole to enter the electrolyte at the pore
5
tip directly (solid arrow), than via the porous structure (dotted arrow).
6
A silicon surface is known to be virtually invert against attack of hydrofluoric acid -
concentrations
42, 43
7
at low pH values, which corresponds to low OH
. A Si-O-Si
8
bridge will be established with consuming one hydroxy and two holes as depicted in
9
Figure 10a (step 1, 2). As Monk et al. reported 44, the dissolution of the oxide resultant
10
in HF involves nucleophilic attack of silicon by fluorine-containing species, such as
11
HF, HF2− , and electrophilic attack of the H+ ion on the oxygen back bonded to the
12
silicon as shown in Figure 10a (step 3 ,4). These reactions are thought to proceed
13
simultaneously on the silicon surface and compete with each other in rate.
14 15 16 17
Figure 10 (a) Schematic illustration of chemical etching of silicon; (b) the corresponding band diagram for charge transfer from the bulk to the porous skeleton or to the pore tip; (c) the enlarged view of the selected area of a) 42, 43.
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4. Conclusions
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The hydrometallurgical purification of MG-Si by leaching with HF in the presence
3
of H2O2 as an oxidizing agent was investigated under different conditions of leaching
4
temperature, particle size, lixiviant composition and leaching duration. After
5
introducing H2O2 into HF lixiviant, the extraction capacity for metallic impurities can
6
be significantly enhanced, especially for Cu with extraction efficiency increasing from
7
23.98% to 92.88% when leaching MG-Si in 2 mol· L-1 HF plus 2 mol· L-1 H2O2.
8
Accordingly, when increasing leaching temperature higher than 55 ℃, the extraction
9
efficiency for Cu decreases dramatically. The leaching yields of impurities will
10
increase with decrease in particle size, but taking grinding cost into consideration,
11
particle size fraction of 74~154 µm will be suitable for SOG-Si production. What is
12
more, the phenomenon of cracking effect by the lixiviant will be more obvious with
13
increasing particle size of silicon, which is beneficial for impurity removal. It is found
14
that the silicon purity increases from 99.74% to more than 99.96% after only 0.25 h
15
leaching by 1 mol· L-1 HF plus 2 mol· L-1 H2O2 with particle size of 74~154 µm.
16
After prolonging leaching duration, 99.99% pure silicon can be achieved. And an
17
obvious increase in purity of silicon cannot be found with increasing HF
18
concentration. According to reveal the micro-structural evolution of MG-Si after
19
etching with different lixiviants, sensitivity sequences of precipitates to HF, alone and
20
associated with H2O2 can be obtained. In addition, the influences of two complexing
21
agents (oxalic acid and acetic acid) on the impurity extraction by HF plus H2O2 are
22
moderated. Different types of MG-Si from different origins may be responsible for 21
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that. After Raman analysis, it is reasonable that etching silicon starts with first
2
oxidizing reaction by H2O2 and then dissolve by HF. Like Si-Si bonds, some Si-F and
3
Si-O bonds can also be found on silicon surface after acid etching with HF plus H2O2
4
etchant.
5
Acknowledgements
6
We gratefully acknowledge the support of the National Natural Science Foundation
7
of China (No. 51334004) and the Scientific and Technological Innovation Platform of
8
Fujian Province (2006L2003). Moreover, the authors are grateful to Tintin Fang and
9
Yun Zhong for their support in proofreading the article.
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