Though off my beat, I found a press release from sp3 Diamond
Technologies, a company involved in the semiconductor industry but with
tentacles in many places announce that their technology is being used
by Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, Scotland. The University is
using the technology to evaluate the benefits of using diamond-coated
reactors for the next generation of fusion reactors due to diamonds’
ability to withstand the intense heat involved in the process.
The University has purchased one of sp3’s CVD diamond deposition tools
as part of a €10 billion research project aimed at developing
waste-free nuclear energy without contributing to global warming via
the Euro International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER)
program.
With
solar being all the rage these days, we can tend to forget that
alternative energy sources exist and regard well-known alternatives
with frightened disdain (mainly for good reason).
The tool
purchased allows for large area deposition of high quality
polycrystalline diamond films with a thickness of between 200
nanometers and 50 microns, which is impressive in itself.
But
it’s those amazing things we call diamonds that should perhaps get the
real credit and sp3’s President Dwain Aidala tends to agree, saying in
the press release: “We are entering an age when the unparalleled
qualities of diamond are coming to the fore and we will see more and
more applications adopting it as a material of choice.”
With
gold reaching new price heights, my bet is that diamonds will
eventually prove to be the material of choice - remember women are so
superior to men that they have known all along that diamonds are a
girl’s best friend!
For more information on Heriot-Watt’s role in the development program click
here.