Signature of high Tc around 25K in higher quality heavily boron-doped diamond
Hiroyuki Okazaki, Takanori Wakita, Takayuki Muro, Tetsuya Nakamura,, Yuji Muraoka, Takayoshi Yokoya, Shin-ichiro Kurihara, Hiroshi Kawarada, Tamio, Oguchi, and Yoshihiko Takano

TL;DR
This study reports the observation of superconductivity above 20 K in heavily boron-doped diamond films with improved crystallinity, suggesting potential for high Tc superconductivity in defect-free diamond.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that high-quality, heavily boron-doped diamond films exhibit superconductivity above 20 K, indicating the importance of crystallinity and doping control for higher Tc.
Findings
Superconductivity observed above 20 K in heavily B-doped diamond.
High crystallinity correlates with higher Tc.
Carrier mean free path and lifetime are longer in high-quality samples.
Abstract
Diamond has outstanding physical properties: the hardest known material, a wide band gap, the highest thermal conductivity, and a very high Debye temperature. In 2004, Ekimov et al. discovered that heavily boron-doped (B-doped) diamond becomes a superconductor around 4 K. Our group successfully controlled the boron concentration and synthesized homoepitaxially grown superconducting diamond films by a CVD method. By CVD method, we found that superconductivity appears when the boron concentration (nB) exceeds a metal-insulator transition concentration of 3.0x10^20 cm^-3 and its Tczero increases up to 7.4 K with increasing nB. We additionally elucidated that the holes formed at the valence band are responsible for the metallic states leading to superconductivity. The calculations predicted that the hole doping into the valence band induces strong attractive interaction and a rapid increase…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiamond and Carbon-based Materials Research · Metal and Thin Film Mechanics · Advanced Materials Characterization Techniques
