Unusually high thermal conductivity in diamond films
Abstract
Chemical-vapor-deposited (CVD) polycrystalline diamond films have recently been reported with a thermal conductivity that is only 25% less than that of high quality single-crystal natural diamond. By studying a series of such films of various thicknesses grown under virtually identical conditions, we have discovered a significant (factor of four) through the thickness gradient in thermal conductivity. The observed gradient is attributed mainly to phonon scattering by the roughly cone-shaped columnar microstructure. For 350 μm films, the material near the top (growth) surface has a conductivity of at least 21 W/cm °C, i.e., comparable to the best single crystals. This remarkable dependence of thermal conductivity on microstructure has important implications for thermal management of microelectronic devices using CVD diamond.
- Publication:
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Applied Physics Letters
- Pub Date:
- March 1992
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1992ApPhL..60.1576G
- Keywords:
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- Diamonds;
- Polycrystals;
- Thermal Conductivity;
- Thin Films;
- Vapor Deposition;
- Crystal Growth;
- Grain Size;
- Microelectronics;
- Microstructure;
- Single Crystals;
- Solid-State Physics