Title of article :
Measurements of Thermal Conductivity and Thermal Diffusivity of CVD Diamond
Author/Authors :
J. E. Graebner ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Abstract :
The thermal conductivity K of natural, gem-quality diamond, which can be as
high as 2500 Wm~1 K-1 at 25°C, is the highest of any known material. Synthetic
diamond grown by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) of films up to 1 mm
thick exhibits generally lower values of K, but under optimal growth conditions
it can rival gem-quality diamond with values up to 2200 Wm~1 K - 1 . However,
it is polycrystalline and exhibits a columnar microstructure. Measurements on
free-standing CVD diamond, with a thickness in the range 25-400/im, reveal a
strong gradient in thermal conductivity as a function of position z from the
substrate surface as well as a pronounced anisotropy with respect to z. The temperature
dependence of K in the range 4 to 400 K has been analyzed to determine
the types and numbers of phonon scattering ceInters as a function of z. The
defect structure, and therefore the thermal conductivity, are both correlated with
the microstructure. Because of the high conductivity of diamond, these samples
are thermally thin. For example, laser flash data for a 25-fim-thick diamond
sample is expected to be virtually the same as laser flash data for a 1-um-thick
fused silica sample. Several of the techniques described here for diamond are
therefore applicable to much thinner samples of more ordinary material.
Keywords :
chemical vapor deposition (CVD) diamond , phonon scattering , specific heat , thermal conductivity , thermal diffusivity
Journal title :
International Journal of Thermophysics
Journal title :
International Journal of Thermophysics