Quantcast

Cobalt and Nanodiamonds – Shaken, not Stirred

A think-tank of Russian physicists currently develops production conditions for a new composite material with diamond matrix and prepares to investigate its properties. Said material is a result of baking of nanodiamonds with cobalt under conditions of high pressure and high temperature.

Microcrystalline diamond powder is a common material for providing various processing tools with diamond coating, however, scientists also suggest using nanodiamonds, produced by means of so-called “detonation technique”, for this purpose. Hardness of mentioned nanodiamonds is nearly the same that natural diamond monocrystals have. Diamond coating is generated by simple baking of nanoparticles, but special coatings (a hyperfine film with appropriate mechanical properties, for instance) often require an activating additive. Researchers claim cobalt, commonly used in production of two-layered diamond carbide blades, is great as an activating additive.

Nanodiamonds are polycrystalline particles, which size does not exceed twenty nanometers. Physicists placed said particles together with cobalt into a high pressure chamber, and when pressure reached 8 GPa, reagents were steadily heated, until thermometers showed 1700-1800 degrees Kelvin – this temperature caused cobalt to melt and enter diamonds, filling empty spaces in crystals. Key reagent for the experiment was following: polycrystalline nanodiamond powder with diameter of aggregates (polycrystals) about 3-4 microns, and crystallites (microcrystals) in these aggregates were as little as 10-20 nanometers. Baking time was very short and never exceeded 10 seconds. Reagent ratio was adjusted in order to prevent diamond powder from full saturation with cobalt.

Read more: Cobalt and Nanodiamonds – Shaken, not Stirred




The material in this press release comes from the originating research organization. Content may be edited for style and length. Want more? Sign up for our daily email.