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http://hdl.handle.net/1942/2520
Title: | Temperature dependence of intrinsic infrared absorption in natural and chemical-vapor deposited diamond | Authors: | Piccirillo, C Davies, G Mainwood, A. Scarle, S Penchina, CM Mollart, T. P. Lewis, KL NESLADEK, Milos REMES, Zdenek Pickles, CSJ |
Issue Date: | 2002 | Publisher: | AMER INST PHYSICS | Source: | JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS, 92(2). p. 756-763 | Abstract: | Empirical rules are derived that describe the temperature dependence of the infrared absorption spectra of pure diamond for photons of energy hnu=500-4000 cm(-1). We show that with increasing temperature in the range 14<T<850 K, all the features in the infrared spectrum shift to lower frequency at very similar fractional rates. The rate for all the features is, to +/-13%, Deltanu/nu=cn(E-e) where c=-0.027 and n(E-e) is the Bose-Einstein population factor with E-e=860 cm(-1). The intensities of the optical absorption involving the creation of two phonons of energies E-1 and E-2 are expected to increase with T in proportion to [1+n(E-1)][1+n(E-2)]. This expression, combined with the fractional shift rule for the energies of each mode, allows high temperature two-phonon spectra to be simulated accurately from a low temperature spectrum. The temperature dependence of the three-phonon band between 2665 and 3900 cm(-1) is precisely fitted without adjustable parameters by using the shift rule in conjunction with a modified density of three-phonon states. Absorption at 10.6 mum is shown to involve the simultaneous destruction and creation of phonons. Its strong temperature dependence in the range 300<T<800 K is accurately described, without any adjustable parameters, in terms of three main components: the destruction of one phonon of 335 cm(-1) and the creation of a second of 1275 cm(-1); the shift to lower energy of the phonons; and a three-phonon process involving the destruction of one and the creation of two phonons. The analysis demonstrates why diamond has to be effectively cooled when used for the windows of a high-power CO2 laser. (C) 2002 American Institute of Physics. | Notes: | Univ London Kings Coll, Dept Phys, London WC2R 2LS, England. QinetiQ, Malvern WR14 3PS, Worcs, England. Univ Limburg, Inst Mat Res, B-3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium. De Beers Ind Diamonds Ltd, Ascot SL5 8BP, Berks, England.Piccirillo, C, Univ London Kings Coll, Dept Phys, London WC2R 2LS, England. | Document URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/1942/2520 | ISSN: | 0021-8979 | e-ISSN: | 1089-7550 | ISI #: | 000176600000014 | Category: | A1 | Type: | Journal Contribution | Validations: | ecoom 2003 |
Appears in Collections: | Research publications |
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