JOURNAL ARTICLE

Thermal Conductivity of Diamond Composites

С. В. КидаловFedor M. Shakhov

Year: 2009 Journal:   Materials Vol: 2 (4)Pages: 2467-2495   Publisher: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

Abstract

A major problem challenging specialists in present-day materials sciences is the development of compact, cheap to fabricate heat sinks for electronic devices, primarily for computer processors, semiconductor lasers, high-power microchips, and electronics components. The materials currently used for heat sinks of such devices are aluminum and copper, with thermal conductivities of about 250 W/(m·K) and 400 W/(m·K), respectively. Significantly, the thermal expansion coefficient of metals differs markedly from those of the materials employed in semiconductor electronics (mostly silicon); one should add here the low electrical resistivity metals possess. By contrast, natural single-crystal diamond is known to feature the highest thermal conductivity of all the bulk materials studied thus far, as high as 2,200 W/(m·K). Needless to say, it cannot be applied in heat removal technology because of high cost. Recently, SiC- and AlN-based ceramics have started enjoying wide use as heat sink materials; the thermal conductivity of such composites, however, is inferior to that of metals by nearly a factor two. This prompts a challenging scientific problem to develop diamond-based composites with thermal characteristics superior to those of aluminum and copper, adjustable thermal expansion coefficient, low electrical conductivity and a moderate cost, below that of the natural single-crystal diamond. The present review addresses this problem and appraises the results reached by now in studying the possibility of developing composites in diamond-containing systems with a view of obtaining materials with a high thermal conductivity.

Keywords:
Thermal conductivity Diamond Heat sink Materials science Thermal expansion Electronics Semiconductor Composite material Ceramic Electrical resistivity and conductivity Aluminium Silicon Electrical conductor Engineering physics Optoelectronics Mechanical engineering Electrical engineering

Metrics

275
Cited By
2.64
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
108
Refs
0.91
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Thermal properties of materials
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Diamond and Carbon-based Materials Research
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Advanced ceramic materials synthesis
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Ceramics and Composites

Related Documents

JOURNAL ARTICLE

Thermal conductivity of TiC-coated diamond/Al composites

Cun XueJiakang Yu

Journal:   Emerging Materials Research Year: 2012 Vol: 1 (2)Pages: 99-106
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Study on Thermal Conductivity of Aluminum/Diamond Composites

垂有 余

Journal:   Material Sciences Year: 2022 Vol: 12 (11)Pages: 1122-1131
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Silver-based diamond composites with highest thermal conductivity

Reza TavangarL. Weber

Journal:   Emerging Materials Research Year: 2012 Vol: 1 (2)Pages: 67-74
JOURNAL ARTICLE

Thermal conductivity of diamond composites sintered under high pressures

Е. А. ЕкимовN. V. SuetinА. Ф. ПоповичVictor Ralchenko

Journal:   Diamond and Related Materials Year: 2008 Vol: 17 (4-5)Pages: 838-843
JOURNAL ARTICLE

On the thermal conductivity of Cu–Zr/diamond composites

Ke ChuChengchang JiaHong GuoWensheng Li

Journal:   Materials & Design (1980-2015) Year: 2012 Vol: 45 Pages: 36-42
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.