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Fast growth, purity may multiply uses. (Better-Built Diamonds).


Although researchers have been getting better at making artificial diamonds for a half century, they haven't yet made the crystals as big or as pure as some diamond visionaries would like. Yet large natural diamonds that make beautiful jewelry are neither pure enough nor cheap enough for the more demanding requirements of technology developers. Artificial diamonds may soon make the grade, two new studies suggest.

A Swedish-English research group has now fabricated the purest diamonds ever made or found, hastening the prospect of a new class of rugged and more capable microchips made from diamond. Another group, based in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , claims to have devised a way to grow high-quality diamonds up to 100 times faster than typical growth rates Growth Rates

The compounded annualized rate of growth of a company's revenues, earnings, dividends, or other figures.

Notes:
Remember, historically high growth rates don't always mean a high rate of growth looking into the future.
. The fast-growth technique promises to make large, high-quality diamonds affordable for certain uses in science and industry. Among those would be exceptionally large so-called diamond anvils for testing materials at ultrahigh ul·tra·high  
adj.
Exceedingly high: an ultrahigh vacuum. 
 pressures (SN: 6/2/01, p. 349).

Aside from their luster and hardness, diamonds boast other properties that make them desirable to industry. For instance, diamond is a semiconductor--the same type of material as silicon, upon which modern electronics is based.

Manufacturers have long made artificial diamonds by pressing graphite at high temperature and pressure. Although clear and hard, the resulting diamonds are typically not much bigger than sesame seeds and too riddled with impurities and crystalline defects for use in electronics.

In their new work, the two teams wedded the heat-and-press method with another well-established diamond-growing technique known as chemical-vapor deposition. In that low-pressure technique, hot, carbon-containing gases condense con·dense  
v. con·densed, con·dens·ing, con·dens·es

v.tr.
1. To reduce the volume or compass of.

2. To make more concise; abridge or shorten.

3. Physics
a.
 and react on a hard surface to form a thin coating of diamond. Both groups used diamonds created in presses as the deposition surface in the vapor chamber.

Combining the two methods has been done before. What's new, both groups claim, is the precision with which they've controlled the deposition process to achieve their ends.

In the Swedish-English experiments, the result is diamonds up to a few tenths of a carat, but so pure that they allow electrons and other electric-charge carriers to pass through with startling star·tle  
v. star·tled, star·tling, star·tles

v.tr.
1. To cause to make a quick involuntary movement or start.

2. To alarm, frighten, or surprise suddenly. See Synonyms at frighten.
 ease. The scientists, of the ABB n. 1. Among weavers, yarn for the warp. Hence, abb wool is wool for the abb s>.

Noun 1. ABB - an urban hit squad and guerrilla group of the Communist Party in the Philippines; formed in the 1980s
 Group Services Center in Vasteras, Sweden, and De Beers Industrial Diamonds in Ascot, England, report their accomplishment in the Sept. 6 Science.

"This paper is ... a major breakthrough," comments James E. Butler of the Naval Research Laboratory Noun 1. Naval Research Laboratory - the United States Navy's defense laboratory that conducts basic and applied research for the Navy in a variety of scientific and technical disciplines
NRL
 in Washington, D.C. "It says we're now making diamond better than nature," he adds.

To speed up crystal growth, Chih-shiue Yan of the Carnegie Institution of Washington The introduction to this article may be too long. Please help improve the introduction by moving some material from it into the body of the article according to the suggestions at  (D.C.) and his colleagues boosted both the heat and pressure of the deposition process and pumped in nitrogen. Yan and his colleagues report their method in an upcoming issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. .

The growth rate they attained "is a very big achievement," says Dennis D. Klug of the National Research Council of Canada The National Research Council Canada (NRC) is Canada's leading organization for scientific research and development. History
NRC was established in 1916, mainly to advise the government. Then, in the early 1930s, laboratories were built in Ottawa.
 in Ottawa, Ontario. The team already has grown flaw-riddled test diamonds up to 5 carats, but it is shooting to create top-notch diamonds on the scale of 100 carats.

However, says Steven E. Coe of De Beers, a coauthor of the Science report, the small diamonds already in hand from his team's new technique are sufficiently large for making electronic components for niche markets. He predicts that those would include high-power, high-voltage devices used in trains, radar systems, and electric-power-grid circuits.
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Title Annotation:artificial diamonds
Author:Weiss, P.
Publication:Science News
Date:Sep 14, 2002
Words:561
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