Niall Tumilty
London Centre for Nanotechnology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Niall Tumilty.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2010
Mose Bevilacqua; Niall Tumilty; Chiranjib Mitra; Haitao Ye; Tatayana Feygelson; James E. Butler; Richard B. Jackman
Nanocrystalline diamond (NCD) has been grown using a nanodiamond seeding technique, leading to a dense form of this material, with grain sizes around 100 nm. The electrical properties of both intrinsic and lightly boron-doped NCD have been investigated using impedance spectroscopy and Hall effect measurements. For intrinsic material, both grain boundaries and grains themselves initially contribute to the frequency dependant impedance values recorded. However, boundary conduction can be removed and the films become highly resistive. Interestingly, the ac properties of these films are also excellent with a dielectric loss value ∼0.004 for frequencies up to 10 MHz. The dielectric properties of these NCD films are therefore as good as high quality large grain polycrystalline diamond films. In the case of boron-doped material, p-type material with good carrier mobility values (10–50 cm2/V s) can be produced at carrier concentrations around 1017 cm−3.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2008
Haitao Ye; Niall Tumilty; Mose Bevilacqua; Stephane Curat; Milos Nesladek; Bertrand Bazin; P. Bergonzo; Richard B. Jackman
The use of diamond as a semiconductor for the realization of transistor structures, which can operate at high temperatures (>700 K), is of increasing interest. In terms of bipolar devices, the growth of n-type phosphorus doped diamond is more efficient on the (111) growth plane; p-type boron-doped diamond growth has been most usually grown in the (100) direction and, hence, this study into the electronic properties, at high temperatures, of boron-doped diamond (111) homoepitaxial layers. It is shown that highly doped layers (hole carrier concentrations as high as 2×1020 cm-3) can be produced without promoting the onset of (unwanted) hopping conduction. The persistence of valance-band conduction in these films enables relatively high mobility values to be measured ( ~ 20 cm2/V?s) and, intriguingly, these values are not significantly reduced at high temperatures. The layers also display very low compensation levels, a fact that may explain the high mobility values since compensation is required for hopping conduction. The results are discussed in terms of the potential of these types of layers for use with high temperature compatible diamond transistors.
Applied Physics Letters | 2009
Niall Tumilty; Joseph O. Welch; Haitao Ye; R. S. Balmer; Christopher John Howard Wort; Richard Lang; Richard B. Jackman
Impedance spectroscopy has been used to investigate conductivity within boron-doped diamond in an intrinsic/delta-doped/intrinsic (i-d-i) multilayer structure. For a 5 nm thick delta layer, three conduction pathways are observed, which can be assigned to transport within the delta layer and to two differing conduction paths in the i-layers adjoining the delta layer. For transport in the i-layers, thermal trapping/detrapping processes can be observed, and only at the highest temperature investigated (673 K) can transport due to a single conduction process be seen. Impedance spectroscopy is an ideal nondestructive tool for investigating the electrical characteristics of complex diamond structures.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2009
Niall Tumilty; Joseph O. Welch; Richard Lang; Christopher John Howard Wort; R. S. Balmer; Richard B. Jackman
Impedance spectroscopy has been used to investigate the conductivity displayed by diamond doped with boron in an intrinsic-δ-layer-intrinsic multilayer system with differing δ-layer thicknesses. Carrier transport within 5 nm δ-layer structures is complex, being dominated by conduction in the interfacial regions between the δ-layer and the intrinsic regions, as well as conduction within the δ-layer itself. In the case of 3.2 nm thick δ-layers the situation appears improved with uncapped samples supporting only two conduction paths, one of which may be associated with transport outside of the δ-layer, the other low transport within the δ-layer complex diamond structures. Introduction of the capping layer creates a third conduction path associated with unwanted boron in the capping layer-δ-layer interface.
Applied Physics Letters | 2010
Rezal K. Ahmad; Ana Carolina Parada; Niall Tumilty; Richard B. Jackman
A method for attaching nanodiamonds (NDs) to H-terminated diamond devices displaying surface conductivity, configured as an ion-sensitive field-effect transistor and resistor sensor, is demonstrated. From Hall effect measurements, there was minimal sign of degradation of the p-type surface conductivity after ND coating (∼1013 carriers/cm2, ∼27 cm2/V s). In response to pH changes, the device showed an improved response to the as-hydrogenated sensor, from 19 mV/pH to a maximum of 37 mV/pH. Configured in resistor mode, exposure to 2,4-dinitrotoluene vapor gave rise to sensitive detection, while the uncoated H-terminated device exhibited reaction instability. The mechanisms behind these observations are discussed.
Carbon | 2010
Niall Tumilty; Lesya Kasharina; Tatiana Prokhoda; Boris Sinelnikov; Richard B. Jackman
MRS Proceedings | 2007
Mose Bevilacqua; Niall Tumilty; Aysha Chaudhary; Haitao Ye; James E. Butler; Richard B. Jackman
european microwave integrated circuit conference | 2014
Niall Tumilty; Alex Pakpour-tabrizi; Richard B. Jackman; Richard Lang
In: Nebel, CE and Jackman, RB and Nemanich, RJ and Nesladek, M, (eds.) DIAMOND ELECTRONICS - FUNDAMENTALS TO APPLICATIONS II. (pp. 235 - 246). MATERIALS RESEARCH SOCIETY (2008) | 2008
Mose Bevilacqua; Niall Tumilty; Aysha Chaudhary; Haitao Ye; James E. Butler; Richard B. Jackman
In: Bergonzo, P and Gat, R and Jackman, RB and Nebel, CE, (eds.) (Proceedings) Symposium on Diamond Electronics - Fundamentals to Applications held at the 2006 MRS Fall Meeting. (pp. 275-+). MATERIALS RESEARCH SOC (2007) | 2007
Haitao Ye; Niall Tumilty; D Garner; Richard B. Jackman