Thermal conductivity of diamond between 170 and 1200 K and the isotope effect
Abstract
Measurements on the thermal conductivity of natural and synthetic single-crystal diamond are presented over a wide temperature range. The large isotope effect reported previously has been confirmed. The data have been analyzed using both the Debye model of thermal conductivity, which ignores the N processes, and the Callaway model in the limit that the N processes dominate the phonon scattering. It is found that the observed isotope effect can be accounted for by including the N processes alone, without having to postulate the existence of additional defects.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review B
- Pub Date:
- June 1993
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevB.47.14850
- Bibcode:
- 1993PhRvB..4714850O
- Keywords:
-
- 66.70.+f;
- 63.20.Mt;
- 63.20.Hp;
- Nonelectronic thermal conduction and heat-pulse propagation in solids;
- thermal waves;
- Phonon-defect interactions