Number 647 #3, July 23, 2003 by Phil Schewe, James Riordon, and Ben Stein
Milling Diamond Films
Milling diamond films can be performed with gallium beams. Diamond
films, created by first installing tiny diamonds in a pitted silicon
surface and then laying down subsequent atoms to form a near-planar
diamond surface, have many of the electrical properties of semiconductors,
but can operate at much higher temperatures, voltages, and power. Because
of its resistance to hostile environments and its bio-compatibility,
diamond films are also expected to be act as handy protective coatings
in microfluidic research Because of its hardness, however, diamond films
are difficult to sculpt through micromachining, during which stresses
on the sample can crack the film. Now scientists at the Nanyang Technological
University in Singapore have devised a versatile way of making possible
micro-optical elements out of diamond films by wielding a carefully
focused gallium ion beam. Optical tests of the resultant structures
show that such properties as transmission and index of refraction were
not distorted by the milling process. By the way, this research was
undertaken as part of the Singapore-MIT Alliance, an innovative engineering
education and research collaboration established in 1998 among three
top engineering research universities: National University of Singapore
(NUS), Nanyang Technological University (NTU), and Massachusetts Institute
of Technology (MIT). (Fu
et al., Review of Scientific Instruments, August 2003)