How a CVD Diamond is Made

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  • čas přidán 12. 06. 2024
  • I want to thank Ropac International for inviting me to their workshop. Fantastic experience and you should check out their equipment! Check out their website: www.ropac.com.tw

Komentáře • 413

  • @trainskitsetc
    @trainskitsetc Před 27 dny +410

    Arguably cooler to have a manufactured diamond, anyone can just find one, manufacturing one is way more of an achievement

    • @nebblepoppishire3037
      @nebblepoppishire3037 Před 27 dny +45

      I am pretty involved in the gem world and I would recommend people to wait another 5-10 years before buying a lab grown diamond. When they first became big, like early 2010s, they were $3400/ct for decent quality (natural diamond of the same quality about $6-7,000) you can get that same 1ct stone for about $1200-1500 today. The prices have come down most steeply in the last 5 years, I think they will become dirt cheap sooner than later, probably

    • @goldnutter412
      @goldnutter412 Před 27 dny +2

      Yeah hexagon in fake 3D things
      Have a look at TEDx fourth phase of water.. just the same as graphite in structural terms. We were so blind.

    • @goldnutter412
      @goldnutter412 Před 27 dny

      Inarguably perhaps 🙃

    • @trainskitsetc
      @trainskitsetc Před 27 dny +12

      @@goldnutter412 diamond mining companies will argue and I welcome them to, I will employ very childish arguments and waste their time 🤣

    • @benjaminchung991
      @benjaminchung991 Před 27 dny +10

      I think that a really awesome gift would be a DIY CVD diamond. The process feels like it's right on the edge of where DIY is possible.

  • @tommihommi1
    @tommihommi1 Před 27 dny +110

    Diamond is used for the window through which plasma heating energy is injected into fusion reactors like ITER. This is because diamond is incredibly transparent over a huge range of frequencies, and the thermal conductivity is required to for cooling. They're also used for windows in other vacuum applications, of course, but pushing tens of megawatts through a 180mm diameter, 2mm thickness diamond window has to be the most amazing one.
    of course, these diamonds are polycrystalline, but still transparent.
    There's also a company making 100mm wafers of monocrystalline diamonds using a unique technology where the diamond isn't grown on a seed crystal, but on a Ir/YSZ/Si wafer. AuDiaTech in Germany. Supposedly the largest monocrystalline diamonds in the world.

    • @goncalovazpinto6261
      @goncalovazpinto6261 Před 25 dny +4

      Those AuDiaTech diamond wafers are just what I need to defrost my hamburgers on the kitchen counter!

    • @reviewchan9806
      @reviewchan9806 Před 24 dny

      How well would diamond heat sinks work

    • @Sion_Revan
      @Sion_Revan Před 22 dny +3

      Whilst not Diamond, the windows on the SR-71 Blackbird were made of 1.25 inch thick clear Quartz slabs, this was to resist the extreme heat and pressure of going mach 3+
      Just a history tid bit I thought I'd add.

    • @dwarvenaled
      @dwarvenaled Před 19 dny

      @@reviewchan9806 I could cut one now and find out. I have large diamond wafers.

    • @Aaron-zu3xn
      @Aaron-zu3xn Před 19 dny

      the problem with these types of processes is the steel being used for the chamber they're made it can erode if you use the wrong kind then while crystals are growing BOOM it finally decides to open a crack and your neighbor gets hit with a chunk of pipe going 80mph

  • @cdl0
    @cdl0 Před 27 dny +114

    This is an outstanding presentation on CVD diamond. One of the first applications for large CVD diamonds, not mentioned in this video, was the manufacture of windows for aerospace applications, Diamond is transparent to light from infrared to ultraviolet wavelengths, and can be used as a protective, optical window for sensors on the front of missiles or aircraft that is the only suitable material able to withstand impact from rain at high speed.

    • @Vatsek
      @Vatsek Před 27 dny +10

      Sapphire is not good enough?

    • @DaSlotho
      @DaSlotho Před 27 dny +7

      @@Vatsek lolz talk to Apple bout that one hahahaha

    • @JohnnieWalkerGreen
      @JohnnieWalkerGreen Před 27 dny +6

      What is still not discussed here -- because it is out of context -- is how the cartel fights back or tries to survive.

    • @cdl0
      @cdl0 Před 26 dny +6

      @@Vatsek Good question: Optical-grade synthetic sapphire is well known for its excellent optical properties from IR to UV wavelengths, particularly UV. There is a strong absorption band from F-centres at 200 nm, but this can be removed with suitable treatment, extending the optical window to 150 nm. Sapphire also has excellent mechanical properties; however, it is still not hard enough to resist rain-impact damage at high velocities. Diamond is the _only_ known material which can do this. Also note that sapphire is a birefringent crystal, which can complicate optical design.

    • @cdl0
      @cdl0 Před 26 dny +2

      @@JohnnieWalkerGreen I agree, you are off-topic.

  • @JaenEngineering
    @JaenEngineering Před 26 dny +6

    The irony is that high quality mined diamonds aren't actually that rare but the diamond houses like DeBeers deliberately restrict the supply. Combine that with the incredible skill needed to polish high quality gemstone and that's why they're still expensive.

  • @testboga5991
    @testboga5991 Před 27 dny +128

    Given the exploitation happening in the mining industry, there should be a mature push for 'cultured' diamonds, highlighting exactly that point.

    • @Lazerecho
      @Lazerecho Před 27 dny +2

      But jobs? 😂 If I know miners they'll fight to keep mining.

    • @notnoaintno5134
      @notnoaintno5134 Před 27 dny

      Let them go back to collecting bannanas and tribal stuff or w/e​@@Lazerecho

    • @kekoraspow9153
      @kekoraspow9153 Před 27 dny

      No point in mining if no one's buying them
      De Beers failed to brain wash the newer generation and they killed their own product by making people think that you should only buy new. Makes them worthless as soon as they leave the jewelry store

    • @nos9784
      @nos9784 Před 27 dny +1

      ​@@Lazerecho...that, and despite only earning a laughably tiny fraction- because external factors and danger still make it a relatively well paid job locally, if you don't have alternatives.

    • @decommonifyable
      @decommonifyable Před 27 dny +7

      I'm more worried about the exploitation of grooms in the wedding industry.

  • @p.0-npcg.248
    @p.0-npcg.248 Před 26 dny +13

    Fun fact: the high hydrogen to carbon ratio in the gas mix is for etching away the non diamond allotropes

  • @GenaTrius
    @GenaTrius Před 27 dny +19

    It sounded like you momentarily dropped into a deep American Southern drawl when you said the word "violet" and I just about got whiplash

  • @jacobmalkin2612
    @jacobmalkin2612 Před 27 dny +21

    When we met in Taipei you asked what my company would do if we were approached to make diamond thin films, now I know what was on your mind!

    • @neveralonewithchrist6016
      @neveralonewithchrist6016 Před 24 dny +1

      Artificial diamonds have been produced since the 1906...
      The same technology today is being used to make indestructible diamond encrusted bi-layer graphene superconductors... F-diamane.
      "Henri Moissan's method involved using a tube furnace to heat a mixture of fluorine and carbon to high temperatures, causing the carbon to sublime and recrystallize as diamond. This process was later refined and improved upon by other scientists, leading to the development of the chemical vapor deposition (CVD) method for diamond synthesis."
      How long have they been making SYNTHETIC DIAMONDS (1950's according to mainstream sources)?
      That would seem like a crucial tid bit of Intel to know.

    • @dwarvenaled
      @dwarvenaled Před 19 dny

      @@neveralonewithchrist6016 I have a specimen that produce natural cvd diamonds.

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Před 5 dny

      @@neveralonewithchrist6016 the magic trick with thin films is uniform thickness. That was absent until fairly recently.

  • @ElectraFlarefire
    @ElectraFlarefire Před 27 dny +21

    I want one of the diamond cubes for my desk. Ideally about twice that size.
    No interest in them cut, but just a nice cube of diamond would be nice to have.

    • @tommihommi1
      @tommihommi1 Před 27 dny +4

      I've been dreaming of asking a local company that makes industrial monocrystalline diamonds if they have any QC rejected pieces like that for this same reason

    •  Před 21 dnem +1

      I had the same thought! Maybe a good market for any "seconds"?

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Před 5 dny

      For thinner slices, google "diamond optical window". This process actually uses such windows to transmit the microwaves into the growth chamber.
      I'm still waiting for one other application, a heat sink interface compound, you know, like heat sink grease or strips that are near the same thermal efficiency as the diamonds for heat sinks. Once the right compound is found and affordable, I suspect we'll start seeing diamond CPU's and GPU's hit the market.

  • @zyxwvutsrqponmlkh
    @zyxwvutsrqponmlkh Před 27 dny +25

    I prefer the term "Bloodless Diamond" to refer to these as.

    • @answerman9933
      @answerman9933 Před 27 dny

      Okay, snowflake.

    • @KingLich451
      @KingLich451 Před 26 dny +1

      Ahhh, good one

    • @robert-wr9xt
      @robert-wr9xt Před 26 dny

      Your preference means nothing to these engineers and scientists. Sheesh.
      I prefer you wash your hands.

    • @benruniko
      @benruniko Před 16 dny +2

      Based, as one may say

    • @robert-wr9xt
      @robert-wr9xt Před 16 dny

      @@benruniko
      ‘Based’?
      Who would say?
      You? The one who dropped out of school?
      One would say you are foolish.

  • @Leicht_Sinn
    @Leicht_Sinn Před 27 dny +54

    As a material sciencentist seeing a video from you being released is always a good day :)
    Especially because I am working at pacvd and pvd
    Now it is required for me to watch this video to the end! 😅

    • @Charles-Darwin
      @Charles-Darwin Před 27 dny

      any new directions with ai models you are willing to share?

    • @outerik90
      @outerik90 Před 27 dny +1

      You are a tech priest.

    • @Leicht_Sinn
      @Leicht_Sinn Před 27 dny +3

      ​@@Charles-Darwin Well, I personally don't use AI at work, but a colleague does use it to analyze effects for Raman spectroscopy and is quite happy with it.
      What I am doing is more about creating new kinds of coatings that are electrically conductive, which is quite interesting.

  • @Parc_Ferme
    @Parc_Ferme Před 27 dny +24

    1:28 LOL sense of humor just like your videos, refined like a sir

    • @Danji_Coppersmoke
      @Danji_Coppersmoke Před 27 dny +5

      Took me a few seconds to realize that. Such a dry humor..

    • @ska5568
      @ska5568 Před 27 dny +2

      Happen to all of us 😂😂😂

  • @christopherleubner6633
    @christopherleubner6633 Před 27 dny +4

    I used to run a CVD machine that created diamonds. These were for making UV photodiodes that were for measurment of energy/average power of KrF excimer lasers. The wafers were made of P type SiC then a layer of blue P type diamond then a layer of yellow N type diamond. The finished crystals were only 3x3x0.2mm. The defect rate was very high as well.😂

  • @Peter_S_
    @Peter_S_ Před 27 dny +43

    Shine on you crazy diamond.

  • @neskey
    @neskey Před 26 dny +6

    i'm calling a linus tech tips video in the next 2 years showcasing a diamond heatsink

    • @rkan2
      @rkan2 Před 22 dny

      Indeed only q matter of time!

  • @bandyj20
    @bandyj20 Před 26 dny +5

    Loved this video. Brings me back to my grad school days when I used to work on diamond thin films for solvated electron generation. Another interesting thing about diamond probably most people don't know is its conduction band is actually so high in energy that it has above the energy of an electron in vacuum. As a result, if the diamond surface is properly controlled, it can have something called negative electron affinity and act as a great electron emitter assuming you can get an electron into the conduction band. This effect works not just in vacuum, but gases and liquids too and with amazing results.

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Před 5 dny

      I can think of a few ways to inject an electron in, but they'd all introduce lattice defects, which would be double plus ungood. :/
      What energy level is the outer shell electrons at? Maybe resonate them a bit in the presence of an electron donor?

  • @ericlotze7724
    @ericlotze7724 Před 25 dny +5

    I NEED the channels that have these type of vacuum chambers and magnetrons and such to try and do CVD Diamonds!

    • @samheasmanwhite
      @samheasmanwhite Před 22 dny +1

      It is VERY hard to get anything transparent, but it would be interesting to see if they can at least get some polycrystalline stuff without graphite all through it.

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Před 5 dny +1

      @@samheasmanwhite from my recollection, it comes down to gas flow being uniform and keeping the plasma uniform, any turbulence and one starts getting defects.

  • @dingolovethrob
    @dingolovethrob Před 27 dny +10

    once again, a totally fantastic video.

  • @nicholashernandez4367
    @nicholashernandez4367 Před 24 dny +1

    Your channel is a gem, pun intended. Every time I watch one of your videos, I get a glimpse of what the tech industry is doing or has been doing. You do such a good job at presenting information. When you brought up the heat dissipation application of CVD diamonds and mentioned Synopsis buying Ansys for heat transfer simulations, it kinda blew my mind to see a connection like that. Not a surprising connection, but one I didn’t think about until you mentioned it.

  • @TheGreatAtario
    @TheGreatAtario Před 26 dny +2

    Years ago there was talk of using diamond for semiconductors directly, which was supposed to allow for chips running at 10GHz and very hot temperatures with no ill effect.

  • @me0101001000
    @me0101001000 Před 27 dny +27

    5:00
    Derjaguin is pronounced more like "der-ya-gihn" (forgive the non-use of IPA). He was a titan in molecular physics. There is a surface force approximation named after him as well. His only major blunder, as far as I know, is a paper on the existence of so-called "polywater", which is a fun rabbit hole to go down.

    • @cdl0
      @cdl0 Před 26 dny

      IPA fails in CZcams comments; the comment is rejected and vanishes. 😞

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Před 5 dny +1

      Don't get me started on water, it's just weird anyway. Go any distance away from STP, find yet another phase for the stuff. As in there's evidence to support the existence of ice inside the earth's mantle.
      It'd drive me to drink, but I already beat them to the punch. ;)

    • @cdl0
      @cdl0 Před 4 dny

      @@spvillano Yes, I believe water (ice) has more known crystal phases than any other pure material. Its strange properties are in part a consequence of the cooperative nature of hydrogen bonding. Then we have matters such as proton disorder and the Bernal-Fowler rules in normal hexagonal ice!

  • @robert-wr9xt
    @robert-wr9xt Před 26 dny +1

    Hey dude. I love your channel and it’s absolute science.
    Respect. Keep being you(making science videos) and I will keep being happy(watching your science videos) as a man can possibly be.
    Respect

  • @cipaisone
    @cipaisone Před 27 dny +10

    The fact that people would want to have “natural” diamonds instead of “synthetic”, if optical, mechanical, and other physical properties are essentially equivalent, is just ridiculous

    • @vilian9185
      @vilian9185 Před 26 dny

      people don't care, look at perls, the diamond mining monopoly is the one complaing, they know they gonna lose, they're trying to shift the people vision that lab grown diamonds are inferiors, that why they complained, when FTC removed that requiriment, now they can't use that to shift public opinion, they are losing

    • @bot7845
      @bot7845 Před 26 dny +2

      The fact that ppl want a piece of glass on a hoop is beyond me

    • @goncalovazpinto6261
      @goncalovazpinto6261 Před 24 dny +1

      @@bot7845 It's because SHINY!
      Some people identify as magpies.

    • @gravityissues5210
      @gravityissues5210 Před 24 dny

      The fact you think everyone should think like you is just ridiculous.

    • @cipaisone
      @cipaisone Před 24 dny

      @@gravityissues5210 I do not think that everyone should think like me. I just think you are ridiculous

  • @danp8321
    @danp8321 Před 27 dny +11

    You didn't say as much but I'm assuming that during formation, MPCVD machines turn the diamonds slowly, and then go 'ping!' when they're finished.

  • @KomradZX1989
    @KomradZX1989 Před 27 dny +5

    Couldn’t get hot enough… happens to all of us… 😅🤪
    Great video Jon! I love all the stuff you make. Your content always scratches my intellectual itch ❤

  • @user-bj1pr5yb1c
    @user-bj1pr5yb1c Před 21 dnem

    That was amazing. Never thought it would be so interesting. Great job!

  • @successfullguy
    @successfullguy Před 27 dny +1

    Awesome video. The variety of topics you cover is almost as good as the humor !

  • @ericlotze7724
    @ericlotze7724 Před 25 dny +2

    Cutting Tools/Drills and Anti-Scratch Coatings/Screen Protectors are another application.
    It may be better done with DLC or PCD, but i am imagining a nonstick pan coating using this technology too.

  • @St0RM33
    @St0RM33 Před 27 dny +6

    AHAHAH THIS IS THE LAST VIDEO I EXPECTED TO SEE A MGS MEME! "YOU'RE PRETTY GOOOOOD:)"

  • @AkbarAli-bs4eq
    @AkbarAli-bs4eq Před 27 dny +4

    Diamondium vs Diamondillium indeed

  • @mr.thomas6128
    @mr.thomas6128 Před 26 dny +2

    Indeed diamonds have a bright future a head of them. Next to all of the other stories in the comments, Some time ago it was found how to make a P-fet on diamond filament, and recently also the N-fet. thus making it possible to make full IC's in diamond filament.

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Před 5 dny

      Didn't hear of the N-FET. Yeah, that paves the way, assuming the defect rate can be lowered enough to make the things affordable.
      Looks like Moore's Law is back in business!

  • @jounisaari9471
    @jounisaari9471 Před 26 dny +1

    CVD can be used for diamond coating also. It can be made on top of plastics, metals, etc. Makes also really low friction and low wear.

  • @theviewer3819
    @theviewer3819 Před 26 dny +1

    Again, awesome content!
    I worked in an institute in Michigan that grows diamonds electronic, electrochemical and sensor applications.
    It's a super interesting semiconductor material, made from cheap widely available raw material. Power electronics, hardened circuits, magnetic field sensor or neuro electrods. Unfortunately, as of now it is not possible to grow them defect free on large areas. Hopefully they will in the future.
    Thanks BR

  • @-r-495
    @-r-495 Před 23 dny

    thank you and thank you Ropac!

  • @Jason_Quinn
    @Jason_Quinn Před 27 dny +2

    What an incredibly interesting video! Thank you!

  • @timwildauer5063
    @timwildauer5063 Před 27 dny +3

    “Couldn’t get hot enough. Happens to all of us.” My brother

  • @practicalmicrofabrication1858

    Diamond and the nitrogen vacancies it can have is a strong candidate for quantum processors.

  • @henryisnotafraid
    @henryisnotafraid Před 27 dny +6

    I think I'm mesmerized by the way you pronounce "violet" at 0:28 like Thumper in Bambi.

  • @Gersberms
    @Gersberms Před 27 dny

    I love this progress.

  • @raymartin3527
    @raymartin3527 Před 15 dny

    I'm just learning about CVD diamonds and ordered a 1.10 carat stone for a mount I purchased. Very interesting video.

  • @arealbigboss
    @arealbigboss Před 27 dny +1

    Hitting close to home with this one, great vid.

  • @dexterm2003
    @dexterm2003 Před 27 dny +4

    Will definitely buy a cultured diamond if/when it comes time in the future. No interest in lining DeBeers pockets.

  • @Vatsek
    @Vatsek Před 27 dny +5

    What is the largest synthetic diamond that can be grown with plasma CVD? Is it limited by the substrate size?

  • @cjay2
    @cjay2 Před 26 dny

    Thank you very much for this video. Extremely informative.

  • @seanmcelwee5034
    @seanmcelwee5034 Před 23 dny +1

    Diamond has also popped up for the quantum computing community. As mentioned there can be nitrogen defects introduced. Nitrogen vacancy defects in the diamond have come out as a means for qubit generation

  • @motionsick
    @motionsick Před 17 dny

    There was a cool article by Wired in 2003 called The New Diamond Age that talked about CVD diamonds and the possible future of "diamond semiconducting"

  • @AC-jk8wq
    @AC-jk8wq Před 27 dny +3

    Nice work Jon!
    😃

  • @taiwanluthiers
    @taiwanluthiers Před 24 dny +1

    CVD Diamonds are used in machining to machine extremely hard materials such as tungsten carbide.

  • @RaglansElectricBaboon

    Nice summary. I used to design MOCVD machines & this is pretty similar tech that I've had a vague interest in understanding!

  • @bebokRZly
    @bebokRZly Před 27 dny

    Mind blowing :D excellent as always!

  • @christopherleubner6633
    @christopherleubner6633 Před 27 dny +1

    Crazy you mentioned heat spreaders, that is what the CVD machine was originally used for, literally to wick the heat away from stacked laser bar arrays used in welders and higher power DPSSLs. We eventually did runs of DUV phodiodes with it.❤

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Před 5 dny

      Well, the microwave plasma was used in physics labs for decades too. Hell, the fusor uses that tech to initially ionize deuterium.

  • @Hectico2257
    @Hectico2257 Před 27 dny +9

    Nano-machines 😂😂

  • @BeachTypeZaku
    @BeachTypeZaku Před 27 dny +4

    I used to sell diamonds for Zales and the natural diamonds were more popular than the manufactured ones. I sold quite a few, but I'd say the ratio is easily 3 or 4 to one.
    The reason is that the occlusions in each natural diamond are different and it's a selling point to the client to have their own, unique, diamond they can tell from others with a jeweler's loupe.
    Yes, laser inscription is the standard and every manufactured diamond is laser inscribed. But most clients see the natural diamonds as more valuable since they took the Earth milliions of years to make.

    • @benjamindover4337
      @benjamindover4337 Před 27 dny +6

      Very few people have such concerns outside of niche markets frequented by the heirs to vast fortunes or the occasional irresponsible clout seeking middle class future divorcees.

    • @szurketaltos2693
      @szurketaltos2693 Před 27 dny +3

      Nowadays, manufactured diamonds are indeed cheaper monetarily than mined diamonds. And many people do seem to want the natural diamonds due to the perceived romanticism of it. But that said, other than Canadian diamonds, mined diamonds are not very traceable and are implicated in human rights violations. Not very romantic IMO.

    • @BeachTypeZaku
      @BeachTypeZaku Před 27 dny

      @@benjamindover4337 In some cases yes, in some cases no. It depends on the situation. If you're a more experienced and older seller, you have a clientele built up over years that will come in and buy anything that they fancy.
      I'm of course speaking from experience I had over a decade ago. The diamond industry was a lot different even then. That shows you how little time it takes for technology to catch up.
      I was there for only 9 and 1/2 to 10 months but in that time I sold a few nice pieces to be sure. The one carat diamond was our main focus.
      The only issue I see is that you cheapen the experience and the symbolism is lost if you make diamonds, particularly those for engagements, so cheap. It's something you should have to strive for and it's something that she should have to appreciate.
      Or else you get another scene like in the movie Baron Munchausen, where she just tosses the diamonds into a growing pile

    • @gravityissues5210
      @gravityissues5210 Před 27 dny

      @@benjamindover4337yeah yeah _you_ don’t see value in it so it must be only a handful of people on the earth who have some esoteric interest. Meanwhile I’ll trust the word of the actual salesman who made a living working for a large corporation who actually made money marketing these.

    • @benjamindover4337
      @benjamindover4337 Před 27 dny

      @@gravityissues5210 Access denied. Do not pass go. Go directly to jail. 🤷🤷🤷

  • @timobatana6705
    @timobatana6705 Před 12 dny

    Nanomachines son, you have earned my subscription

  • @simonhebting8512
    @simonhebting8512 Před 26 dny

    Nice to see a Williamson pyrometer up close

  • @jack504
    @jack504 Před 27 dny +1

    How are the diamond wafer pre cursors made?
    Is it possible to buy the unprocessed diamond cubes? They would make an interesting industrial curiosity without the distraction of being formed into jewelry.

  • @vaakdemandante8772
    @vaakdemandante8772 Před 27 dny

    A link to the sponsor's business offering would be nice - great content!

  • @alexanderscholz8855
    @alexanderscholz8855 Před 27 dny

    Diamonds are the Girls best Friend. Dupdupdidu. There are a old sing with this phrase in it. First in my mind when Diamond is involved. Good Video as always! The most are totally over my head and not my Mother language, but your Voice and professional to make it easy to watch! That's are really rare in Space of Since because it's Since! Thanks for your hard work to teach a noob like me so extremely hard complex topics! Thanks 👍😎‼️

  • @bambam144
    @bambam144 Před 27 dny

    first of all many thx for ur great stuff as always!
    about these diamant plates:
    could they make lenses from them?
    blades for scalpels, watch "glasses"?

  • @k.c.sunshine1934
    @k.c.sunshine1934 Před 27 dny

    Thank you ROPAC! I am sure they deserve the credit; I appreciate it at least.

  • @thesquatchdoctor3356
    @thesquatchdoctor3356 Před 24 dny

    You just explained to me the line "rolling down Rodeo with a shotgun"

  • @wolfy9005
    @wolfy9005 Před 27 dny

    A lab at a local school is growing diamond spirals using ethanol/methanol and lasers, potentially for terahertz-wave communication or whatever they want really

  • @senefelder
    @senefelder Před 26 dny

    Awesome. I am involved in a research project for developing in-situ monitoring of diamond growth inside CVD reactors

  • @paulcandiago9339
    @paulcandiago9339 Před 23 dny

    Thank you for the documentary and the TRUE value hidden in my BBQ charcoal>>> now I have to buy a simmering rice Cooker and I am into big Money.

  • @tomgorgy7966
    @tomgorgy7966 Před 27 dny

    Great video, could you do a more in depth video on how CVD is used in the semiconductor industry exclusively?

    • @Gameboygenius
      @Gameboygenius Před 27 dny

      He already did... Sort of. Did you see the one on atomic layer deposition?

  • @peterpayne2219
    @peterpayne2219 Před 7 dny

    Every video I watched by you increases my nerd level by 100x

  • @seanhewitt603
    @seanhewitt603 Před 27 dny

    I hope that the mpcvd method drops the market price of diamonds into the 20$per carat range for jewelry grade diamonds. Put debeers into recievership!

  • @fredfred2363
    @fredfred2363 Před 26 dny

    Would a thin flat diamond work as a good barrier for a heat exchanger? I could see uses in superminiature heat pumps and heat multipliers.
    Really interesting video. Thanks. Lots to think about. 👍🏻🇬🇧

  • @nunyabisnass1141
    @nunyabisnass1141 Před 20 dny

    Im more interested in getting some of the off cuts, or flawed cubes to some electrical testing with.
    I wish though that i had the appropriate skills to use onenofbthose deposition machines. Might be nice to work with a micron to micron layers or wafers.

  • @jonatajwlr
    @jonatajwlr Před 20 dny

    As a jeweler thats a amazing, a lot of tools needs diamonds to cut and polish, but eventually lab diamonds will be just like glass, and the natural ones will probably be mutch more expensive because mining will not be viable anymore, the cool thing is that other gems will get more visibility, personally, clear diamonds are kinda boring.

  • @ShivakumarNagaraja-sy9xw

    A great innovation making diamonds affordable and avoiding environmental issues of deep mining

  • @davidbwa
    @davidbwa Před 27 dny

    that was interesting. Thanks.

  • @Jackkalpakian
    @Jackkalpakian Před 27 dny

    Very Informative, and ROPAC appears to be a very open minded and creative firm.

  • @Mrcometo
    @Mrcometo Před 27 dny +3

    9:36 This is very similar to that time when aluminum pass from the "precious" metal category to "common".

  • @bmanpura
    @bmanpura Před 27 dny

    12:40 This 3 sentences alone can attract a lot of minds to study material science. Thank you.

  • @Hashtag-Hashtagcucu
    @Hashtag-Hashtagcucu Před 27 dny +3

    Thank you, the last comment on CoWoS and Ansys was very interesting

    • @stevebabiak6997
      @stevebabiak6997 Před 25 dny +1

      He didn’t specifically name ANSYS there, but I concur that this seems to be what he is getting at.
      I believe he is referring to the Synopsys agreement to acquire ANSYS here, but I could be mistaken in that. That deal still hasn’t completed due to navigating regulatory hurdles (anti-trust things is what my understanding is).
      ANSYS has lots more software to offer, but Synopsys probably is primarily interested in just that one piece.

  • @ozne_2358
    @ozne_2358 Před 26 dny

    A few days ago I saw an article about making diamonds at ordinary pressure and reduced temperature in liquid metal. They are still experimenting though.

  • @alanparker3130
    @alanparker3130 Před 27 dny

    I heard Boris Derjaguin, mentioned here, give a talk in 1977. He was a polymath most famous for formulating the "DLVO" theory of colloidal stability during WWII with his buddy Lev Landau (see his appallingly difficult "Course in Theoretical Physics").

  • @SuperCuriousFox
    @SuperCuriousFox Před 27 dny

    What’s the difference between MPCVD and PECVD (plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition)? Or are they synonyms?

  • @bebokRZly
    @bebokRZly Před 27 dny +1

    For me, as nerd, grown diamond is even better thing! "look honey! Our technical culture made this possible! Nanometers in smartwatch, diamonds in ring" ;D

  • @samheasmanwhite
    @samheasmanwhite Před 22 dny

    I think there is already an exclusive application for CVD diamonds in anything that needs to be very wide, like 20mm or more. Can't get the thickness but you can get the width.
    Very difficult and expensive though, so that market won't carry CVD on it's own without some common technology that needs and can afford wide diamond windows or such.

  • @benjamindover4337
    @benjamindover4337 Před 27 dny +21

    It is completely absurd that people still pay for diamonds for any non-industrial use.

    • @_general_error
      @_general_error Před 27 dny +3

      They also decorate their home with furniture...

    • @benjamindover4337
      @benjamindover4337 Před 27 dny +2

      @@_general_error what homes?

    • @gravityissues5210
      @gravityissues5210 Před 27 dny +3

      People like diamonds. What is absurd about that? Or are you going to next say that it is absurd that people buy gold for non-industrial purposes as well? These things are market-dictated. People pay as much as something is worth to them. Although, in the case of diamonds, as he alluded to, De Beers holds a near monopoly, and can thus artificially manipulate the price. But, they can only do so much; there still has to be a market.

    • @benjamindover4337
      @benjamindover4337 Před 27 dny

      @@gravityissues5210 the people have spoken

    • @notnoaintno5134
      @notnoaintno5134 Před 27 dny

      So youve never bought anything just to show it off? Not a tshirt with a band logo on it, some nerdy computer shit, nothing? If you have, you should be able to understand why people buy jewelry. Anyway stop being a loser

  • @JL-pc2eh
    @JL-pc2eh Před 24 dny

    I want a phone screen made out of diamond! No more scratches I bet :D

  • @aryaman05
    @aryaman05 Před 27 dny

    Did you make this video on news of Anglo American offloading De Beers ?😊

  • @Dlee234
    @Dlee234 Před 27 dny

    Made my first money importing these. Went from buckets to containers a month. Clients in France and other places. Competition sadly ruined the fun for me, when the Ru started to crank up their production i moved into crypto. Either way good times and good content 👍

  • @zlm001
    @zlm001 Před 27 dny

    Thanks

  • @rydplrs71
    @rydplrs71 Před 27 dny +1

    If you like commercial microwaves being dissected for development tools you may not be aware how strained silicon divices were tested.
    Stick a small spacer under one side of a wafer and press down and observe the device speed and Vt’s

    • @fredfred2363
      @fredfred2363 Před 26 dny

      I enjoy watching the results of that experiment...

    • @rydplrs71
      @rydplrs71 Před 26 dny

      @@fredfred2363 it is surprising how much you can test with such simplicity. Obviously straining silicon for production took orders of magnitude more engineering, but while bringing up electroplating I was using back grind tape to ensure there wasn’t oxidation between layers. Only to find out there was a nist test with a specific model of scotch tape and adhesion pressure to do the same test. The end result was we could use my test to guarantee passing the nist tast and get zero voids after reflow instead of an ‘acceptable’ level.
      I’m not a degreed engineer I just apparently have an abundance of common sense apparently. I worked with a team of phd’s but was the simple solution person. You need a couple million dollars for an advanced cvd tool, I can do it with a hot plate and a blast off a liquid n2 supply. Tested with a home depot sprayer. Every manager in the building had gold foil hanging on their office wall in the shape of a wafer because I could delaminate it on demand. I also made the anniversary wafers with a uv cure tool instead of a stepper or aligner and in any color desired instead of just purple poly on silicon.

  • @brealistic3542
    @brealistic3542 Před 27 dny +1

    I flew as a passnger in a High wing glider piloted by the brilliant GE scientist that made first commercial artificial diamond process which apparently is still used today. Great guy although the glider flight was a bit scary since the glider was winched at more then a 45 degree angle up into the air using an old car that had a large drum attached to a very old car engine that pulled us both up into the air !

    • @cdl0
      @cdl0 Před 27 dny

      Less well-known is that one of the pioneering researchers responsible for this was a woman, Judith Milledge (1927-2021). She also worked with Catherine Lonsdale of londsdalite fame, the hexagonal form of diamond.

  • @Earth_Rim_Roamer
    @Earth_Rim_Roamer Před 27 dny +7

    You are a diamond

  • @scoria1755
    @scoria1755 Před 17 dny

    In most cases, a diamond engagement ring or other diamond jewelry will have a resale value of between 20 and 60% of the amount it cost when it was new.

  • @bouncehouseofficial
    @bouncehouseofficial Před 27 dny

    Did you make this after watching that segment with Becky and a BRK subsidiary?

  • @redknight4
    @redknight4 Před 24 dny

    cpu water block using a diamond plate would be interesting for water cooling even in a server farm setting

  • @jc-tu6pg
    @jc-tu6pg Před 27 dny +1

    fascinating! a refreshing twist from your normal content. but $35 BILLION for one piece of software is beyond nuts!

    • @fredfred2363
      @fredfred2363 Před 26 dny

      It's called money laundering, so your corporation can add value without making a profit, in effect declare a loss. Think about it. Completely legal too.

    • @stevebabiak6997
      @stevebabiak6997 Před 25 dny

      I believe he is referring to the Synopsys agreement to acquire ANSYS here, but I could be mistaken in that. That deal still hasn’t completed due to navigating regulatory hurdles (anti-trust things is what my understanding is).
      ANSYS has lots more software to offer, but Synopsys probably is primarily interested in just that one piece.

  • @goldnutter412
    @goldnutter412 Před 27 dny

    BROOOOOOOOOO no way you are nailing it but I haven't even finished the hard drives yet LOL
    Damn this is great ! haha I remember buying some stuff on eBay over 20yrs ago from a mine. Made a good amount and two of the sales were to jewellers. Colour changing stones and a ruby ring. Amazed me how cheap they were. Those days are long gone now its just a shidhole with a poor, duct taped together website, total mess. Amazon if it was on fire.
    And I still have some raw emerald somewhere. Nice.

  • @kimchi_taco
    @kimchi_taco Před 27 dny +1

    Women don't care of physical identity, but Tiffany.

  • @_general_error
    @_general_error Před 27 dny

    Gosh... I'd want my own MPCVD machine... do they do free handouts?

  • @justepourlacheruncom8393
    @justepourlacheruncom8393 Před 27 dny +1

    Given the tetravalence of both carbon and silicium could it be possible to make carbon based circuit with the deposition technology ?

    • @stevebabiak6997
      @stevebabiak6997 Před 25 dny

      I believe there is research that is seeking to do just that.

  • @SilentSword22
    @SilentSword22 Před 27 dny

    is the footage at around 7:17 your footage? is so awesome if not also awesome just less interesting i guess
    edit : commented before the end, turns out it is it's just that he got access to it and not what i was thinking of. i thought considering the knowledge of asianometry i thought he likely working in industry so had access. turns out one of the assumptions was wrong

  • @michealwestfall8544
    @michealwestfall8544 Před 26 dny

    Imagine in the future, baking pans being made out of diamonds.

  • @nasreenvora6159
    @nasreenvora6159 Před 18 dny

    Just to clarify my doubt , the substrate maintained at high temperature is the same diamond seed thing that entered the reactor.Right?