Abstract

An order-of-magnitude enhancement of the pulsed photocurrent in a polycrystalline diamond sample synthesized by chemical vapor deposition is observed under the conditions of formation of an electron–hole liquid. Nonequilibrium charge carriers are excited by laser pulses at a wavelength of 222 nm with FWHM pulse duration of 18 ns and peak intensity above 2.5 MW/cm2 upon cooling the sample to 90 K. For peak intensities of laser excitation lower than 1 MW/cm2, sample cooling from 300 to 90 K leads to a decrease in pulsed photocurrent by about a factor of 5. The observed increase in pulsed photocurrent is attributed to the formation of the electron–hole liquid.

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