Nanodiamonds for device applications: An investigation of the properties of boron-doped detonation nanodiamonds

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Abstract

The inclusion of boron within nanodiamonds to create semiconducting properties would create a new class of applications in the field of nanodiamond electronics. Theoretical studies have differed in their conclusions as to whether nm-scale NDs would support a stable substitutional boron state, or whether such a state would be unstable, with boron instead aggregating or attaching to edge structures. In the present study detonation-derived NDs with purposefully added boron during the detonation process have been studied with a wide range of experimental techniques. The DNDs are of ~4 nm in size, and have been studied with CL, PL, Raman and IR spectroscopies, AFM and HR-TEM and electrically measured with impedance spectroscopy; it is apparent that the B-DNDs studied here do indeed support substitutional boron species and hence will be acting as semiconducting diamond nanoparticles. Evidence for moderate doping levels in some particles (∼1017 B cm-3), is found alongside the observation that some particles are heavily doped (∼1020 B cm-3) and likely to be quasi-metallic in character. The current study has therefore shown that substitutional boron doping in nm NDs is in fact possible, opening-up the path to a whole host of new applications for this interesting class of nano-particles.

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Afandi, A., Howkins, A., Boyd, I. W., & Jackman, R. B. (2018). Nanodiamonds for device applications: An investigation of the properties of boron-doped detonation nanodiamonds. Scientific Reports, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-21670-w

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