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THE MANY FACETS OF MAN-MADE DIAMONDS
Synthetic diamond makers are targeting the
gem market first, but their product could transform many other
industries, too
AMANDA YARNELL, C&EN WASHINGTON
Before the 1930s, the gems of
choice for engagement rings included opals, rubies, and sapphires. But
in the 1940s, De Beers--the
South African mining firm that controls the majority of the world's
diamond supply--introduced "A Diamond Is Forever." The success of this
campaign turned diamond into the symbol of eternal love and
dramatically increased demand for the gems.
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DIAMOND
RING Because of its optical
transparency, high thermal conductivity, and resistance to chemical
attack, synthetic diamond is an attractive material for making optical
windows for instruments used in extreme environments. ELEMENT SIX PHOTO
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Today, two start-up companies are staking
their futures on the lure of more affordable, laboratory-grown diamond
gemstones. But because of diamond's remarkable optical, thermal,
chemical, and electronic properties, synthetic diamond promises to
offer a lot more than just beautiful jewelry.
In a warehouse in Sarasota, Fla., a
company called Gemesis is
growing diamonds in two dozen or so high-pressure, high-temperature
crystal growth chambers, each the size of a washing machine. Within
each chamber, a tiny sliver of natural diamond is bathed in a molten
solution of graphite and a proprietary metal-based catalyst at
approximately 1,500 °C and 58,000 atm of pressure. Slowly, carbon
precipitates onto the diamond seed crystal. A gem-quality, 2.8-carat
rough yellow diamond grows in just under three-and-a-half days.
A rough diamond of this size can be cut
and polished to give a diamond gem larger than 1.5 carats. (One-half
carat is equal to 100 mg of diamond and is roughly the size of a kernel
of corn.) Just like naturally occurring yellow diamonds, the yellow
lab-grown stones get their color from trace amounts of nitrogen
impurities: Replacing fewer than five out of each 100,000 carbon atoms
in the diamond crystal lattice with nitrogen atoms gives a yellow
diamond.
Naturally occurring fancy-colored
diamonds--yellows, blues, pinks, and reds--are very rare and thus very
valuable. A Gemesis-created yellow fancy-colored diamond--visibly
indistinguishable from a natural one, even to a trained gemologist--can
be purchased for about $4,000 per carat. That's about 30% less than the
price of a natural diamond of similar color and quality, according to
Robert Chodelka, Gemesis' vice president for technology.
SYNTHETIC DIAMONDS are nothing new. Producing them has been a stable business
for the past half century. Today, more than 100 tons of the stones is
produced annually worldwide by firms like Diamond Innovations
(previously part of General Electric), Sumitomo Electric, and De Beers.
Tiny synthetic diamonds are used in saw blades for cutting asphalt and
marble, in drill bits for oil and gas drilling, and even as an
exfoliant in cosmetics.
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IN
THE ROUGH To grow its gem-quality yellow
diamonds (a rough one is shown above), Gemesis uses
washing-machine-sized crystal-growing chambers to reproduce the high
pressures and high temperatures that nature relies on. GEMESIS PHOTOS
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The first synthetic diamonds (diamond grit)
were produced in the early 1950s by researchers at the Allmanna Svenska
Elektriska Aktiebolaget Laboratory in Stockholm, Sweden. They did not
immediately publish their work. Soon thereafter, GE researchers
reported their own successful diamond synthesis in Nature. Like Gemesis, both
teams used conditions that mimic the pressures and temperatures under
which diamonds are thought to form naturally.
Prior to Gemesis, GE, Sumitomo Electric,
and De Beers had reported the synthesis of large diamonds by similar
processes. But these companies marketed their synthetic stones as heat
sinks for electronics or used them solely for research purposes.
Gemesis, on the other hand, is growing diamonds for jewelry. And
because Gemesis' yellow lab-grown diamonds are visually
indistinguishable from their mined counterparts, some in the gem
industry have expressed concern that the lab-grown diamonds could be
passed off as naturals.
Chodelka tells C&EN that Gemesis is
"committed to disclosure," noting that all of the firm's diamonds are
laser inscribed. In addition, he says trace amounts of nickel left in
the diamond from the metal catalyst cause a short-lived phosphorescence
after exposure to intense ultraviolet light--a characteristic not
shared by most natural diamonds. He also points out that differences in
the spatial distribution of nitrogen defects between natural and
Gemesis-grown diamonds can be detected by Fourier transform infrared
spectroscopy and X-ray absorption spectroscopy.
But Gemesis' business plan only begins
with gems. Diamond has an extraordinary range of materials properties:
It is the hardest and stiffest material known; is an excellent
electrical insulator; has the highest thermal conductivity of any
material yet barely expands when heated; is transparent to UV, visible,
and infrared light; and is chemically inert to nearly all acids and
bases.
Diamond's superlative properties are
fine-tuned by impurities found in the carbon lattice--the same
impurities that produce colors in naturally occurring diamond. Diamonds
having a perfect carbon crystal lattice without defects or
substitutions are colorless. Such diamond has a large band gap--meaning
that the energy required to free an electron so it can move through the
diamond lattice is high--and therefore is an excellent electrical
insulator. But replacing some of the carbon atoms in the diamond
lattice with boron--an impurity that produces the pretty blue color in
some rare diamonds, including the famed Hope
Diamond--transforms diamond into a p-type semiconductor. That's
because boron has only three outer-shell electrons and can make only
three of four bonds that carbon normally does in the diamond lattice.
The result is a missing electron or "hole" that can move freely through
the crystal, allowing the diamond to conduct positive charge.
For materials applications that take
advantage of these remarkable properties, natural diamonds have obvious
flaws: They are prohibitively expensive and limited in size. "Plus,
with natural diamonds, you can't control the type or placement of
dopants," notes James E. Butler, who is spearheading attempts to study,
grow, and use diamond at the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory. As a
consequence, Gemesis and many others are eager to create large
synthetic diamonds with carefully selected impurities--for instance,
boron-doped semiconducting diamonds that could be used to fabricate
diamond-based electronic devices that could stand up to heat and
chemical attack.
But high-pressure, high-temperature
methods of synthesizing diamond like Gemesis' offer limited control of
impurities and produce diamonds of limited size, Butler says. Apollo Diamond, a start-up
company in Boston, thinks that a low-pressure technique called chemical
vapor deposition (CVD) could be the answer. Butler agrees. "As
interesting and as important as the high-pressure, high-temperature
method is, it won't have the technological impact of diamond growth by
chemical vapor deposition," he tells C&EN.
Apollo is using CVD to grow
single-crystal diamond wafers big enough to be cut into diamond
gemstones of a carat of more. Apollo's method can grow larger diamonds
and is less expensive than high-pressure, high-temperature methods,
notes Robert C. Linares, Apollo's founder and chairman.
CVD allows finer control of impurities
than do high-pressure, high-temperature methods, Linares says. This
enables Apollo to produce a wider variety of colored
diamonds--including colorless, pink, blue, honey brown, and even black.
Like Gemesis, Apollo inscribes its larger lab-grown gems to aid
detection. A combination of spectroscopic methods--including infrared
spectroscopy and photoluminescence spectroscopy--can normally be used
to distinguish Apollo gems from naturally occurring ones, according to
Wuyi Wang, a research scientist at the Gemological
Institute of America in New York City [Gems
& Gemol., 39, 268 (2004)].
A slow, tedious version of the
low-pressure CVD process was first documented in 1952 by William G.
Eversole of Union Carbide. Back then, "there was a great deal of
skepticism that one could grow diamond at low pressures because diamond
is thermodynamically unstable with respect to graphite," recalls John
C. Angus, professor of chemical engineering at Case Western Reserve
University, Cleveland. "Many people said that growth of diamond at low
pressure violated the second law of thermodynamics. You were thought to
be a fool or a fraud if you proposed this," he says.
Union Carbide subsequently abandoned the
project. But a small band of Russian and American scientists, including
Angus, pushed forward. By the late 1960s, Angus managed to prove that
diamond growth by CVD was indeed feasible. The method was further
refined into a viable commercial process in the 1980s by scientists at
the National Institute for Research in Inorganic Materials in Tsukuba,
Japan.
Hydrogen is the key to growing diamond
and not graphite under these conditions, Angus' early work showed. At
the surface, the carbon lattice of diamond is decorated with "dangling
bonds" that can potentially cross-link to reorganize the surface into
more stable graphite. Capping these bonds with hydrogen prevents
graphite formation and generates reactive surface sites for attachment
of carbon radicals.
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A CUT
ABOVE Apollo uses chemical vapor
deposition to grow plates of very pure diamond (left) that can be cut
and polished into beautiful gems (right). APOLLO
DIAMOND PHOTO
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In Apollo's CVD reactor, hydrogen gas and
methane are flowed through a chamber containing a diamond seed crystal
(often a highly polished synthetic one produced by high-pressure,
high-temperature methods). The hydrogen gas is split into atomic
hydrogen by the action of a hot filament or a microwave-generated
plasma. The atomic hydrogen thus generated reacts with methane to give
methyl radical and hydrogen gas. The carbon-containing radical species
eventually deposit onto the diamond seed, forming new diamond
carbon-carbon bonds. But the surface chemistry of how carbon atoms
actually attach to the diamond lattice still remains murky, Linares
notes.
Apollo's CVD method produces
single-crystal diamond, just as nature does. But until relatively
recently, most of the diamond grown by CVD methods was polycrystalline,
not single-crystal. Polycrystalline diamond is a patchwork of minuscule
diamond crystals (and sometimes tiny crystals of graphite). Because it
retains many of naturally occurring single-crystal diamond's excellent
properties, polycrystalline diamond has been targeted for a number of
uses.
For instance, chemistry professor Robert J. Hamers of the
University of Wisconsin, Madison, has developed a photochemical method
for covalently linking DNA via an organic tether to the surface of
polycrystalline boron-doped diamond films made by CVD. Recently, he and
graduate student Wensha Yang found that the binding of complementary
DNA strands to the DNA-labeled diamond surface can be detected directly
by measuring the change in electrical properties of the diamond film.
The direct electrical detection allowed by diamond eliminates the need
for labor- and time-intensive labeling steps required by other
biosensing methods.
And because semiconducting diamond can
generate a wider range of potentials than other electrode materials,
electrodes made of this material can be used to study redox reactions
that can't be studied with conventional electrodes, notes assistant
professor of chemical engineering Heidi B.
Martin of Case Western. That and the many other excellent
properties of diamond have led chemistry professor Greg
M. Swain of Michigan State University and many other scientists to
use CVD to grow polycrystalline boron-doped diamond electrodes that can
detect--and in some cases degrade--redox-reactive organic contaminants
in water supplies. In addition, Martin is using CVD to grow highly
conductive boron-doped polycrystalline diamond microelectrodes that
could directly sense a variety of redox-active neurotransmitters during
neurotransmission. The diamond microelectrodes should be more
sensitive, stable, and versatile than ones made of other materials,
Martin says.
U.K.-based Element Six,
formerly known as De Beers Industrial Diamonds, is already selling
CVD-grown polycrystalline diamond films for various applications, notes
Steven E. Coe, the firm's R&D manager. The company markets its
polycrystalline diamond for use as heat spreaders in high-power
electronic devices. It also uses the material to fashion surgical
blades that are resistant to dulling and optical windows for
high-powered CO2 lasers.
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LET
IT RAIN To make diamond by chemical vapor deposition, hydrogen
gas and methane are flowed through a chamber containing a substrate.
Heat or a microwave-generated plasma is used to split hydrogen gas into
atomic hydrogen, which then reacts with methane to give methyl radical
and hydrogen gas. The carbon-containing radical species eventually
deposit as diamond onto the substrate.
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NEVERTHELESS, using single-crystal diamond instead of polycrystalline
diamond in such applications has advantages. Because the C—C bonds that
hold its patchwork of tiny crystals together are weaker than C—C bonds
in single-crystal diamond, polycrystalline diamond isn't quite as
thermally conductive, as optically transparent, or as strong as
single-crystal diamond. In fact, for some applications--particularly
those such as electronics that require the highest carrier
mobility--only single-crystal diamond will do, Linares tells C&EN.
For diamond to live up to its promise as an alternative to silicon for
fabricating electronic devices, "what's required is high-quality,
single-crystal CVD diamond in usable sizes," Coe adds.
Coe and his colleagues at Element Six
proved this was possible just over a year ago [Science,
297, 1670
(2002)] and now can grow high-quality, single-crystal diamond wafers
that are 5 mm square. Linares tells C&EN that Apollo currently can
grow high-quality, single-crystal diamond wafers that are about double
that size. He predicts that within the next four years the company will
be cranking out 4-inch square wafers.
Both Coe and Linares suggest that, thanks
to its high thermal conductivity and electrical carrier mobility,
single-crystal semiconducting diamond will be the ultimate material for
fashioning high-powered electronic devices. Element Six is already
making some simple prototype devices, such as switches, from p-type
semiconducting diamonds, Coe says. But most devices will require both
hole-conducting (p-type) and electron-conducting (n-type) diamond
semiconductors. The former is easy: Both Element Six and Apollo report
that they can use their CVD methods to make boron-doped single-crystal
diamond wafers that are excellent p-type semiconductors. Producing
n-type semiconducting diamond has proven more challenging, however.
A number of potential n-type dopants have
been investigated, most notably phosphorus. A group led by Hisao Kanda
of Japan's National
Institute for Materials Science has shown that doping diamond with
phosphorus gives n-type semiconducting diamond. The team has gone on to
show that phosphorus-doped and boron-doped diamond can be combined to
make a simple electrical device called a p-n junction.
But so far neither phosphorus nor any
other n-type dopant has demonstrated exactly the right electrical
properties, according to Butler. Butler, Jacques Chevallier of the
Laboratoire de Physique des Solides et de
Cristallogénèse, in Meudon, France, and their colleagues
recently reported that impregnating boron-doped CVD diamond with
deuterium yields n-type semiconducting diamond [Nat.
Mater., 2, 482
(2003)]. Despite this promising development, Angus--whose own lab is
doping CVD diamond with a combination of boron and sulfur to get n-type
semiconductivity--comments that "all of the n-type work, including
ours, is interesting in a scientific sense but not yet practical for
devices."
The payoff for such work is potentially
huge: Today's microchips are running hotter and hotter because more and
more transistors are being crammed onto them. If the trend continues,
silicon may not be able to take the heat. Diamond could be the perfect
solution.
Despite its superior combination of
electrical, optical, thermal, and chemical properties, though, diamond
may never totally replace silicon for two reasons: Silicon is both
cheap and firmly entrenched in the computer industry. Still, Reza
Abbaschian, a professor of materials science and engineering at the
University of Florida, Gainesville, whose lab helped to perfect
Gemesis' diamond-growing method, believes that "for certain specialized
applications, such as devices that run at high power or high
temperature, diamond may be just the ticket."
COVER STORY
THE MANY FACETS OF MAN-MADE DIAMONDS
Synthetic diamond makers are targeting the gem market first, but their
product could transform many other industries, too
IMPROVING
ON NATURE
Heat Treatment And Chemical Additives Make More Mundane Stones Look
Like Rare Gems
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WHODUNIT
First Diamond Synthesis: 50 Years Later, A Murky Picture Of Who
Deserves Credit
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Chemical
& Engineering News
Copyright © 2004 American Chemical Society
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