1. Ultrathick, low-stress nanostructured diamond films.
- Author
-
Kucheyev, S. O., Biener, J., Tringe, J. W., Wang, Y. M., Mirkarimi, P. B., van Buuren, T., Baker, S. L., Hamza, A. V., Brühne, K., and Fecht, H.-J.
- Subjects
- *
CHEMICAL vapor deposition , *NANOSTRUCTURES , *CHEMICAL bonds , *SURFACE roughness , *MICROCRYSTALLINE polymers , *BACKSCATTERING - Abstract
We describe a hot-filament chemical vapor deposition process for growing freestanding nanostructured diamond films, ∼80 μm thick, with residual tensile stress levels ≲90 MPa. We characterize the film microstructure, mechanical properties, chemical bond distribution, and elemental composition. Results show that our films are nanostructured with columnar grain diameters of ≲150 nm and a highly variable grain length along the growth direction of ∼50–1500 nm. These films have a rms surface roughness of ≲200 nm for a 300×400 μm2 scan, which is about one order of magnitude lower than the roughness of typical microcrystalline diamond films of comparable thickness. Soft x-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy indicates a large percentage of sp3 bonding in the films, consistent with a high hardness of 66 GPa. Nanoindentation and XANES results are also consistent with a high phase and elemental purity of the films, directly measured by x-ray and electron diffraction, Rutherford backscattering spectrometry, and elastic recoil detection analysis. Cross-sectional transmission electron microscopy reveals a large density of planar defects within the grains, suggesting a high rate of secondary nucleation during film growth. These films represent a new class of smooth, ultrathick nanostructured diamond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF