A micro-IBIC comparison between natural and CVD diamond

1997 
Abstract Micro-IBIC (ion beam-induced current) by means of a proton microbeam is a powerful tool for mapping the distribution of charge collection lengths at the surface and in the bulk of diamond samples. Up to now, an evident correspondence between the morphological columnar structure of chemical vapour-deposited (CVD) diamond and the “stripy” shape of IBIC maps has been found. This points out the presence of a microcrystalline “electric” structure and the harmful effects of defects associated to grain boundaries on transport properties. In this work we present for the first time a comparison between micro-IBIC maps of cross-sections of a natural IIa diamond and maps obtained in CVD diamond samples. In natural IIa diamond, IBIC maps are homogeneous and the global IBIC spectrum is peaked at a mean collection efficiency of about 10% at an electric field of 7500 V cm −1 . Strong irradiation produces a uniform increase of the mean collection length in natural IIa diamond whereas, in CVD diamond, it produces an homogenisation of the space charge with an increase of the counting rate without any evident increase of the average collection length.
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