Crystallization of HPHT diamond crystals in a floatage system under the influence of nitrogen and hydrogen simultaneously

Employing floatage as a driving force for diamond growth, the crystallization of diamond crystals in a Fe-Cr-C system co-doped with nitrogen and hydrogen elements is established at a static pressure of ~6.5 GPa and a temperature range of 1335-1485 °C. Under the influence of nitrogen and hydrogen inc...

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Veröffentlicht in:CrystEngComm 2015-01, Vol.17 (34), p.654-6511
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Guofeng, Zheng, Youjin, Peng, Lizhi, Li, Zhanchang, Jia, Xiaopeng, Ma, Hongan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Employing floatage as a driving force for diamond growth, the crystallization of diamond crystals in a Fe-Cr-C system co-doped with nitrogen and hydrogen elements is established at a static pressure of ~6.5 GPa and a temperature range of 1335-1485 °C. Under the influence of nitrogen and hydrogen incorporated into the diamond structure simultaneously, a rich morphological diversity of diamond specimens is produced, such as hexagonal slice-shape, trapezoidal slice-shape, strip shape and triangular slice-shape crystals. Observation of the infrared spectra of the as-grown crystals indicates that a dramatic enhancement in the simultaneous incorporation of hydrogen and nitrogen atoms into the diamond structures is present in the strip-shape specimens, confirmed by the fact that relatively high absorption coefficients of the peaks at 1130 cm −1 , and 1344 cm −1 are accompanied with high absorption coefficients of the bands at 2850 cm −1 and 2920 cm −1 . Hydrogen-related absorption in the three-phonon region further indicates that hydrogen atoms exist in the diamond structures as sp 3 bonded -CH 2 - and -CH 3 group forms. At atmospheric pressure, these hydrogen-containing structures are rather stable and can sustain high temperatures of up to 1800 °C. Nitrogen donors are universally observed as an isolated substitutional form in the crystals, while minor paired-form nitrogen atoms are readily formed in the strip shape crystals or other crystals crystallized at higher temperature. Nitrogen and hydrogen co-doped diamond crystals were grown using a floatage system with FeCr acting as a solvent-metal.
ISSN:1466-8033
1466-8033
DOI:10.1039/c5ce01225b