Bulk electronic properties of diamond
Christoph E. Nebel

TL;DR
This review discusses the electronic properties of diamond, highlighting its high carrier mobilities, doping behaviors, and potential for high-temperature electronic applications due to its insulating nature and semiconducting doping characteristics.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive overview of diamond's electronic properties, emphasizing trends, limitations, and the potential for future electronic device applications.
Findings
Undoped diamond is an insulator with very low conductivity.
Doping with boron or phosphorus makes diamond semiconducting.
High carrier mobilities (>20,000 cm2/Vs at 80 K) are limited by phonon scattering.
Abstract
A review of electronic properties of insulating-, boron- and phosphorus-doped diamond is given. The main goal is, to show data in a wider context, to reveal trends and limitations with respect to carrier mobilities, conductivities, p- and n-type doping. Undoped diamond is an insulator with conductivities significantly smaller than 10^-17 Ohmcm at room temperature. Mostly, these insulating films show conductivity activation energies of 1.7 eV, an indication that small amounts of substitutional nitrogen dominates the Fermi-level. The electron and hole mobilities are very high (> 20.000 cm2/Vs at T = 80 K) and are limited by acoustic phonon scattering. By phosphorus and boron doping diamond becomes semiconducting with an n-type donor activation energy (phosphorus) of 600 meV and an acceptor activation energy (boron) of 370 meV. Both dopands are hydrogen-like in nature. Due to the deep…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiamond and Carbon-based Materials Research · High-pressure geophysics and materials · Electronic and Structural Properties of Oxides
