In this paper, for an inductively heated Czochralski furnace used to grow sapphire single crystal, influence of the inner (wall‐to‐wall) and crystal internal (bulk) radiation on the characteristics of the growth process such as temperature and flow fields, structure of heat transfer and crystal‐melt interface has been studied numerically using the 2D quasi‐steady state finite element method. The obtained results of global analysis demonstrate a strong dependence of thermal field, heat transport structure and crystal‐melt interface on both types of radiative heat transfer within the growth furnace.
The goal of the research presented here is to apply a global analysis of an inductively heated Czochralski furnace for a real sapphire crystal growth system and predict the characteristics of the temperature and flow fields in the system. To do it, for the beginning stage of a sapphire growth process, influence of melt and gas convection combined with radiative heat transfer on the temperature field of the system and the crystal-melt interface have been studied numerically using the steady state two-dimensional finite element method. For radiative heat transfer, internal radiation through the grown crystal and surface to surface radiation for the exposed surfaces have been taken into account. The numerical results demonstrate that there are a powerful vortex which arises from the natural convection in the melt and a strong and large vortex that flows upwards along the afterheater side wall and downwards along the seed and crystal sides in the gas part. In addition, a wavy shape has been observed for the crystal-melt interface with a deflection towards the melt.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.