New method to use diamonds in optical Lasers

A team of EPFL researchers has developed an unconventional way of microscopically cutting diamonds into a particular shape and smoothing them at an atomic level.

160,000 Atlantic salmons escape from Washington fish farm

This new technique, presented at the International Conference on Diamond and Carbon Materials DCM2017 on 5 September. To manufacture diffraction gratings out of pure diamond. Unique properties ideal for both spectroscopy and the optical components used in high-powered lasers.

Optical diffraction gratings made out of pure diamond. Their surfaces smoothed down to the very last atom. These new devices used to alter the wavelength of high-powered lasers or in cutting-edge spectrographs

Diffraction gratings are parallel grooves that break up light into its spectral components, kind of like a prism. These gratings usually made of glass and silicon, materials that have already been used in spectrographs and to alter the color emitted by lasers.

The team, led by Niels Quack, a SNSF-funded professor at the School of Engineering, has now found a way to make these gratings out of single crystal diamond as well, opening up the field to an array of new possibilities. Diamonds unmatched in terms of their thermal conductivity. Between five and ten times greater than that of any other material used for this purpose.

Chemical Vapor Deposition


Diamonds are also extremely hard and work well with UV rays, as well as infrared and visible beams. "Diamonds are chemically inert, which means that even the most aggressive chemical substances can"t attack them. But it also means that they are very difficult to machine," explains Dr. Quack. "So this new way of carving diamonds could prove very useful."

The technique developed by the researchers is groundbreaking because it allows them to etch well defined shapes into millimeter sized single-crystal diamond plates, with the grooves separated by just a few microns and with incredibly smooth surfaces. To develop their technique, the researchers used diamonds created synthetically through chemical vapor deposition.

The diamonds etched in several stages. First, a hard mask deposited and structured on the surface of a diamond plate. Then exposed to an oxygen plasma. The oxygen ions in the plasma accelerated onto the surface of the diamond by an electric field.

Moreover, the oxygen ions remove carbon atoms from the diamond"s surface one by one. "By adjusting the intensity of the electric field, we can alter the shape we etch into the diamond," explains Dr. Quack.

For the diffraction gratings, we carve out triangular grooves that are just a few microns apart from each other. We adjust the process parameters to selectively reveal a set of well-defined crystal planes.

Secrets to New source for brain’s development found

Allowing to create V-shaped grooves that are smoothed down almost to the atomic level. It is impossible to get this kind of precision when the diamonds are simply cut with a laser.

 

Comments