A modification of Ångström’s method that employs photothermal radiometry to measure thermal diffusivity: Application to chemical vapor deposited diamond

1998 
A modification of the one dimensional Angstrom’s method that employs photothermal radiometry has been used to determine the longitudinal thermal diffusivity of three thin long bars of chemical vapor deposited diamond. Long bar specimens permit us to use a simple one-dimensional treatment that employs a linear least squares fitting procedure on both magnitude and phase data as a function of position, provided that the condition for ignoring end effects is fulfilled. Any differences in diffusivities obtained from magnitude data and from phase data can be attributed to surface heat losses; the values of diffusivity obtained with the two types of data showed no significant difference. The diffusivities obtained agree reasonably well with the mean values calculated from measurements made by several other laboratories on the same specimens. The heat source was the beam of an argon-ion laser focused onto the specimen surface either with a cylindrical lens to form a line focus or with a spherical lens to form a p...
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