Diamond synthesis by chemical vapor deposition: The early years

被引:35
作者
Angus, John C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Case Western Reserve Univ, Dept Chem & Biomol Engn, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA
关键词
History; Diamond synthesis; Chemical vapor deposition; Metastable synthesis; Diamond crystal; Diamond film; ION-BEAM DEPOSITION; GAS-PHASE; POLYCRYSTALLINE DIAMOND; THIN-FILMS; LOW-ENERGY; EPITAXIAL SYNTHESIS; MICROWAVE PLASMA; GROWTH-MECHANISM; SEED CRYSTALS; LOW-PRESSURE;
D O I
10.1016/j.diamond.2014.08.004
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
In the two decades following World War II there was a great surge in interest in high-pressure diamond synthesis, especially in Sweden, the United States and the Soviet Union. It is less well known that during this time major efforts were also made in low-pressure, metastable growth of diamond. All of these efforts, both high and low pressure, were characterized by great secrecy and a considerable lack of transparency. General Electric made the first public announcement of successful high pressure-high temperature diamond synthesis in 1955. The first reports of low-pressure diamond syntheses in the open literature were in 1962 (Eversole; Union Carbide Corporation) in 1968 (Angus et al.; Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, and also in 1968 (Deryagin et al.; Physical Chemistry Institute, Moscow). In addition to skepticism about the veracity of these claims, a common view was that even if true, growth rates would always be far too slow to be of interest. Also, the apparent violation of thermodynamic laws was a continuing theme by many (but not all) during this time period. These attitudes changed dramatically in the early 1980s when the National Institute for Research in Inorganic Materials (NIRIM) in Japan (Kamo, Matsumoto, Sato, Setaka) announced diamond growth rates in the micron per hour range. The role of hydrogen in diamond synthesis was suggested in 1966 by Lander and Morrison at Bell Labs. An understanding of the critical role of atomic hydrogen grew incrementally, through sequential growth-cleaning cycles (Angus, Gardner) and culminating in its using during growth by the Moscow group (Deryagin, Fedoseev, Polanskaya, Spitsyn, Varnin, et al.). (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:77 / 86
页数:10
相关论文
共 135 条
[1]   ION-BEAM DEPOSITION OF THIN FILMS OF DIAMONDLIKE CARBON [J].
AISENBERG, S ;
CHABOT, R .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS, 1971, 42 (07) :2953-+
[2]  
Amato I., 1997, STUFF MAT WORLD IS M
[3]  
Angus J.C., 1974, P INT C APPL SYNTH D, P30
[4]  
Angus J. C., 1994, ELEC SOC S, P21
[5]  
Angus J.C., 1966, AIR FORCE CAMBRIDGE, P66
[6]  
Angus J.C., 1960, DIAMOND SYNTHESIS LO
[7]   CHEMICAL VAPOR-DEPOSITION OF DIAMOND [J].
ANGUS, JC ;
ARGOITIA, A ;
GAT, R ;
LI, Z ;
SUNKARA, M ;
WANG, L ;
WANG, Y .
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON SERIES A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES, 1993, 342 (1664) :195-208
[8]   TWINNING AND FACETING IN EARLY STAGES OF DIAMOND GROWTH BY CHEMICAL VAPOR-DEPOSITION [J].
ANGUS, JC ;
SUNKARA, M ;
SAHAIDA, SR ;
GLASS, JT .
JOURNAL OF MATERIALS RESEARCH, 1992, 7 (11) :3001-3009
[9]   LOW-PRESSURE, METASTABLE GROWTH OF DIAMOND AND DIAMONDLIKE PHASES [J].
ANGUS, JC ;
HAYMAN, CC .
SCIENCE, 1988, 241 (4868) :913-921
[10]   GROWTH OF DIAMOND SEED CRYSTALS BY VAPOR DEPOSITION [J].
ANGUS, JC ;
WILL, HA ;
STANKO, WS .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS, 1968, 39 (06) :2915-&