Background and History to the Bristol CVD Diamond Group

Bristol University, and in particular the Physics Department, has had an interest in single crystal diamond research for around 30 years. But Chemical Vapour Deposition (CVD) diamond research began at Bristol in 1991, with a collaboration between the Chemistry and Aerospace Engineering Departments in a DTI-funded project to investigate diamond films for Aerospace applications. This has expanded rapidly, and now Bristol is one of the top centres for CVD diamond research in the UK, with the effort being split among various departments within the University. The diamond films are grown in the Chemistry Department. The mechanical properties (stiffness, etc) of the deposited films are tested in the Mechanical Engineering Dept, whilst more detailed structural analysis (TEM, EELS) is performed by the Physics Department and Interface Analysis Centre. We are also associated with several Centres for Doctoral Training, many of whom fund our PhD students. These include the Bristol Centre for Functional Nanomaterials and ACCIS, and we are partners in the Diamond Science and Technology CDT.

Funding sources

Funding over the years has been from various sources, both governmental and industrial, including:

EPSRC
EPSRC

Royal SocietyThe Royal Society

Element Six
Element Six

STFC
STFC

Bristol Uni Alumni
Bristol University
Alumni Foundation

2a Technologies
2a Technologies

as well as previously by AWE, Arima Corporation (Taiwan), Thomas Swan, Smiths Industries and DERA (Farnborough).

We are also part of:

CDT logo
UK CDT in Diamond Science and Technology

and the

NRC logo
The Bristol-Oxford Nuclear Research Centre.