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Radiative Heat Transfer in a Resistance Heated Floating Zone Furnace: A Numerical Study with FIDAP TM
Author(s) -
Lin K.,
Dold P.
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
crystal research and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.377
H-Index - 64
eISSN - 1521-4079
pISSN - 0232-1300
DOI - 10.1002/1521-4079(200108)36:7<629::aid-crat629>3.0.co;2-7
Subject(s) - heat transfer , thermal radiation , radiative transfer , temperature gradient , materials science , mechanics , finite element method , silicon , spreading resistance profiling , internal heating , thermal , thermal resistance , thermodynamics , optics , physics , metallurgy , quantum mechanics
This paper presents a numerical study of radiative heat transfer in a floating zone (FZ) furnace which was performed by using the commercial finite element program FIDAP TM . This resistance furnace should provide a temperature higher than the melting temperature of silicon (i.e. T max ≈ 1500 °C) and a variable temperature gradient at the liquid/solid interface (≥ 25 K/cm). Due to the high working temperatures, heat radiation plays the dominant role for the heat transfer in the furnace. For this reason, the quality of view factors used in the wall‐to‐wall model was carefully inspected with energy‐balance checks. A numerical model with two control parameters is applied to study the influence of material and geometrical parameters on the temperature field. In addition, this model allows us to estimate the internal thermal conditions which were used as thermal boundary conditions for partial 3D simulations. The influences of an optical lens system on the radial symmetry of the temperature field were examined with these partial 3D simulations. Furthermore, we used the inverse modeling method to achieve maximum possible temperature gradients at the liquid/solid interface according to the limitation of maximum available power and the maximum stable height of a melt zone.