• Title/Summary/Keyword: Chemical vapor deposition of Diamond

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Diamond Film Deposition by Microwave Plasma CVD Using a Mixture of $CH_4$, $H_2$, $O_2$, (마이크로웨이브 플라즈마 화학증착법에 의해 메탄, 수소, 산소의 혼합가스로부터 다이아몬드 박막의 합성)

  • 이길용;제정호
    • Journal of the Korean Ceramic Society
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    • v.27 no.4
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    • pp.513-520
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    • 1990
  • Diamond film was deposited on Si wafer substrate from a gas mixture of methane, hydrogen and oxygen by microwave plasma-assisted chemical vapor deposition. The effects of the pre-treatments of the substrate and of the oxygen addition on the diamond film synthesis are described. In order to obtain diamond film, the substrate was pre-treated with 3 kinds of methods. When the substrate was ultrasonically vibrated within the ethyl alcohol dispersed with 25${\mu}{\textrm}{m}$ diamond powder, the denset diamond film was deposited. Addition of oxygen in the gas mixture of methane and hydrogen improved the crystallinity of the deposited diamond film and also increased the deposition rate of the diamond film more than two times.

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Role of Charge Produced by the Gas Activation in the CVD Diamond Process

  • Hwang, Nong-Moon;Park, Hwang-Kyoon;Suk Joong L. Kang
    • The Korean Journal of Ceramics
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    • v.3 no.1
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    • pp.5-12
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    • 1997
  • Charged carbon clusters which are formed by the gas activation are suggested to be responsible for the formation of the metastable diamond film. The number of carbon atoms in the cluster that can reverse the stability between diamond and graphite by the capillary effect increases sensitively with increasing the surface energy ratio of graphite to diamond. The gas activation process produces charges such as electrons and ions, which are energetically the strong heterogeneous nucleation sites for the supersaturated carbon vapor, leading to the formation of the charged clusters. Once the carbon clusters are charged, the surface energy of diamond can be reduced by the electrical double layer while that of graphite cannot because diamond is dielectric and graphite is conducting. The unusual phenomena observed in the chemical vapor deposition diamond process can be successfully approached by the charged cluster model. These phenomena include the diamond deposition with the simultaneous graphite etching, which is known as the thermodynamic paradox and the preferential formation of diamond on the convex edge, which is against the well-established concept of the heterogeneous nucleation.

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Fabrication of Diamoud Thin Films using RF Plasma (RF 플라즈마를 이용한 다이아몬드 박막의 제조)

  • 신재균;현준원
    • Journal of the Korean institute of surface engineering
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    • v.31 no.3
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    • pp.165-170
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    • 1998
  • Deposition of diamond on silicon substrates has been performed by RF HPCVD (Helicon Plasma Chemical Vapor Deposition) from methane-hydrogen gas mixture. Growth properties and deposition condition conditions have been studies as functions of substrate temperature ($750^{\circ}C$~$850^{\circ}C$). Si p-type (100) wafers were used as a substrate. The chharecterizations of the gaind thin films by SEM, AFM and Raman seattring are diamond crystallites which include disordered graphit.

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The Growth of Diamond-Like-Carbon (DLC) Film by PECVD and the Characterization (PECVD에 의한 DLC 박막의 성장과 그 특성 조사)

  • 조재원;김태환;김대욱;최성수
    • Journal of the Korean Vacuum Society
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    • v.7 no.3
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    • pp.248-254
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    • 1998
  • DLC(Diamond-Like-Carbon) thin film, one of the solid state amorphous carbon films, has been deposited by the method of PECVD (Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition). The structural features have been characterized using both FT-IR Spectroscopy and Raman Scattering. The film is considered to consist of microcrystalline diamond domains and graphitelike carbon domains, which are interconnected by hydrogenated $sp^3$ tetrahedral carbons. This shows a good agreement with the results by I-Vmeasurements. In I-Vstudy, the sudden increase of current has been observed and this phenomenon is understood to be due to the tunneling effect between graphitelike domains. A characteristic feature related to the $\beta$-SiC has been identified in the study of Raman Scattering for the very thin film, which suggests that a buffer layer forms at the interface of the Si substrate and the carbon film.

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Synthesis of White Diamond Thin Film by Microwave Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition Method

  • Kim, S.H.;Y.S.ppark;Lee, J-W.;Song, S.A.
    • Proceedings of the Korean Vacuum Society Conference
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    • 1994.02a
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    • pp.98-101
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    • 1994
  • white diamond thin film, which should be compposed of almost ppure diamond, could be successfully obtained under high ppressure conditions(above 150 Torr) by means of MppECVD(microwave pplasma enhanced chemical vappor depposition, ASTeX 1.5 kW). Characteristics of the films with varing expperimental pparameters have been examined. From the expperimental results, we will discuss the surface morpphology and the growth mechanism of the films.

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Diamond Crystal Growth Behavior by Hot Filament Chemical Vapor Deposition According to Pretreatment Conditions

  • Song, Chang Weon;You, Mi Young;Lee, Damin;Mun, Hyoung Seok;Kim, Seohan;Song, Pung Keun
    • Journal of the Korean institute of surface engineering
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    • v.53 no.5
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    • pp.241-248
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    • 2020
  • The change of the deposition behavior of diamond through a pretreatment process of the base metal prior to diamond deposition using HFCVD was investigated. To improve the specific surface area of the base material, sanding was performed using sandblasting first, and chemical etching treatment was performed to further improve the uniform specific surface area. Chemical etching was performed by immersing the base material in HCl solutions with various etching time. Thereafter, seeding was performed by immersing the sanded and etched base material in a diamond seeding solution. Diamond deposition according to all pretreatment conditions was performed under the same conditions. Methane was used as the carbon source and hydrogen was used as the reaction gas. The most optimal conditions were found by analyzing the improvement of the specific surface area and uniformity, and the optimal diamond seeding solution concentration and immersion time were also obtained for the diamond particle seeding method. As a result, the sandblasted base material was immersed in 20% HCl for 60 minutes at 100 ℃ and chemically etched, and then immersed in a diamond seeding solution of 5 g/L and seeded using ultrasonic waves for 30 minutes. It was possible to obtain optimized economical diamond film growth rates.

Synthesis of transparent diamond-like carbon film on the glass by radio-frequency plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (RF-PECVD법에 의한 투명 다이아몬드상 탄소 박막 합성)

  • Kim, Tae-Gyu;Shin, Yeong-Ho;Cho, Hyun;Kim, Jin-Kon
    • Journal of the Korean Crystal Growth and Crystal Technology
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    • v.22 no.4
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    • pp.190-193
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    • 2012
  • Transparent diamond-like carbon (DLC) films were synthesized on glass using radio frequency plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition method from the gas mixture of $CH_4$, $SiH_4$ and Ar. The pressure, the rf-power, $CH_4/SiH_4/Ar$ ratio, and the deposition time were 0.1Torr, 100W, 20 : 1 : 1, and 20 min, respectively. The optical transmittances of DLC-deposited glass and uncoated glass were compared with each other in the visible light regions. The DLC-deposited glass showed transmittance of approximately 83 % and 95 % as compared to the uncoated glass for the wavelength of 380 nm and 500 nm, respectively. The hardness and roughness of DLC-coated glass have been measured by nanoindentation and AFM, respectively. The DLC-coated glass showed a little less or similar optical transmittance compared to the uncoated glass, while the hardness of DLC-coated glass was 2.5 times higher than that of the uncoated glass. The deposited DLC film had the very smooth surface and was thicker than 150 nm after deposition for 20 min.

Solid Particle Erosion of CVD Diamond (CVD 다이아몬드 코팅의 고체입자 Erosion 특성)

  • 김종훈;임대순
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Tribologists and Lubrication Engineers Conference
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    • 1997.04a
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    • pp.69-73
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    • 1997
  • Microwave Plasma assisted CVD (Chemical Vapor Deposition) and DC Plasma CVD were used to prepare thin and thick diamond film, respectively. Diamond coated silicon nitride and fiee standing diamond thick film were eroded by silicon carbide particles. The velocity of the solid particle was about 220m/sec. Phase transformation and the other crack formation were investigated by using Raman spectroscopy and microscopy.

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Diamond thin film deposition on Ni in microwave plasma CVD (Microwave plasma CVD에서 Ni 기판에 다이아몬드 박막 증착)

  • Kim, Jin-Kon;Ryu, Su-Chak;Cho, Hyun
    • Journal of the Korean Crystal Growth and Crystal Technology
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    • v.12 no.6
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    • pp.311-316
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    • 2002
  • Two different approaches, namely two-step deposition process and Bias-Enhanced Nucleation (BEN) technique have been examined for deposition of high quality diamond thin film on polycrystalline Ni which has low chemical activity with the carbon neutrals provided from the $CH_4/H_2$mixtures. A two-step deposition process, consisted of pre-deposition of soot layer at lower temperatures and subsequent deposition at higher temperature condition, has been developed to deposit diamond layer directly on Ni substrate. Diamond particles were observed after deposition step at $925^{\circ}C$ for 5 hours and those particles seem to be nucleated from the soot layer pre-deposited at lower temperatures ($810^{\circ}C$). Diamond particles of a substantial size were found on Ni substrate after biasing -220 V for 10 minutes and subsequent deposition for 2 hours while no diamond particles were observed under the conditions without applied bias.