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Features of coated diamonds from the Snap Lake/King Lake kimberlite dyke, Slave craton, Canada, as revealed by optical topography
Authors:A.P Yelisseyev   N.P. Pokhilenko   J.W. Steeds   D.A. Zedgenizov  V.P. Afanasiev
Affiliation:

a Siberian Division, Institute of Mineralogy and Petrography, 3 Ac.Koptyug av., 630090, Novosibirsk, Russia

b H.H. Wills Physics Laboratory, University of Bristol, Tyndall Avenue, Bristol BS8 1TL, UK

Abstract:Confocal photoluminescence (PL) and local absorption spectroscopy were used to study the types and spatial distribution of point defects in coated diamonds, the input of which is about 30% in the Snap Lake deposit, Canada. Nitrogen concentration is on the level of several hundreds of ppm in the core, with a nitrogen-poor layer in its outer part, whereas in the coat it is usually several times higher as a result of fast growth. Nitrogen defects in the core are strongly aggregated with N3, B and B′-forms dominating, whereas A-defects are typical of the coat. The rounded shape of the coated diamonds is a result of the combined effect of partial dissolution of the octahedral core and the “abnormal” growth of the coat, which produces a fibrous structure. Analysis of PL and PL excitation spectra showed that structureless yellow-green PL of the coat is likely to be due to nickel-nitrogen complexes with their fine structure broadened in the strain fields. The presence of irradiation/annealing products such as vacancies V0 and nitrogen-vacancy complexes NV, N2V2 shows that the diamonds studied have undergone post-growth ionizing irradiation with further low-temperature annealing in natural conditions.
Keywords:Coated diamonds   Absorption   Luminescence   Nickel   Nitrogen   Impurity defects
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