Highly Boron-Doped Graphite and Diamond Synthesized From Adamantane and Ortho-Carborane under High Pressure
Abstract
This work demonstrates the effectiveness of the high-pressure method for the production of graphite and diamond with a high degree of boron doping using adamantanecarborane mixture as a precursor. At 8 GPa and 1700 oC, graphite is obtained from adamantane C10H16, whereas microcrystals of boron-doped diamond (22.5 at.% of boron) are synthesized from a mixture of adamantane and ortho-carborane C2B10H12 (atomic ratio B:C = 5:95). This result shows convincingly the catalytical activity of boron in the synthesis of diamond under high pressure. At pressures lower than 7 GPa, only graphite is synthesized from the adamantane and carborane mixture. Graphitization starts at quite low temperatures (below 1400 oC) and an increase in temperature simultaneously increases boron content and the quality of the graphite crystal lattice. Thorough study of the material structure allows us to assume that the substitutional boron atoms are distributed periodically and equidistantly from each other in the graphite layers at high boron concentrations (>1 at.%). The theoretical arguments and model ab initio calculations confirm this assumption and explain the experimentally observed boron concentrations.
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