Diamond is
the hardest material in nature. But out of many expectations, it also has great
potential as an excellent electronic material. A joint research team led by
City University of Hong Kong (CityU) has demonstrated for the first time the
large, uniform tensile elastic straining of microfabricated diamond arrays
through the nanomechanical approach. Their findings have shown the potential of
strained diamonds as prime candidates for advanced functional devices in
microelectronics, photonics, and quantum information technologies.
The
research was co-led by Dr Lu Yang, Associate Professor in the Department of
Mechanical Engineering (MNE) at CityU and researchers from Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT) and Harbin Institute of Technology (HIT). Their
findings have been recently published in the prestigious scientific journal
Science ("Achieving large uniform tensile elasticity in microfabricated
diamon").
"This
is the first time showing the extremely large, uniform elasticity of diamond by
tensile experiments. Our findings demonstrate the possibility of developing
electronic devices through 'deep elastic strain engineering' of microfabricated
diamond structures," said Dr Lu.
Diamond:
"Mount Everest" of electronic materials
Well known
for its hardness, industrial applications of diamonds are usually cutting,
drilling, or grinding. But diamond is also considered as a high-performance
electronic and photonic material due to its ultra-high thermal conductivity,
exceptional electric charge carrier mobility, high breakdown strength and
ultra-wide bandgap. Bandgap is a key property in semi-conductor, and wide
bandgap allows operation of high-power or high-frequency devices. "That's
why diamond can be considered as 'Mount Everest' of electronic materials,
possessing all these excellent properties," Dr Lu said.
However,
the large bandgap and tight crystal structure of diamond make it difficult to
"dope", a common way to modulate the semi-conductors' electronic
properties during production, hence hampering the diamond's industrial
application in electronic and optoelectronic devices. A potential alternative
is by "strain engineering", that is to apply very large lattice
strain, to change the electronic band structure and associated functional
properties. But it was considered as "impossible" for diamond due to
its extremely high hardness.
Then in
2018, Dr Lu and his collaborators discovered that, surprisingly, nanoscale
diamond can be elastically bent with unexpected large local strain. This
discovery suggests the change of physical properties in diamond through elastic
strain engineering can be possible. Based on this, the latest study showed how
this phenomenon can be utilized for developing functional diamond devices.
Uniform
tensile straining across the sample
The team
firstly microfabricated single-crystalline diamond samples from a solid diamond
single crystals. The samples were in bridge-like shape - about one micrometre
long and 300 nanometres wide, with both ends wider for gripping (See image:
Tensile straining of diamond bridges). The diamond bridges were then uniaxially
stretched in a well-controlled manner within an electron microscope. Under
cycles of continuous and controllable loading-unloading of quantitative tensile
tests, the diamond bridges demonstrated a highly uniform, large elastic
deformation of about 7.5% strain across the whole gauge section of the
specimen, rather than deforming at a localized area in bending. And they
recovered their original shape after unloading.
By further
optimizing the sample geometry using the American Society for Testing and
Materials (ASTM) standard, they achieved a maximum uniform tensile strain of up
to 9.7%, which even surpassed the maximum local value in the 2018 study, and
was close to the theoretical elastic limit of diamond. More importantly, to
demonstrate the strained diamond device concept, the team also realized elastic
straining of microfabricated diamond arrays.
Tuning the
bandgap by elastic strains
The team
then performed density functional theory (DFT) calculations to estimate the
impact of elastic straining from 0 to 12% on the diamond's electronic
properties. The simulation results indicated that the bandgap of diamond
generally decreased as the tensile strain increased, with the largest bandgap
reduction rate down from about 5 eV to 3 eV at around 9% strain along a
specific crystalline orientation. The team performed an electron energy-loss
spectroscopy analysis on a pre-strained diamond sample and verified this
bandgap decreasing trend.
Their
calculation results also showed that, interestingly, the bandgap could change
from indirect to direct with the tensile strains larger than 9% along another
crystalline orientation. Direct bandgap in semi-conductor means an electron can
directly emit a photon, allowing many optoelectronic applications with higher
efficiency.
These
findings are an early step in achieving deep elastic strain engineering of
microfabricated diamonds. By nanomechanical approach, the team demonstrated
that the diamond's band structure can be changed, and more importantly, these
changes can be continuous and reversible, allowing different applications, from
micro/nanoelectromechanical systems (MEMS/NEMS), strain-engineered transistors,
to novel optoelectronic and quantum technologies. "I believe a new era for
diamond is ahead of us," said Dr Lu.