Radiation detector made of a diamond single crystal grown by a chemical vapor deposition method

2003 
Abstract The first investigation of a radiation detector made of a diamond single crystal grown by a chemical vapor deposition (CVD) method was successfully carried out. The diamond single crystal, having a size of 2.0×2.0×0.7 mm 3 , was grown by the CVD method and then applied to the detector. The CVD method was able to reduce nitrogen and boron impurities in diamond crystals more effectively than a high-pressure and high-temperature (HP/HT) method. Consequently the detector had high-energy resolution of 0.4% for 5.486 MeV α particles from an 241 Am source. The behavior of charge carriers in the detector could not be adequately investigated because the detector had a partial depression layer and strong rectification. Ionization energy of the CVD diamond was determined to be 16.1 eV; this value was higher than that of the HP/HT type IIa diamond, i.e., 13.1 eV. This result shows the potential of CVD diamond single crystals because an ideal diamond should have higher ionization energy than the HP/HT type IIa diamond that had the influence of impurities.
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