IBM Recycles Waste CPU Wafers Into Solar Panels
Luyseyal writes "IBM has developed a process for scrubbing waste silicon wafers clean, allowing the otherwise highly secret waste to be sold. The silicon quality usually necessary for solar production is very high and the cost of solar panels reflects it. Recycling this waste should help bring down the cost in the long run and add a new profit vector for chip manufacturers. The article notes that IBM has such a high profile in the chip business that this recycling tech should spread rapidly."
I think it's got more to do with the "energy debt" that silicon wafers acquire during their manufacture. Anything is better than starting from scratch.
They sentenced me to twenty years of boredom
With Silicon you have the added problem that you want really big crystals since you do not want a grain boundary halfway across your electronic component. The wafers are cut from a single large crystal and it takes a lot of effort to grow this crystal. Silicon is very hard so cutting it into wafers is not that easy either.
Is it any surprise that silicon, being so expensive to purify, would ultimately start to see at least some measure of waste recovery?