15 research outputs found
Effects of Baffle Design on Fluid Flow and Heat Transfer in Ammonothermal Growth System of Nitrides
Efforts have been made in growing bulk single crystals of GaN front supercritical fluids using the ammonothermal method, which utilizes ammonia as fluid rather than water as in the hydrothermal process. Different mineralizers such as amide or azide and temperatures in the range of 200-600degreesC have been used to increase the solubility. The pressure is from 1 to 4 kbar. Modeling of the ammonothermal growth process has been used to identify factors which may affect the temperature distribution, fluid flow and nutrient transport. The GaN charge is considered as a porous media bed and the flow in the charge is simulated using the Darcy-Brinkman-Forchheimer model. The resulting governing equations are solved using the finite volume method. The effects of baffle design and opening on flow pattern and temperature distribution in an autoclave are analyzed. Two cases are considered with baffle openings of 15% and 20% in cross-sectional area, respectively
Modeling of Ammonothermal Growth of Gallium Nitride Single Crystals
Ammonothermal growth of GaN crystals with a retrograde solubility has been modeled and simulated here using fluid dynamics, thermodynamics and heat transfer models. The nutrient is considered as a porous media bed and the flow in the porous charge is simulated using the Darcy-Brinkman-Forchheimer model. The resulting governing equations are solved using the finite volume method. For the case of retrograde solubility, the charge is put above the baffle. The temperature difference between the dissolving zone and growth zone is found smaller than that applied on the sidewall of autoclave. The baffle opening has a strong effect on the nutrient transport and supersaturation of GaN species in the growth zone
ACTION-DERIVED AB INITIO MOLECULAR DYNAMICS
Action-derived molecular dynamics (ADMD) is a numerical method to search for minimum-energy dynamic pathways on the potential-energy surface of an atomic system. The method is based on Hamilton's least-action principle and has been developed for problems of activated processes, rare events, and long-time simulations. In this paper, ADMD is further extended to incorporate ab initio total-energy calculations, which enables the detailed electronic analysis of transition states as well as the exploration of energy landscapes. Three numerical examples are solved to demonstrate the capability of this action-derived ab initio molecular dynamics (MD). The proposed approach is expected to circumvent the severe time-scale limitation of conventional ab intio MD simulations.open2
Modeling Ammonothermal Growth of GaN Single Crystals: The Role of Transport
Single crystal gallium nitride (GaN) is an important technological material used primarily for the manufacture of blue light lasers. An
important area of contemporary research is developing a viable growth technique. The ammonothermal technique is an important
candidate among many others with promise of commercially viable growth rates and material quality. The GaN growth rates are a
complicated function of dissolution kinetics, transport by thermal convection and crystallization kinetics. A complete modeling effort for
the growth would involve modeling each of these phenomena and also the coupling between these. As a first step, the crystallization and
dissolution kinetics were idealized and the growth rates as determined purely by transport were investigated. The growth rates thus
obtained were termed ‘transport determined growth rates’ and in principle are the maximum growth rates that can be obtained for a
given configuration of the system. Using this concept, a parametric study was conducted primarily on the geometric and the thermal
boundary conditions of the system to optimize the ‘transport determined growth rate’ and determine conditions when transport might be
a bottleneck
Modeling of ammonothermal growth of gallium nitride single crystals
Ammonothermal growth of GaN crystals with a retrograde solubility has been modeled and simulated here using fluid dynamics, thermodynamics and heat transfer models. The nutrient is considered as a porous media bed and the flow in the porous charge is sim