Except for most blue diamonds, which are semiconductors,
diamonds are good electrical insulators, meaning they reduce the flow of electricity. Blue diamonds owe their semi-conductive
property to boron
impurities, which act as a doping agent and cause p-type semiconductor behavior. Diamonds
appear cold and hard, but they’re good conductors of heat because of the strong
chemical bonds within the crystal.
Most natural blue diamonds contain boron atoms which replace
carbon atoms in the crystal matrix, and also have high thermal conductivity. Heat
is a property contained in most materials, and has the tendency to flow to
areas of lesser heat. A substance that is a thermal insulator reduced the flow
of heat.
Diamonds are actually excellent conductors of heat, better
than more well-known heat conductors like copper or silver. Diamonds will
warm-up. It’s as if when we talk about a diamond’s “fire,” it can refer to it
figuratively as well as literally!
As much as we associate diamonds for their beauty and use as
jewelry, only about 20% of all diamonds mined are gem-quality. The rest are
good only for industrial uses. Because it’s the hardest substance, it’s used to
cut other materials such as stone, metal and concrete. It’s also used to grind
eyeglasses and computer chips.
Most industrial diamonds are mined, but scientists have
successfully engineered synthetic industrial diamonds that have more versatile
uses than mined diamonds. Now major companies like GE and even DeBeers make synthetic
diamonds. The primary use for these synthetic industrial diamonds is to conduct
heat away from devices that require a constant temperature for safe and proper
operation.
www.supremesolutions.in
No comments:
Post a Comment