enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Carbonate–silicate cycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbonate–silicate_cycle

    The carbonate–silicate geochemical cycle, also known as the inorganic carbon cycle, describes the long-term transformation of silicate rocks to carbonate rocks by weathering and sedimentation, and the transformation of carbonate rocks back into silicate rocks by metamorphism and volcanism. [1][2][3] Carbon dioxide is removed from the ...

  3. Silica cycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silica_cycle

    Silicon is considered a bioessential element and is one of the most abundant elements on Earth. [2][3] The silica cycle has significant overlap with the carbon cycle (see carbonate–silicate cycle) and plays an important role in the sequestration of carbon through continental weathering, biogenic export and burial as oozes on geologic timescales.

  4. Nitrogen trifluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrogen_trifluoride

    Nitrogen trifluoride is primarily used to remove silicon and silicon-compounds during the manufacturing of semiconductor devices such as LCD displays, some thin-film solar cells, and other microelectronics. In these applications NF 3 is initially broken down within a plasma.

  5. Lithium–silicon battery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithium–silicon_battery

    Lithium–silicon batteries are lithium-ion battery that employ a silicon-based anode and lithium ions as the charge carriers. [1] Silicon based materials generally have a much larger specific capacity, for example 3600 mAh/g for pristine silicon, [2] relative to the standard anode material graphite, which is limited to a maximum theoretical capacity of 372 mAh/g for the fully lithiated state ...

  6. Silicon carbonate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silicon_carbonate

    Silicon carbonate is a crystalline substance formed under pressure from silica and carbon dioxide. The formula of the substance is SiCO 4. To produce it silicalite is compressed with carbon dioxide at a pressure of 18 Gpa and a temperature around 740 K (467 °C; 872 °F). The silicon carbonate made this way has carbonate linked to silicon by ...

  7. RCA clean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RCA_clean

    The RCA clean is a standard set of wafer cleaning steps which need to be performed before high-temperature processing steps (oxidation, diffusion, CVD) of silicon wafers in semiconductor manufacturing. Werner Kern developed the basic procedure in 1965 while working for RCA, the Radio Corporation of America. [1][2][3] It involves the following ...

  8. Dangling bond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dangling_bond

    Dangling bond. A schematic illustration of dangling bonds in amorphous silicon. The dangling bonds are depicted as blue-red hybrid sp 3 orbitals. In chemistry, a dangling bond is an unsatisfied valence on an immobilized atom. An atom with a dangling bond is also referred to as an immobilized free radical or an immobilized radical, a reference ...

  9. Organosilicon chemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organosilicon_chemistry

    Organosilicon chemistry is the study of organometallic compounds containing carbonsilicon bonds, to which they are called organosilicon compounds. Most organosilicon compounds are similar to the ordinary organic compounds, being colourless, flammable, hydrophobic, and stable to air. Silicon carbide is an inorganic compound.