1. Effect of LPHT annealing on interface characteristics between HPHT Ib diamond substrates and homoepitaxial CVD diamond layers
- Author
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Zhao Yun, Tu Juping, Siwu Shao, Chen Liangxian, Wei Junjun, Liu Jinlong, Xiaohua Zhu, and Chengming Li
- Subjects
Photoluminescence ,Materials science ,Hydrogen ,Annealing (metallurgy) ,Mechanical Engineering ,Analytical chemistry ,Diamond ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Chemical vapor deposition ,engineering.material ,Condensed Matter Physics ,symbols.namesake ,chemistry ,Mechanics of Materials ,Impurity ,engineering ,symbols ,General Materials Science ,Raman spectroscopy ,Spectroscopy - Abstract
To study the interface characteristics between substrates and homoepitaxially grown single crystalline diamond layers, the high-pressure/high-temperature Ib diamond seeds with homoepitaxial diamond layers were annealed by low-pressure/high-temperature treatment in a hydrogen environment. The stress evolution and related impurity transformation near the interface were characterized by Raman spectroscopy, photoluminescence, and micro-infrared spectroscopy before and after annealing. It is found that the stress is the smallest in a 100 µm wide zone near the interface, accompanying with the similar change in substitutional nitrogen (Ns) concentration. After annealing at 1050 °C, 1250 °C, and 1450 °C, the local compressive stress is released gradually with temperature change. It is decreased by 1.03 GPa in maximum after annealing at 1450 °C. The concentration of nitrogen–vacancy (NV) complexes in the chemical vapor deposition (CVD) layer is dramatically reduced at 1450 °C. The value of ${{{I_{{\rm{N}}{{\rm{V}}^-}}}}/{{I_{{\rm{diamond}}}}}}$ decreases much more than ${{{I_{{\rm{N}}{{\rm{V}}^0}}}}/{{I_{{\rm{diamond}}}}}}$ in the CVD layer, which is due to the lower stability of NV− compared with NV0 at high temperature.
- Published
- 2020