Wednesday 8 February 2012

Hexagonal Diamond - The "other" form of diamond

Here's another geometrical object that, if you believed basic school textbooks, should be impossible. You know how they taught you that carbon only comes in three forms, diamond, graphite and soot, and that other configurations were geometrically impossible? Before the penny dropped regarding Buckyballs and Buckytubes?

Well, it turns out that even diamond has (at least) two possible versions.

This one is known as hexagonal diamond, or Lonsdaleite, after the crystallographer Kathleen Lonsdale (1903-1971).

The reason why most people haven't heard of it is that it's not normally naturally occurring, at least, not in situations that are easily accessible to us (although teeny-tiny specks of it are supposed to have been isolated from meteorites). Its nominal bond angles and lengths would seem to be the same as normal diamond, and it still has a tetrahedral aspect to the way that it has four bonds surrounding each individual atom, but the configuration is, nevertheless, different. People have computer-modelled Lonsdaleite, but I only know of two physical models of the structure, and they're both in my bedroom. *

Hexagonal diamond is a bit of a wildcard, in that although we can try to calculate and model the properties of the bulk material, we don't really know for certain what they are, exactly. We expect pure Lonsdaleite to be harder than standard diamond (which is interesting), and it it might well have interesting semiconductor properties when we dope it (as with normal diamond), but until we can find or make a decent-sized chunk of the stuff to test, we don't know for sure.

What we could do is try to make hexagonal diamond using conventional chemical vapour deposition (CVD), but to use some sort of crystal seed surface that has bumps and hollows in the right places to get the Lonsdaleite structure started, after which the deposited film will hopefully continue growing in the new "HexD" configuration. But it's maybe not immediately obvious why Lonsdaleite doesn't usually get noticed in normal diamond-bearing rock. Does it have some form of instability that makes it a less viable end-material than conventional "cubic" diamond? Dunno.

One potential clue is Lonsdaleite's structural affinity to graphite. You can (notionally) make Lonsdaleite by taking stacked and aligned sheets of graphite and cross-linking. Graphite's two-dimensional sheets only make three out of the four potential bonds per atom, the missing fourth bond being shared as a sort of pair of fuzzy electron clouds that hover on both sides of each individual graphene sheet, as a sort of repulsive lubricant that lets the individual graphene sheets slide across each other. Looking at the hexagonal structure of a single graphene sheet, we can select alternating carbon atoms (three per hexagon), and force them down out of the plane to make bonds with the corresponding atoms on the sheet below … and then take the other 50% of the atoms in the sheet and make them form similar shared bonds with the atoms directly above them, in the next sheet up. The sheet then crinkles so that it's no longer flat, and hopefully, in the right set of circumstances, the sheets on either side will start to crinkle to fit, and their spare three-bond atoms will be pushed out of the plane to be closer to the next sheets, and will hopefully start to make bonds.

So, perhaps we could try making Lonsdaleite by clamping the edges of a block of graphite to compress the constituent graphene sheets and encourage them to "crinkle", while ... er ... heating? Or repeatedly hitting the thing with a hammer? That might create disordered Lonsdaleite, which might have pockets or regions of "the good stuff", which might then be extractable. And even if it doesn't work, it might produce something interesting, maybe. What the heck, why not go for the whole "Frankenstein laboratory" approach and try zapping a current across the sheets at the same time, to see if you can encourage something interesting to "grow". :)

But perhaps chemical vapour deposition is the way to go, if we can find a suitable seed substrate.


* Okay, somebody's now bought one though my Shapeways shop, so that makes three. :) There must be other physical models of this thing out there, in chemistry labs somewhere ... I've just not seen one photographed. Then again, I'm not a chemist or a crystallographer.