The Age of Diamond Technology - Industry Today - Leader in Manufacturing & Industry News
 

August 21, 2019 The Age of Diamond Technology

As we reach the physical limitations of silicon semiconductors, diamond’s inherent properties make it the clear successor material.

semiconductor

AKHAN’s manufacturing process produces the perfect diamond wafers needed for electronic production which can be used as a platform for fabricating the semiconductor devices.

August 15, 2019

By Adam Khan, Founder & CEO, AKHAN Semiconductor

The ongoing mission to create electronic devices that are smaller, more powerful and more energy-responsible has led us to the new frontier of Wide Bandgap (WBG) semiconductors. Their ability to operate at temperatures of over 300 degrees, handle 10 times higher voltages and operate with over 90 percent increased power efficiency presents the potential to save billions of dollars in energy and cut the cost of electronics when implemented.

That said, the benefits of using WBG semiconductors comprised of a material that can augment their already impressive capabilities will result in even better electronics. Historically, silicon has been the predominant material used for semiconductors, but we’ve since reached its physical limitations for both computing and powering applications. Today’s applications require lithography feature sizes that are close to the atomic limit for silicon in computing, as well as higher blocking voltages, switching frequencies, power reliability, and efficiency.

Diamond’s inherent properties have kept it at the forefront of the search to find a superior successor material. However, as the least mature option for WBG semiconductor materials, there are a number of challenges to overcome to enable widespread applicability and high-volume usage.

Creating Electronic-Grade Diamonds

AKHAN was founded on the premise that diamonds are the most ideal material for this application, and we have made it our life’s work to discover and perfect a method that would refine them into a cost-efficient and effective solution across all major industries. This led to the development of our Miraj Diamond® Platform.

Through extensive research and scientific advancements, we created a state-of-the-art manufacturing process using methane gas and plasma as source materials, enabling us to produce these crystals at a low-cost. These wafer scale processes utilize chemical vapor deposition (CVD) reactors to form diamond in nanocrystals below 400°C, which enables their integration with complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) devices, commercial display glass and other materials previously ruled out due to temperature sensitivity, resulting in perfect diamond wafers needed for electronics.

diamond bar graph

Diamond has the uncommon ability to isolate massive voltages with a small fraction of the material.

Benefits of Diamond Semiconductors

The ability to create lab-grown diamonds at a steady rate for use within electronics is ushering in a new era of smaller, faster devices that is only possible with diamond technology. Benefits of implementing diamond semiconductors include:

  • Increased Power Flow – Considering diamonds’ ability to handle higher voltages than silicon without deteriorating, new devices will be available for high power application such as Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field Effect Transistors (MOSFETS) and Schottky Diodes (where building higher-voltage-rating MOSFETs and Schottky diodes is limited due to the large silicon die increase as the breakdown voltage requirement increases, resulting in reduced manufacturing yields and increased costs). Currently, silicon systems can only utilize insulated gate bipolar transistors (IGBTs) and pin diodes, both with higher loss than their mentioned counterparts. What’s more, diamonds also operate at over 90% increased power efficiency by reducing the ambient power loss compared to current technology.
  • Improved Heat Diffusion – Diamonds’ ability to conduct heat drastically exceeds that of materials currently used for electronics. Unlike convection-based cooling (e.g. fans) and heat sinks, diamond films can be directly integrated into a chip, which cools much more efficiently (direct phonon cooling) and much faster (with diamond thermal conductivity 22 times that of silicon and five times that of copper). Diamonds can also withstand and operate at temperatures over 600 degrees Celsius (versus 150 degrees Celsius for Silicon), meaning electronics can run hotter without costly and bulky cooling requirements.
  • Less Space Required – One of diamonds’ most unique properties is its ability to isolate massive voltages with just a small fraction of the material. Consider this, 50 times less diamond is needed than traditional silicon material when isolating 10,000V, which means devices that use diamond will be more than 1,000 times thinner than those that use silicon since less material is required to transmit higher voltages. Further, diamond has the lowest on-state resistance, the highest saturated drift velocity and the highest breakdown voltage of all semiconductor materials.

How will this impact different industries?

Diamond technology will revolutionize a number of different industries, with the most notable opportunities within automotive technology, the aerospace and defense industry, and consumer electronics. Examples of various applications include:

  • Faster supercomputers
  • Advanced radar and telecommunications
  • Hyper-efficient hybrid and electric vehicles
  • Electronics in extreme environments
  • Next-generation aerospace and avionics
  • Faster, lighter, and more capable aircraft and propulsion
  • Offensive and defensive capabilities in directed energy/high-energy laser systems
  • Lighter and more durable consumer electronics

The diamond age is here—prepare for a world with faster, smaller, more energy efficient and affordable electronics. A more advanced world that is only possible with diamond technology.

adam khan akhan semiconductor

Adam Khan

Adam Khan – Founder, Chairman, & Chief Executive Officer
Adam Khan has authored several patents and technical publications and is also a frequent speaker on Diamond Semiconductor & Clean Technology. As a result of his award-winning research, which he began as an electrical engineering student at age 19, Adam is inventor of the Miraj Diamond® Platform. Adam has also served as a speaker and expert witness to a variety of Federal bodies, including the U.S. House Space, Science, & Technology Committee and the U.S. Department of Energy. Additionally, Adam’s work was recognized and individually honored by the United States Congress in the 114th Congressional Records & Proceedings. Adam’s professional affiliations include the Materials Research Society, Board of Directors for the Chicago Council on Science and Technology, and the U.S. Council on Competitiveness. Adam earned his B.S. in Electrical Engineering and Physics from the University of Illinois Chicago, before pursuing graduate research at the Stanford University Nanofabrication Facility. He has been everything from a CleanTech Open Midwest Innovation Summit winner, a Forbes 30 Under 30, to a Modern-Day Nikola Tesla in the International Documentary Film ‘Tesla’s Children’ (2016).

Contact: info@akhansemi.com

AKHAN Semiconductor
 

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