Synthetic diamond is diamond produced through chemical or physical processes in a factory. Like naturally occurring diamond it is composed of a three-dimensional carbon crystal. Due to its extreme physical properties, synthetic diamond is used in many industrial applications, and has the potential to become a serious disruptive technology in many new application areas such as electronics and medicine. Synthetic diamond is also called industrial diamond, manufactured diamond, artificial diamond or cultured diamond. Synthetic diamond is not the same as Diamond-like Carbon, DLC, which is amorphous hard carbon, or diamond imitation, which can be made of other materials such as cubic zirconia or silicon carbide.
Synthetic diamond was first produced on February 16, 1953 in Stockholm, Sweden by the QUINTUS project of ASEA, Sweden's major electrical manufacturing company using a bulky apparatus designed by Baltzar von Platen and the young engineer Anders Kämpe (1928–1984). Pressure was maintained within the device at an estimated 83,000 atmospheres (8.4 GPa) for an hour. A few small crystals were produced. The discovery was kept secret. A year later, General Electric managed to repeat that feat and published their results in Nature and that result is today the officially recognised first synthesis of diamond.
This gave rise to an industrial diamond industry that was for decades represented by two main players: GE Superabrasives and De Beers Industrial Diamonds. During the 1980s a new competitor emerged in Korea named Iljin Diamond followed later by hundreds of Chinese entrants. Note: Iljin Diamond was only able to accomplish this after misappropriating trade secrets from GE via a Korean former GE employee in 1988 (General Electric v. Sung, 843 F. Supp. 776). In 2003 GE sold GE Superabrasives to a private equity firm called Littlejohn and renamed to Diamond Innovations. Also, in 2002, De Beers Industrial Diamonds rebranded to Element Six and is operating as an independent company from De Beers. Many more companies have become important players in the industrial diamond market. The main ones are Sumitomo Electric Hardmetal, US Synthetic and Smith Megadiamond. Some smaller companies have signalled their intent to enter the market for gems using synthetic diamond. These are Apollo Diamond and Gemesis, where Gemesis is the only one to have taken products to market. Today, in the year 2006, the industrial diamond industry is an annual States dollar|US$" target="_blank" >*1 billion market, producing some 3 billion carats, or 600 metric tons, of synthetic diamond. This should be put in comparison with the 130 million carats (26 metric tons) mined annually for gem purposes.
The original GE invention by H. Tracy Hall, uses the belt press, wherein upper and lower anvils supply the pressure load and heating current to a cylindrical volume. This internal pressure is confined radially by a belt of pre-stressed steel bands. A variation of the belt press uses hydraulic pressure to confine the internal pressure, rather than steel belts. Belt presses are still used today by the major manufacturers at a much larger scale than the original designs.
The second type of press design is the cubic press. A cubic press has six anvils which provide pressure simultaneously onto all faces of a cube-shaped volume. The first multi-anvil press design was actually a tetrahedral press, using only four anvils to converge upon a tetrahedron-shaped volume. The cubic press was created shortly thereafter to increase the pressurized volume. A cubic press is typically smaller than a belt press and can achieve the pressure and temperature necessary to create synthetic diamond faster. However, cubic presses cannot be easily scaled up to larger volumes. To illustrate, one could increase the pressurized volume by either increasing the size of the anvils, thereby increasing by a factor of 6 the amount of force needed on the anvils to achieve a similar pressurization, or by decreasing the surface area to volume ratio of the pressurized volume by using more anvils to converge upon a different platonic solid (such as a dodecahedron), but such a press would be unnecessarily complex and not easily manufacturable.
The advantages to CVD diamond growth include the ability to grow diamond over large areas, the ability to grow diamond on a substrate, and the control over the properties of the diamond produced. In the past, when high pressure high temperature (HPHT) techniques were used to produce diamond, the diamonds were typically very small free standing diamonds of varying sizes. With CVD diamond growth areas of greater than fifteen centimeters (six inches) diameter have been achieved and much larger areas are likely to be successfully coated with diamond in the future. Improving this ability is key to enabling several important applications.
The ability to grow diamond directly on a substrate is important because it allows the addition of many of diamond’s important qualities to other materials. Since diamond has the highest thermal conductivity of any material, layering diamond onto high heat producing electronics (such as optics and transistors) allows the diamond to be used as a heat sink,. Diamond films are being grown on valve rings, cutting tools, and other objects that benefit from diamond’s hardness and exceedingly low wear rate. In each case the diamond growth must be carefully done to achieve the necessary adhesion onto the substrate.
The most important attribute of CVD diamond growth is the ability to control the properties of the diamond produced. In the area of diamond growth the word “diamond” is used as a description of any material primarily made up of sp3 bonded carbon, and there are many different types of diamond included in this. By regulating the processing parameters—especially the gases introduced, but also including the pressure the system is operated under, the temperature of the diamond, and the method of generating plasma—many different materials that can be considered diamond can be made. Single crystal diamond can be made containing various dopants. Polycrystalline diamond consisting of grain sizes from several nanometers to several micrometers can be grown,. Some polycrystalline diamond grains are surrounded by thin, non-diamond carbon, while others are not. These different factors affect the diamond’s hardness, smoothness, conductivity, optical properties and more.
There are several problems facing CVD diamond growth in the future. First, because research in the area is so heavily application oriented, there are basic questions which have had very little work done on them, and this continues to be a problem for the field. This problem is exacerbated by the fact that small changes in chemistry can require a great deal of research to understand. Another problem is that while CVD diamond growth occurs over large areas compared to other methods of diamond growth, these areas are still too small for some applications, such as large scale transistor manufacturing. There is no better method of producing semiconducting, doped diamond than CVD, but until large scale wafers can be efficiently produced CVD electronics will only have niche applications. CVD diamond growth has had historically low growth rates, usually a few micrometers an hour. While growth rates have been improved dramatically in a few very specific areas, in most applications they are still very slow. The biggest problem with CVD diamond growth is cost; cheaper alternatives are used instead of CVD diamonds whenever possible.
The Carnegie Institute's Geophysical Laboratory can produce 10 carat (2 g) single-crystal diamonds rapidly (28 nm/s) by CVD, as well as colorless single-crystal diamonds. Growth of colorless diamonds up to 60 g (300 carats) is believed achievable using their method.
The applications for this type of synthetic diamond are the same as for PCD, but because of its higher cost and better performance, in the more demanding environments. Some of the larger synthetic diamond crystals are also used in the gem industry as yellow artificial diamond.
The applications fields are wide, varying from abrasive to optical to medical to environmental.
CVD single crystal diamond is mainly used in abrasive, electronic, sensor and detector applications.
Diamonds have long been used in machining tools, especially when machining non-ferrous alloys. This is most commonly done by distributing micrometer-sized diamond grains in a metal matrix (usually cobalt), hardening it and then sintering it onto the tool. This is typically referred to in industry as “PCD” diamond. It is not uncommon to find large PCD diamond drills used in drilling for oil, but the primary use for PCD diamond tools in recent years has been machining aluminum for the automobile industry. The automobile industry uses a number of aluminum alloys that produce extreme wear on tools and diamond is the only cost-efficient way of machining these alloys. For the past fifteen years work has been done on using CVD diamond growth to coat tools with diamond, and though the work still shows promise it has not significantly displaced traditional PCD tools.
CVD diamond also has applications in electronics. Conductive diamond has been demonstrated as a useful electrode under many circumstances. For example, University of Wisconsin-Madison chemistry professor Robert Hamers has developed a photochemical methods for covalently linking DNA to the surface of polycrystalline diamond films produced through CVD. Also, the diamonds have been shown to detect redox reactions that can't ordinarily be studied and in some cases degrade redox-reactive organic contaminants in water supplies. Because diamond is almost completely chemically inert it can be used as an electrode under conditions that would destroy traditional materials. For such reasons waste water treatment of organic effluents as well as production of stong oxidants have been published. There are already a number of companies producing diamond electrodes.
Diamond has shown great promise as a potential radiation detection device. Diamond has a similar mass to that of soft tissue, is radiation hard and has a wide bandgap. These qualities suggest it has potential to be an excellent radiation detection material, and it has already been employed in some applications, such as the BABAR detector at Stanford.
Diamond also has potential uses as a semiconductor. This is because the diamonds can be "doped" with impurities like boron and phosphorus. Since these elements contain one more or one less valence electron than carbon, they turn the diamonds into n-type or p-type semiconductors. There are also studies being conducted about impregnating boron-doped CVD diamonds with deuterium yields to produce n-type semiconducting diamonds. Diamond transistors are functional to temperatures many times that of silicon and are resistant to chemical and radioactive damage. While no diamond transistors have yet been successfully integrated into commercial electronics, they show promise for use in exceptionally high power situations and hostile environments.
CVD diamond growth has also been used in conjunction with lithographic techniques to incase microcircuits inside diamond. Researchers at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and the University of Alabama, Birmingham use this process to create designer diamond anvils as a novel probe for measuring electric and magnetic properties of materials at ultra high pressures using a Diamond Anvil Cell.
Chatham Created Gems produces yellow, pink and blue synthetic diamonds (as well as other gemstones). Retailing at $4800/ct, they are equivalent in color to natural pinks and blue diamonds that can sell for as much as $150,000/ct. Like Gemesis diamonds, these are also produced using high-pressure, high-temperature growth process.
A third company, Boston, Massachusetts-based Apollo Diamond, uses the low-pressure technique of chemical vapor deposition (CVD) to produce larger, less expensive diamonds with greater control over impurities. The diamond produced is a single crystal, as opposed to the polycrystalline patchworks formerly produced by CVD. This greater measure of control allows Apollo Diamond to produce diamonds of various colors, from pink to black. The ability to control the intentional introduction of impurities, doping, is necessary for the creation of diamond semiconductor devices. Apollo Diamond gems are currently available on a limited invitation-only basis as finished pieces of jewelry.
The traditional diamond industry is evaluating countermeasures to these cheaper alternatives. Gem-quality synthetic diamonds are visually identical to naturally occurring ones, but they can be distinguished by spectroscopy in infrared, ultraviolet, or X-ray wavelengths. The DiamondView tester from De Beers uses UV fluorescence to detect trace impurities of nickel or other metals in HPHT diamonds, or hydrogen in LP CVD diamonds. Furthermore, all three manufacturers laser-inscribe serial numbers on their gemstones. (sources : Wired.com, Chemical and Engineering News: The Many Facets of Man-Made Diamonds).
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