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Published by C1ay 05-16-2005
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#1
By
BlameTheEx
on
05-19-2005
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| Re: Very Large Diamonds Produced Very Fast I guess engagement rings are going to get heavier, but It is interesting to consider other applications. Diamond has wonderful properties. Lets ignore the obvious one of hardness. Diamonds are wonderful conductors of heat. The big problem with CPU's is waste heat, You get a lot of heat coming from a very small chip. Of course you can stick on a nice big fan cooled heat sink but how to get the heat from the chip to the heatsink? Right now the trick is to glue the chip to a copper heat spreader (that little copper square on the top of your CPU) and bolt the heat sink to the heat spreader. The problem is that even copper has its limits with that much heat travelling though so small a surface. This is where diamonds can come in. A diamond heat spreader would be the bees knees for computer nerds and games freaks. But why stop there? Diamond can replace silicon in semiconductors. In theory a diamond semiconductor would just blow away the competition. More raw speed for a start, but diamonds are next to indestructible. Power handling and maximum operating temperature will be incredible. They will probably be limited by the temperature at which the metal conducting strips fail. Heres is a link about diamond semiconductors: http://www.ntt.co.jp/news/news03e/0308/030820.html |
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#3
By
CraigD
on
09-04-2005
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| The availability of vapor vacuum deposition-formed diamonds – which can be inexpensively, huge, and jewelry-quality - raises the intriguing question of the reaction of natural diamond produces and distributors, such as the De Beers group. Tales of inventors of such technology disappearing forever in the company of mysterious private commando teams, real or imaginary, abound. Personally, I expect to see a massive ad campaign along the lines of “when you care enough to give her the best … artificial diamonds have no soul”. |
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), but that comment is very interesting as well
.



