Hole transport in single crystal synthetic diamond at low temperatures

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Abstract

Investigating the effects of local scattering mechanisms is of great importance to understand charge transport in semiconductors. This article reports measurements of the hole transport properties of boron-doped (100) single-crystalline chemical vapor deposited diamond. A Time-of-Flight measurement using a 213 nm, pulsed UV laser for excitation, was performed on high-purity single-crystalline diamonds to measure the hole drift velocity in the low-injection regime. The measurements were carried out in the temperature range 10-80 K. The results obtained are directly applicable to low-temperature detector applications. By comparing our data to Monte-Carlo simulations, a detailed understanding of the dominating hole scattering mechanisms is obtained. © 2013 AIP Publishing LLC.

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Majdi, S., Kovi, K. K., Hammersberg, J., & Isberg, J. (2013). Hole transport in single crystal synthetic diamond at low temperatures. Applied Physics Letters, 102(15). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4802449

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