TEM study on the electrical discharge machined surface of single-crystal silicon

EDM is a useful process for machining high-aspect ratio features with good accuracy in electrically conductive materials irrespective of their mechanical properties. With the ability of micro-EDM to compete with the resolution of conventional semi-conductor processing techniques, the process has att...

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Main Authors: Murray, J.W., Fay, M.W., Kunieda, M., Clare, A.T.
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/2561/
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author Murray, J.W.
Fay, M.W.
Kunieda, M.
Clare, A.T.
author_facet Murray, J.W.
Fay, M.W.
Kunieda, M.
Clare, A.T.
author_sort Murray, J.W.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description EDM is a useful process for machining high-aspect ratio features with good accuracy in electrically conductive materials irrespective of their mechanical properties. With the ability of micro-EDM to compete with the resolution of conventional semi-conductor processing techniques, the process has attracted interest for the potential machining of single-crystal silicon. In order for the process to be feasible, the damage mechanism occurring during machining must be characterised to assess the need for secondary processing. Despite this the microstructural transformations induced by the process on the surface of the workpiece have not yet been assessed. In this study transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and laser-Raman spectroscopy are employed to characterise the microstructural changes as well as the presence of any contaminants and defects at the nano-scale. A twinned-crystalline structure created by epitaxial growth is formed in the recast layer. Some amorphous phase is also present. Findings indicate sub-surface pores between 10 nm and 200 nm diameter formed by gas expansion are observed. If the formation of such pores can be generalised for EDM processing of other materials, this phenomenon may contribute to the reduced mechanical integrity of such machined surfaces. Significant tool electrode material deposition with crystals of down to 3 nm diameter also occurred in the workpiece surface. The nano-scale of embedded material may have implications for the progress of electrical discharge machining as a coating process and the properties of such coatings.
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spelling nottingham-25612020-05-04T20:19:18Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/2561/ TEM study on the electrical discharge machined surface of single-crystal silicon Murray, J.W. Fay, M.W. Kunieda, M. Clare, A.T. EDM is a useful process for machining high-aspect ratio features with good accuracy in electrically conductive materials irrespective of their mechanical properties. With the ability of micro-EDM to compete with the resolution of conventional semi-conductor processing techniques, the process has attracted interest for the potential machining of single-crystal silicon. In order for the process to be feasible, the damage mechanism occurring during machining must be characterised to assess the need for secondary processing. Despite this the microstructural transformations induced by the process on the surface of the workpiece have not yet been assessed. In this study transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and laser-Raman spectroscopy are employed to characterise the microstructural changes as well as the presence of any contaminants and defects at the nano-scale. A twinned-crystalline structure created by epitaxial growth is formed in the recast layer. Some amorphous phase is also present. Findings indicate sub-surface pores between 10 nm and 200 nm diameter formed by gas expansion are observed. If the formation of such pores can be generalised for EDM processing of other materials, this phenomenon may contribute to the reduced mechanical integrity of such machined surfaces. Significant tool electrode material deposition with crystals of down to 3 nm diameter also occurred in the workpiece surface. The nano-scale of embedded material may have implications for the progress of electrical discharge machining as a coating process and the properties of such coatings. Elsevier 2013-05 Article PeerReviewed Murray, J.W., Fay, M.W., Kunieda, M. and Clare, A.T. (2013) TEM study on the electrical discharge machined surface of single-crystal silicon. Journal of Materials Processing Technology, 213 (5). pp. 801-809. ISSN 0924-0136 EDM Single crystal silicon TEM Raman Deposition Recast layer http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0924013612003536# doi:10.1016/j.jmatprotec.2012.11.028 doi:10.1016/j.jmatprotec.2012.11.028
spellingShingle EDM
Single crystal silicon
TEM
Raman
Deposition
Recast layer
Murray, J.W.
Fay, M.W.
Kunieda, M.
Clare, A.T.
TEM study on the electrical discharge machined surface of single-crystal silicon
title TEM study on the electrical discharge machined surface of single-crystal silicon
title_full TEM study on the electrical discharge machined surface of single-crystal silicon
title_fullStr TEM study on the electrical discharge machined surface of single-crystal silicon
title_full_unstemmed TEM study on the electrical discharge machined surface of single-crystal silicon
title_short TEM study on the electrical discharge machined surface of single-crystal silicon
title_sort tem study on the electrical discharge machined surface of single-crystal silicon
topic EDM
Single crystal silicon
TEM
Raman
Deposition
Recast layer
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/2561/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/2561/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/2561/