HONG KONG SAR -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 20 December 2024 - A research team led by Professor Zhiqin Chu,
Associate Professor in the Department of Electrical & Electronic
Engineering, and Professor Yuan Lin, Professor in the Department of
Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering at the University of Hong
Kong (HKU), has developed a groundbreaking method for massively
producing ultrathin and ultra-flexible diamond membranes, in
collaboration with Professor Kwai Hei Li, Assistant Professor of the
Southern University of Science and Technology, and Professor Qi Wang,
Professor of the Dongguan Institute of Opto-Electronics of Peking
University.
These ultrathin and ultra-flexible diamond membranes are compatible with
existing semiconductor manufacturing technologies, and thus can, in
principle, be fabricated into a variety of electronic, photonic,
mechanical, acoustic, and quantum devices.
The innovative edge-exposed exfoliation method discovered by the team
facilitates the rapid production of scalable, free-standing diamond
membranes. This approach is superior to traditional methods, which are
typically time- and costly and limited in size. Remarkably, the new
process can manufacture a two-inch wafer within 10 seconds, offering
unmatched efficiency and scalability.
These ultra-flat diamond surfaces, essential for high-precision
micromanufacturing, along with the flexibility of the membranes, open up
new possibilities for next-generation flexible and wearable electronic
and photonic devices. The research team envisions significant industrial
applications in electronics, photonics, mechanics, thermics, acoustics,
and quantum technologies.
"We hope to promote the usage of the high-figure-of-merit diamond
membrane into various fields, and to commercialise this cutting-edge
technology and deliver premium diamond membranes, setting a new standard
in semiconductor industry. We are eager to collaborate with academic
and industry partners to bring this revolutionary product to market and
accelerate the arrival of diamond era," concluded Professor Chu.
Diamonds, renowned globally as valuable gemstones, possess exceptional
versatility in various scientific and engineering applications. They are
the hardest natural material, boasting unparalleled thermal
conductivity at room temperature, extremely high carrier mobility,
dielectric breakdown strength, an ultrawide bandgap, and optical
transparency spanning from the infrared to the deep-ultraviolet
spectrum. These remarkable properties make diamonds ideal for
fabricating advanced high-power, high-frequency electronic devices,
photonic devices, and heat spreaders to cool high-power density
electronic components, such as those in processors, semiconductor
lasers, and electric vehicles. However, the inert nature and rigid
crystal structure of diamonds pose significant challenges in fabrication
and mass production, particularly for ultrathin and freestanding
diamond membranes, thereby restricting their widespread usage.
The full paper can be accessed here:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-08218-x
About Professor Zhiqin Chu
Prof. Zhiqin Chu received his B.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Physics from
Northwest University (China) and The Chinese University of Hong Kong, in
July 2008 and July 2012, respectively. After spending one year as a
postdoctoral fellow in the same group, he conducted postdoctoral
research at The University of Stuttgart (Germany) from April 2014 to
September 2016. Since November 2018, he has been an Assistant Professor
in the Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering (with a joint
appointment in the School of Biomedical Sciences) at The University of
Hong Kong, and was promoted to tenured Associate Professor in November
2024. Since joining HKU, Prof. Chu has published over 60 peer-reviewed
articles in journals such as Nature, Nature Communications, and Science
Advances, and has filed 14 patents related to diamond technology. Prof.
Chu has received multiple awards, including the Gold Medal at the 2023
International Invention Innovation Competition in Canada (iCAN), the Top
10 Best Invention Award at the 2023 iCAN, the Silver Medal at the 2022
Inventions Geneva Evaluation Days, and the Gold Medal at the 2024
International Exhibition of Inventions of Geneva.
About Professor Yuan Lin
Prof. Yuan Lin earned his B.S. and M.S. in Engineering Mechanics from
Tsinghua University, followed by another M.S. in Applied Mathematics and
a Ph.D. in Solid Mechanics from Brown University. He joined The
University of Hong Kong in 2008 and is now a full Professor in the
Department of Mechanical Engineering. His research on cell/tissue
mechanics and mechanics of functional materials led to publications in
top journals, including Nature, PNAS, Nature Communications, Science
Advances and PRL. Prof. Lin has served as Chair of the Gordon Research
Conference on Nano-Mechanical Interfaces and keynote speaker in numerous
international conferences. As the PI or Co-PI, he has secured more than
15 research grants. Prof. Lin currently serves as the Secretary for the
Hong Kong Society of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics.