| Literature DB >> 33260474 |
Kazimierz Fabisiak1, Szymon Łoś1, Kazimierz Paprocki1, Mirosław Szybowicz2, Janusz Winiecki3,4, Anna Dychalska2.
Abstract
Point defects, impurities, and defect-impurity complexes in diamond microcrystals were studied with the cathodoluminescence (CL) spectroscopy in the scanning electron microscope, photoluminescence (PL), and Raman spectroscopy (RS). Such defects can influence the directions that microcrystals are grown. Micro-diamonds were obtained by a hot-filament chemical vapor deposition (HF CVD) technique from the methane-hydrogen gas mixture. The CL spectra of diamond microcrystals taken from (100) and (111) crystallographic planes were compared to the CL spectrum of a (100) oriented Element Six diamond monocrystal. The following color centers were identified: 2.52, 2.156, 2.055 eV attributed to a nitrogen-vacancy complex and a violet-emitting center (A-band) observed at 2.82 eV associated with dislocation line defects, whose atomic structure is still under discussion. The Raman studies showed that the planes (111) are more defective in comparison to (100) planes. What is reflected in the CL spectra as (111) shows a strong band in the UV region (2.815 eV) which is not observed in the case of the (100) plane.Entities:
Keywords: Raman spectroscopy; cathodoluminescence; defects concentration; diamond point defects; photoluminescence
Year: 2020 PMID: 33260474 PMCID: PMC7730111 DOI: 10.3390/ma13235446
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Diamond microcrystals: (a) (100) plane, (b) (111) plane. The + sign indicates places from which the cathodoluminescence CL spectrum were taken.
Figure 2The recorded CL and photoluminescence (PL) spectra respectively for: (a,b) Element Six monocrystal, the spectra were taken from the plane (100); (c,d) hot filament chemical vapor deposition (HF CVD) microcrystal, the spectra were taken from the (100) plane; and (e,f) the spectra were taken from the (111) plane.
The observed color centers in the CL and PL spectra.
| Peak Assignment | Energy | Element Six | HF CVD | HF CVD |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GR1 is thought to consist of a vacancy | 1.675 | No | Yes | Yes |
| Center observed in synthetic diamonds. | 1.797 | No | Yes | No |
| This defect can strongly affects the | 1.881 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Nitrogen-linked centers can exist in | 1.947 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| H3 (NVN) | 2.001 | Yes | No | No |
| This center is attributed generally | 2.055 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Nitrogen with neutral | 2.156 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| In CVD diamond it results | 2.418 | Yes | No | No |
| Defect of uncertain structure (some- | 2.551 | No | No | Yes |
| A-band attributed to lattice | 2.815 | No | Yes | Yes |
Figure 3The Raman spectra for Element Six diamond monocrystal, and spectra taken from (100) and (111) planes of HF CVD diamond microcrystals.