Abstract

Nitrogen impurity remains a crucial focus in diamond impurity research. To address difficulties associated with excessive nitrogen impurities during the synthesis of high-quality diamonds under high-pressure and high-temperature conditions and to increase the proportion of aggregated nitrogen impurities in diamonds, we explored the multi-element growth environment of natural diamonds. In this study, we used N–H–S–O multi-component co-doping to increase the proportion of aggregated nitrogen impurities in diamond. Through Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy characterization, we successfully used the synergistic mechanism of N–H–S–O co-doping to achieve a 47.9% proportion of aggregated nitrogen impurities in diamond in a single synthesis and successfully synthesized the type IaA + Ib diamond. Raman tests revealed a lower residual stress in the high-quality large single-crystal diamond synthesized. Moreover, we comprehensively analyzed the mechanism of N–H–S–O co-doping to increase the proportion of nitrogen impurities in diamond aggregates and proposed an optimal ratio principle based on the experimental results. This study presents a method for synthesizing diamonds with a high proportion of aggregated nitrogen impurities and provides valuable guidance for elucidating the origin of natural diamonds and synthesizing multi-doped functional diamonds.

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