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Applications of Single Crystal CVD DiamondThe desire for electronic devices with higher power throughput, wider frequency bandwidth and higher operational temperatures is driving research and development of new semiconductors. One such area of research is wide band gap materials. Diamond is extreme in this group of materials (which includes SiC, ZnO and GaN), having a direct band gap of 7.5 eV, an indirect gap of 5.5 eV and a room temperature thermal conductivity in excess of 2000 W/m/K. Diamond electronic devices, such as power diodes and highfrequency field effect transistors, are expected to deliver outstanding performance due to the material.s excellent intrinsic properties such as high carrier mobilities and high breakdown field. However, the development of diamond electronics has been hampered by several problems including a lack of shallow dopants, heteroepitaxy as a route to large area single crystal growth, low crystal quality and poor consistency of synthetic material. We will report recent results on the fabrication and characterization of device quality single crystal CVD diamond. These results show, not only that material can be fabricated with performance that matches the very best natural diamond, but also that key properties such as the mobility and lifetime of the carriers, far exceed expectations. It has been lack of material quality that has limited diamond.s progress in the past, making it a minority player against SiC and GaN. However, the figures of merit now demonstrated for diamond are so extreme that the material should be re-examined as an ideal material for the most demanding power electronics and switching applications.
Document ID
20030068607
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Abstract
Authors
Daniel J Twitchen
(Element Six Ltd. Berkshire, United Kingdom)
Geoffrey A Scarsbrook
(Element Six Ltd. Berkshire, United Kingdom)
Andrew J Whitehead
(Element Six Ltd. Berkshire, United Kingdom)
Chris Wort
(Element Six Ltd. Berkshire, United Kingdom)
Steve E Coe
(Element Six Ltd. Berkshire, United Kingdom)
Jan Isberg
(Uppsala University Uppsala, Sweden)
Date Acquired
August 21, 2013
Publication Date
August 1, 2003
Publication Information
Publication: Proceedings of the Seventh Applied Diamond Conference/Third Frontier Carbon Technology Joint Conference
Publisher: National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Subject Category
Electronics and Electrical Engineering
Report/Patent Number
NASA/CP-2003-212319
Meeting Information
Meeting: 3rd Frontier Carbon Technology (FCT) Joint Conference
Location: Tsukuba
Country: JP
Start Date: August 18, 2003
End Date: August 21, 2003
Sponsors: Nippon Institute of Technology, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Glenn Research Center
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.

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