Wafer (electronics)

  • Top left: polished 12" and 6" silicon wafers. Their crystallographic orientation is marked by notches and flat cuts. Top right: VLSI microcircuits fabricated on a 12-inch (300 mm) silicon wafer, before dicing and packaging.
  • Bottom left: A 3D rendering of solar wafers on a conveyor. Bottom right: completed solar wafers

In electronics, a wafer (also called a slice or substrate)[1] is a thin slice of semiconductor, such as a crystalline silicon (c-Si, silicium), used for the fabrication of integrated circuits and, in photovoltaics, to manufacture solar cells.

The wafer serves as the substrate for microelectronic devices built in and upon the wafer. It undergoes many microfabrication processes, such as doping, ion implantation, etching, thin-film deposition of various materials, and photolithographic patterning. Finally, the individual microcircuits are separated by wafer dicing and packaged as an integrated circuit.

  1. ^ Laplante, Phillip A. (2005). "Wafer". Comprehensive Dictionary of Electrical Engineering (2nd ed.). Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press. p. 739. ISBN 978-0-8493-3086-5.

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