Abstract:
A method is described for the production of a suitable substrate for the subsequent growth of a mono-crystalline diamond layer. This method includes the following steps: 
     Selection of a substrate of a mono-crystalline material having a fixed lattice constant (a Si ) or with a layer consisting of such a material. 
     Manufacture of a strained silicon layer with foreign material atoms incorporated at substitutional lattice sites on the mono-crystalline material of the substrate. 
     Transfer of the strained layer into an at least partly relaxed state in which it adopts by relaxation and through the selected foreign material concentration a lattice constant (a Si(C ) which satisfies the condition n.a Si(C) =m.a D , wherein n and m are integers and a D  is the lattice constant of diamond, with the relaxed layer forming the substrate or substrate surface for the epitaxial growth.

Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     The invention relates to a method for manufacture of a suitable substrate for the subsequent growth of a single crystal diamond layer and for the manufacture of a single crystal diamond layer, to a substrate as well as to a carrier wafer and a diamond jewel. 
     Single crystal diamond layers are particularly desirable for applications in high temperature electronics. Diamond is a crystalline high-pressure phase of carbon which is meta-stable under normal conditions. The stable phase is graphite. In addition to naturally occurring diamonds, diamonds are also produced artificially by a high-pressure method. These diamonds are normally very small and are used for grinding purposes because of the hardness of the diamonds. For electronic applications of diamonds, it is principally thin, single crystal diamond layers that are of interest. High-temperature applications which are made possible by the high band gap of diamond of about 5 eV are at the center of interest. Diamond can in principle be deposited epitaxially onto single crystal diamond by means of chemical vapor deposition (CVD) in a corresponding hydrogen atmosphere. The presence of hydrogen serves in this connection for the preferential etching away of the stable equilibrium phase in the form of graphite, which is likewise deposited. For practical applications, the epitaxy of diamond layers on single crystal diamond crystals is not of great importance, because only very small single crystal diamond substrates are available and because large area substrates of other materials with similar lattice constants to diamond do not exist. In the case of microelectronics and optoelectronics there are, however, semiconductor wafers which are commercially available in part with a diameter of up to 30 cm. Since no large area single crystal diamond substrates are available, numerous efforts have been made to produce single crystal diamond layers on other easily available substrates. The best success hitherto has been achieved with (100) orientated silicon substrates on which strongly textured, likewise almost (100) orientated diamond layers can be deposited by means of suitable CVD methods using an electrical voltage at the silicon substrate. These diamond layers consist of individual single crystal diamond grains in the micron range, which are twisted and tilted relative to the silicon substrate, with the twisting and tilting angles lying in the order of magnitude of about 1°. So-called grain boundaries thereby arise at points at which individual diamond grains abut, and greatly impair the electronic characteristics of the diamond film. It would, in contrast, be desirable to avoid these grain boundaries in order to actually produce a single crystal diamond layer. These diamond layers are described in the article by X. Jiang et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 62 (1993) 3438. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     It is an object of the present invention to provide a method for the manufacture of a substrate for the growth of single crystal diamond layers and also corresponding substrates which make it possible to produce extended single crystal diamond layers by epitaxy, so far as possible without disturbing grain boundaries, and diamonds built up on this for electronic and/or other purposes, such as industrial cutting and grinding processes, or in the form of diamond jewels. 
     The method of the invention for the manufacture of a suitable substrate for the subsequent growth of a single crystal diamond layer is characterized by the following steps: 
     a) selection of a substrate of a mono-crystalline material having a fixed lattice constant (a Si ) or with a layer consisting of such a material, 
     b) manufacturing either a strained silicon layer with foreign material atoms incorporated at substitutional lattice sites on the monocrystalline material of the substrate, 
     c) transferring the strained layer into an at least partly relaxed state in which it adopts by relaxation and through the selected foreign atom concentration a lattice constant (a Si(C ) which satisfies the condition 
     
       
         
           n.a 
           Si(C) 
           =m.a 
           D 
         
       
     
      where n and m are integers, preferably different integers, and a D  is the lattice constant of diamond, with the relaxed layer forming the substrate, for example the substrate surface, for the epitaxial growth of the diamond layer. 
     In particular it is proposed that carbon atoms should be used for the foreign material atoms and n should be selected=2 and m=3. 
     The method of the invention is based on the fundamental realization that the almost epitaxial alignment of the diamond layers which can be grown on (100) silicon wafers is to be associated with the fact that the lattice constant of diamond a D  has an almost rational relationship to the lattice constant of the silicon a Si , so that one can write 
     
       
         2 a   Si   ≅a   D   
       
     
     The condition 
     
       
         2 a   Si =3 a   D   (1) 
       
     
     is, however, not precisely satisfied. Furthermore, it has been speculated, in accordance with the invention, that if the corresponding relationship were precisely satisfied, one could expect direct epitaxial growth without misorientation and without grain boundaries. 
     In reality, 2a Si  is approximately 1½% larger than 3a D . This is now seen as the reason why an adaptation arises with a corresponding faulty orientation (twisting and tilting) in the 1-degree region. 
     The basic concept of the present invention is that if one could reduce the lattice constant of silicon substrate by about 1%, so that 2a Si 3a D , i.e. so that the condition (1) is precisely satisfied, the growth of single crystal diamond layers without substantial structuring should be possible on such a silicon substrate. 
     Furthermore, the invention recognizes that the desired reduction of the lattice constant of silicon by the incorporation of foreign material atoms on substitutional lattice sites of the crystalline silicon can be achieved. It is, for example, known that carbon as a group-IV-element can be electrically neutrally incorporated in crystalline silicon at substitutional lattice sites. Since carbon atoms are considerably smaller than silicon atoms, the incorporation of carbon leads to a volume reduction of the silicon crystal. In simplified manner, one can say that the volume of a silicon crystal reduces for each substitutionally incorporated carbon atom by an atomic volume ΩSi of the silicon. This is explained in more detail in the article by U. Gösele in MRS-Proc. Vol. 59 (1986), pages 419 to 431. 
     Thus, a corresponding reduction of the average lattice constant a Si(C)  results in dependence on the concentration C c  of the incorporated carbon. 
     The relationship 
     
       
           a   SiC ( C   c )≅ a   Si (1 −αC   c )  (2) 
       
     
     applies approximately, with α having the value of 6,9×10 −24  cm −3 . From this it can be calculated that a carbon concentration of approximately 2×10 21  cm −3  (corresponding to approximately 1,5%) would be necessary in order to largely accurately satisfy the relationship (1). Since the diamond deposition takes place at elevated temperatures in the range of 800° C., the different thermal expansion of diamond and silicon should also be taken into account, so that the relationship (1) applies at the deposition temperature and not necessarily at room temperature. The taking into account of the different coefficients of thermal expansion, however, only leads to a small modification of the carbon concentration that is required. 
     The solubility of carbon in silicon in thermal equilibrium is known and is extremely small (maximum about 10 17  cm −3 ) compared to the carbon concentration of approximately 2×10 21  cm −3  required for the desired reduction in size of the lattice. It has, however, been shown that it is possible by means of both CVD processes and also by means of molecular beam epitaxy to grow carbon at these high concentrations (corresponding to a lattice contraction of ca. 2.5% and more) into epitaxial silicon layers in a meta-stable form, as can be found in the literature. In this connection reference is made to the following documents: 
     C. Guedj et al., J. Appl. Phys. 84 (1998) 4631, 
     W. Faschinger et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 67 (1995) 2630, 
     A. R. Powell et al., J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B11 (1993:) 1064. 
     At higher temperatures and with correspondingly longer tempering times, substitutionally dissolved carbon precipitates out in the form of silicon carbide precipitations. For the handling of epitaxial growth processes, the epitaxial silicon layers with a carbon content are grown on silicon crystals, and a problem arises in that the carbon-rich silicon layers adopt the lattice constant of silicon parallel to the plane of growth and not the lattice constant which is to be expected from the relationship (2). 
     The carbon-rich layer is subjected to a high tensile stress, it represents a strained layer. A reduction of the tensile stress and an associated relaxation of the lattice constant of the layer by mismatched dislocations does not occur in practice, because the corresponding dislocations have only a negligible mobility in the carbon-rich material. At higher temperatures silicon carbide precipitation preferentially takes place instead of relaxation via mismatched dislocations. In order to overcome this problem, the invention provides that the strained carbon-rich silicon layer must be transferred into an at least partly relaxed state in which it adopts the desired lattice constant a SiC  by relaxation and as a result of the selected concentration of foreign material. This can be realized when the carbon-rich layer is no longer mechanically fixedly connected to the silicon substrate on which it was grown, and a simple relaxation is thereby possible. 
     Since large area free-standing thin layers (with thicknesses typically under one micron) are not easy to handle technologically, it is desirable to reattach the correspondingly relaxed layers (with the now desired small lattice constant) to an appropriate carrier substrate. In this respect silicon is again preferred because it has practically the same thermal coefficient of expansion as the highly carbon doped silicon layer. 
     It is evident from the explanations given above how one can produce an initially strained carbon-rich silicon layer for the manufacture of a suitable substrate for the subsequent grown of a single crystal diamond layer and can then place this strained layer in a relaxed state so that it adopts a lattice constant (a Si(C) ) which satisfies the condition 2(a Si(C) )=3a D  and also that the relaxed layer forms the substrate or at least the effective surface of a substrate for the epitaxial growth of the diamond layer. 
     It is not absolutely essential to use carbon atoms for the manufacture of the strained layer, but rather other foreign materials can be considered. It is also not essential for the substrate to consist of monocrystalline silicon, but rather other monocrystalline materials can also be used, providing the desired strained layer with the incorporated foreign material atoms on substitutional lattice sites can be grown thereon. 
     One possibility of placing the strained layer in a state in which it can relax by relaxation and adopt the desired lattice constant (a Si(C) ) lies in producing a separation of the strained layer from the substrate. This can be achieved by etching trenches in a predetermined pattern into the strained layer and by etching away a layer arranged beneath the strained layer through the trenches by subsequent etching process by means of a suitable etching liquid. In this way the trenches are preferably so formed that square or rectangular regions of the strained layer arise. 
     It is particularly advantageous if, after the separation of the strained layer from the substrate by the etching liquid, the substrate with the now relaxed layer, which is still weakly coupled in place via the etching liquid, is removed from the etching liquid and the etching liquid present between the previously strained and now relaxed layer on the substrate is removed, whereby the relaxed layer comes to lie directly adjacent the remaining substrate and bonds with the latter in the relaxed state, for example through the formation of covalent bonds, whereby the remaining substrate becomes the carrier substrate. 
     Specifically, one can proceed in such a manner that one uses an SOI substrate in which a monocrystalline silicon layer is coupled via a silicon dioxide layer to an insulator, for example bonded to it, that the thickness of the silicon layer is reduced to a desired layer thickness d SOI , optionally by suitable thermal oxidation and then separation of the thermal oxide, for example by hydrofluoric acid, that a strained carbon-rich layer with the layer thickness d Si(C)  is epitaxially grown onto the silicon layer, that the trenches are produced through the Si(C) layer and the lower lying Si layer by a dry etching process known per se which is highly selectively stopped at the silicon dioxide layer of the Si substrate, and that the separation of the strained layer from the insulator is carried out by dissolving the buried silicon dioxide layer of the SOI substrate in a bath with diluted hydrofluoric acid. 
     A silicon layer is preferably epitaxially grown onto the Si(C) layer prior to the etching of the trenches, and indeed with a thickness which corresponds essentially to the thickness of the Si layer lying beneath it, with both the thickness of the silicon layer beneath it and also the thickness of the cladding layer of silicon being selected to be substantially smaller than the thickness of the Si(C) layer, for example at least 10 times smaller and preferably orders of magnitude smaller. Since the Si(C) layer is arranged between two Si layers of at least substantially the same thickness, the strain which originates from these Si layers is relatively small, because the layers are thin. Furthermore, the presence of two Si layers of the same thickness on both sides of the Si(C) layer ensures that no bending deflection of the layer system takes place, which would be deleterious to the mechanical stability and the subsequent bonding process. 
     The dissolving of the silicon dioxide layer should in particular take place with a horizontal arrangement of the structure in the bath of dilute hydrofluoric acid because in this way the thin separated layer is supported carefully over its full area and any tendency of the separated layer to slide away from the lower lying substrate under the action of gravity is avoided. 
     It is not absolutely essential to use an SOI substrate for the epitaxial growth of the carbon-rich strained Si(C) layer, but rather one can grow this layer directly onto a monocrystalline silicon wafer as substrate. 
     The invention furthermore provides a method for the manufacture of a single crystal diamond layer which is characterized in that one grows the latter onto a relaxed layer which has been manufactured in accordance with one of the above-explained processes and which satisfies the corresponding condition na Si =ma D . 
     After the manufacture of an epitaxial diamond layer without pronounced grain boundaries, the latter can be duplicated in accordance with a further development of the invention. 
     In other words, after the growth of a correspondingly thick single crystal diamond layer on a relaxed carbon-doped silicon substrate a thin film of this diamond layer is separated from the remainder of the diamond layer by a suitable hydrogen implantation process and bonded by a wafer bonding process to a carrier wafer. This process can be repeated multiply so that a plurality of carrier wafers with bonded on diamond layers can be produced from the original diamond layer. A further diamond layer can be grown epitaxially on each carrier wafer with a bonded on diamond layer and the hydrogen implantation process and wafer bonding process can be repeatedly used in order to produce even more carrier wafers with bonded on diamond layers. The original substrate with the relaxed carbon-rich silicon layer can also be multiply used or reused for the growth of further diamond layers which can then likewise be transferred by means of the hydrogen implantation process and the wafer bonding process to carrier wafers. 
     The method can also be carried out so that an epitaxial single crystal diamond layer in the layer thickness range above approximately 1 mm is produced over areas which are larger than approximately 1 square millimeter in order to realize the manufacture of diamond jewels. 
     The separation of the diamond layer in the region of the hydrogen-rich buried layer is preferably carried out in that the bonded wafer is held at a temperature of about 800° C. for a sufficient time in order to produce microcrack formation in the hydrogen-rich layer ( 38 ) and subsequent splitting off of the carrier wafer ( 42 ) with the bonded on diamond layer ( 32 A) along the microcracks and parallel to the substrate surface. The epitaxial production of the diamond layer is preferably carried out by a CVD process known per se. 
     The present invention has general validity in the sense that the method can be used for the manufacture of a suitable substrate for the subsequent growth of a single crystal material layer with any desired lattice constant a D . The general process is characterized by the following steps: 
     a) selection of a substrate of a monocrystalline material with a fixed lattice constant (a Si ) different from a D  or with a layer consisting of such a material, 
     b) production of a strained epitaxial layer of another material with foreign material atoms incorporated at substitutional lattice sites on the monocrystalline material of the substrate, 
     c) transfer of the strained layer into an at least partly relaxed state in which it adopts through relaxation and through the selected foreign atom concentration a lattice constant (a Si(C) ) which satisfies the condition 
     
       
         
           n.a 
           Si(C) 
           =m.a 
           D 
         
       
     
      with n and m being integers, preferably different integers, and wherein the relaxed layer forms the substrate or substrate surface for the epitaxial growth of the material layer with the desired lattice constant a D . 
     For the sake of completeness reference should be made at this point to the article by Jean-Francois Damlencourt, Jean-Louis Leclercq, Michel Gendry, Michel Garrigues, Nabil Aberkane and Guy Hollinger with the title “Paramorphic Growth: A New Approach in Mismatched Heteroepitaxy to Prepare Fully Relaxed Materials”, in Japanese J. Appl. Pys., Volume 38, (1999) pages 996 to 999. 
     The method described there is concerned with the preparation of a thin relaxed starter layer (“seed membrane”) (specific case described there In 0.65 Ga 0.35 As) with a fixed lattice constant on a monocrystalline substrate (in the specific case of InP) with a different lattice constant in order to then grow thicker layers of the same material (In 0.65 Ga 0.35 As) without strain on the thin relaxed starter layer. 
     For this purpose the starter layer is first epitaxially grown in the form of a thin pseudomorphic strained layer of a composition corresponding to that of the desired layer onto a sacrificial layer present on the substrate. The starter layer is subsequently separated from the substrate by removal of the sacrificial layer by chemical etching and is bonded in the relaxed state to the substrate again after the relaxation has taken place. 
     In the specific example the sacrificial layer is grown onto a buffer layer of AlInAs present on the substrate. For the chemical etching of the sacrificial layer trenches were etched through the starter layer and the sacrificial layer into the buffer layer in order to define square areas of the starter layer of 40×40 μm 2  to 300×300 μm 2  which were connected directly to the substrate via trampoline arms. The trampoline arms are on the one hand intended to enable the relaxation of the square regions of the starter layer, but on the other hand to ensure the retention of the crystallographic alignment of these regions with the substrate. 
     The process described there has also been further developed as can be read in the non-prior published article “High-quality fully relaxed In 0.65 Ga 0.35 As layers grown on InP using the paramorphic approach” by J. F. Damlencourt, J. L. Leclercq, M. Gendry, P. Regrany and G. Hollinger in Appl. Phys. Letter, 75, volume 23, of Dec. 6, 1999, pages 3638 to 3640. 
     Furthermore, the present invention includes a substrate which has been manufactured in accordance with one of the above-described methods, in particular a substrate which is suitable for the subsequent growth of a single crystal diamond layer on at least one of its surfaces with the special characteristic that a layer is present at the said surface of the substrate which has a lattice constant (a Si(C) ) through relaxation of the selected foreign material concentration, which satisfies the condition n.a Si(C) , with n and m being integers and a D  being the lattice constant of diamond, with the relaxed layer forming the substrate for the epitaxial growth. 
     Furthermore, the present invention includes a carrier wafer with an epitaxial single crystal diamond layer bonded on via a bond layer and diamond jewels which can be produced from the diamond layers in accordance with the invention. 
     The invention will be explained in the following in more detail with reference to embodiments and to the drawings. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     FIGS. 1A-1I are a sequence of sketches to explain a first embodiment of the method of the invention for the manufacture of epitaxial monocrystalline diamond layers without pronounced grain boundaries, 
     FIGS. 2A-2G are a further sequence of sketches to explain a possibility in accordance with the invention for the duplication of diamond layers, 
     FIGS. 3A-3D are a further sequence of sketches to explain the second embodiment of the method of the invention utilizing spring structures, 
     FIG. 4 is a representation corresponding to the cross-section of FIG. 3A but of an alternative embodiment of the invention, 
     FIG. 5 is a representation in accordance with the cross-section of FIG. 3A, but of a further alternative embodiment of the invention, and 
     FIG. 6 is a plan view of a semiconductor wafer in order to make clear a further possible inventive design of the spring structure. 
    
    
     DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
     In the following, various methods will be described in more detail as to how a carbon-rich silicon layer can be produced and separated from the original substrate so that an elastic relaxation to the desired lattice constant takes place. In a second step the relaxed layer manufactured in this way is then bonded by means of a wafer bonding process to a silicon substrate wafer again and the substrate wafer can also be the original substrate wafer on which the carbon-rich epitaxial layer was grown. 
     In the embodiment of FIG. 1 a so-called SOI substrate  10  is taken as the starting material and consists in this example of a single crystal silicon layer  12  which is connected via a silicon dioxide layer  14  to an insulator  16 . Such SOI substrates are available commercially in diameters up to 300 mm. The commercially available silicon layer  12  of 100 to 300 nm thickness is however too thick for the present invention and is first reduced to about 10 nm to 100 nm. This can be achieved by suitable thermal oxidation of the silicon layer and separation of the thermal oxide by hydrofluoric acid. The reduction of the thickness of the silicon layer  12  is schematically shown in the cross-sectional drawing of FIG. 1B, where the layer  12  is significantly thinner than in the corresponding cross-sectional drawing of the starting substrate in accordance with FIG.  1 A. 
     A carbon-rich Si(C) layer  18  with a layer thickness d Si(C)  of typically a few 100 nm is first grown epitaxially onto the substrate  10  of FIG. 1B, i.e. onto the silicon layer  12 , as can be seen from FIG.  1 C. The epitaxial growth of this carbon-rich layer can be effected in accordance with the named documents. 
     A silicon cladding layer  20  (without carbon doping) is then grown epitaxially onto this layer  18  in accordance with FIG. 1B for later mechanical stress compensation, with its thickness d Deck  corresponding to the reduced layer thickness d SOI  of the silicon layer  12  of the SOI substrate  10 . The carbon concentration in the carbon-rich layer  18  is so selected in this arrangement that the sandwich consisting of the two silicon layers  20 ,  12  and the carbon-doped layer  18  has the desired lattice constant in accordance with the relationship (1) when this sandwich is separated from the insulator  16  by removal of the silicon dioxide layer  14  and has relaxed. In order to keep the carbon concentration in a technologically available range, it is thus necessary for 
       d   SOI   +d   Deck   &lt;&lt;d   Si(C) , 
     i.e. d SOI  plus d Deck  should preferably be an order of magnitude or more smaller than d Si(C) . 
     The so grown structure of FIG. 1D is now suitably structured by means of photolithographic methods, and indeed in such a way that trenches  22  are etched in a predetermined pattern into the Si/Si(C)/Si layer sandwich  20 ,  18 ,  12 . FIG. 1E shows the wafer  10  with these trenches  22  in a square pattern. Dry etching processes which stop highly selectively at the buried oxide layer of the SOI substrate are preferred for the etching of the trenches  22 . 
     As shown, squares or rectangles with a side length of up to about 1 cm can be selected as a pattern for the trenches. The total silicon wafer would then be covered with such squares or rectangles  24  separated from one another by trenches. 
     As a next step the so structured wafer is placed as horizontally as possible into a bath  26  with dilute hydrofluoric acid  28  which dissolves the oxide layer  14  also beneath the epitaxial layer sandwich  20 ,  18 ,  12 . In the representation of FIG. 1F this dissolving has already been completed. Because of the surface tension of the liquid, the epitaxial layers, however, continue to stick to the substrate wafer via a liquid layer  30  of the etching liquid. Since the coupling via the liquid layer  30  is very weak, the elastically strained epitaxial layer sandwich  20 ,  18 ,  12  will contract to its natural lattice constant. 
     In a next step the wafer is removed from the hydrofluoric acid solution, as is shown in FIG.  1 G. For the sake of illustration, FIG. 1G shows only a section of the wafer and at a scale enlarged relative to FIG.  1 F. 
     After a correspondingly long period of waiting at room temperature or after a correspondingly shorter waiting at a slightly elevated temperature (below the boiling point of the etching liquid consisting of hydrofluoric acid), this liquid  30  evaporates and also disappears from the regions beneath the separated carbon-rich epitaxial layer  18 , as shown in FIG.  1 H. 
     An increase of the temperature after the evaporation of the liquid to a few 100° C. (typically 400-600° C.) leads to an intimate covalent bond between the separated epitaxial layer sandwich  20 ,  18 ,  12  and the original substrate in the form of the insulator  16 . 
     One now has available a sandwich structure in which many separate square regions  24  exist on an insulator  16  which can itself be a silicon wafer and within which a thin Si/Si(C)/Si layer sandwich  20 ,  18 ,  12  with the desired smaller lattice constant in accordance with the relationship (1) is covalently bonded onto the silicon substrate. FIG. 1H is also to be considered as representative for this bonded structure, since the structure has not changed through the bond process relative to the method step of evaporating the etching solution. 
     Single crystal diamond layers  32  can now be deposited in accordance with customary CVD processes at elevated temperatures onto epitaxial layers of the desired lattice constant in accordance with the basic principle of the invention, as is schematically illustrated in FIG.  1 I. In this respect attention should be paid to the fact that the deposition takes place as far as possible at temperatures at which the process of silicon carbide precipitation takes place so slowly that no substantial increase of the lattice constant of the carbon doped silicon layer occurs during the diamond deposition. 
     As a variant, it is also possible to remove the layer  20  and to grow the diamond layer directly onto the Si(C) layer  18 . This variant should, however, first take place after the bonding onto a substrate. Prior to this, this Si layer  20  has the task of compensating for mechanical stresses which arise from the lower Si layer  12 . Otherwise, the layer will bend and the bonding will be made more difficult and possibly prevented. After the bonding one could, however (as stated), remove the layer  20  (does not however have to do so), which may perhaps have advantages. 
     It can be seen from the above explanations that the manufacture of the suitable substrate, for example in accordance with FIG. 1H, for the growth of single crystal diamond layers requires a considerable technical effort. It would therefore be desirable if this substrate could be multiply used. In the following a corresponding process for this will be set out with reference to FIGS. 2A-2G. For many applications it is sufficient to have a thin single crystal diamond layer (typically under one micron thickness) on a suitable substrate, which should have a thermal conductivity which is as high as possible and a similar thermal coefficient of expansion to diamond. 
     The starting point for the present further development of the invention is a substrate in accordance with FIG. 11 with an already deposited epitaxial single crystal diamond layer of many microns, for example 10 μm. This diamond layer  32  is now implanted, in accordance with FIG. 2B, with hydrogen ions  34 , with the implantation process, which is known per se, being represented by arrows  36 . The implantation takes place with hydrogen ions in the dose range of 10 16 -10 17  cm −2  and with typical energies of 20 keV-200 keV, so that the hydrogen-rich buried layer  38  forms in the diamond layer  32  at a depth which results from the implantation energy. Implantation depths in the range from 100 nm to 1000 nm can easily be realized. Prior to or after the hydrogen implantation a thin bond layer  40  is deposited on the diamond layer, as can be seen in FIG. 2C, with the bond layer having been deposited in FIG. 2C after the hydrogen implantation. This bond layer can, for example, consist of polysilicon, CVD silicon dioxide or CVD silicon nitride and should be selected in accordance with the envisaged use of the diamond layer. This bond layer is so prepared by means of appropriate chemo-mechanical polishing that a carrier wafer  42 , for example in the form of a silicon substrate or an SOI substrate, can subsequently be bonded to the so prepared free surface of the bond layer  40  and thus to the diamond layer  32 . This bonding process is schematically indicated in FIG.  2 D. The result can be seen in FIG.  2 E. 
     The heating up of the so bonded structure to a temperature of above about 800° C. for a sufficiently long time, as is for example described in the document Q.-Y. Tong et al., Appl. Phys. Lett. 70 (1997) 1390 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,877,070 (1999), Gösele et al., then leads to microcrack formation in the hydrogen-rich layer  38  and finally to a splitting off of one of the wafers along the microcracks and parallel to the bonding boundary surface, such as is known as a “smart cut” in the case of silicon, as is described in the document M. Bruel, Electronics Lett. 31 (1995) 1201. 
     Thus, a single crystal diamond layer  32 A is then transferred via the thin bond layer  40  onto a suitable substrate in form of the carrier wafer  42 . The surface of the transferred layer  32 A can now—if necessary—be subjected to fine chemical mechanical polishing. Appropriate polishing recipes have been set forth in literature and discussed, for example in the article by Haisma et al., Philips J. Res. 49 (1995) 23. 
     The carrier wafer  42  with the diamond layer  32 A can now be used for various purposes. On the one hand, this structure can be used for electronic purposes. On the other hand, the diamond layer  32 A can also be enlarged in thickness by further epitaxial deposits of diamond material by means of the CVD process known per se, so that, for example, diamond jewels for industrial purposes arise. Another possibility is to grow further diamond material epitaxially onto the diamond layer  32 A and to produce further carrier wafers  42  with a bonded on diamond layer  32 A in accordance with FIG. 2F by hydrogen implantation. The original substrates  16  with the remainder of the diamond layer  42 B can be reused. For example, the process of hydrogen implantation induced transfer of single crystal diamond layers can be correspondingly multiply repeated with this substrate, so that a plurality of carrier wafers  42  with a bonded on diamond layer  32 A can be produced from the starting structure of FIG.  2 A. The original substrate  16  with the diamond layer  32 B of FIG. 2G can also be used, if necessary after a correspondingly fine polishing, for the growth of a thick diamond layer, and can be used again as a starting substrate in accordance with FIG.  2 A. It can also be used for the further applications which have been described in connection with the structure of FIG.  2 F. 
     Instead of square and separate individual regions of carbon-rich epitaxial silicon layers it is also possible to leave the inner part of the silicon wafer with a continuous, carbon-rich layer and to form suitably dimensioned spring structures by etching in a marginal region only (with well-known methods from the field of silicon micromechanics). After the etching away of the whole area silicon wafer from the rear side (apart from a ring-like marginal region which serves as a holder) these spring structures permit the inner, separated, carbon-rich epitaxial layer to relax. In this connection the buried oxide layer of the SOI substrate serves as an etch stop layer, which can in turn be easily dissolved away by means of hydrofluoric acid. Then a suitable wafer bonding step takes place (see the literature; Gösele and Tong 1998) for the anchoring of the relaxed carbon-rich silicon layer onto a silicon substrate. Instead of the large area separation of the base substrate it is also possible to provide the carbon-rich epitaxial layer in the inner region of the wafer with a plurality of holes which permit the lower lying oxide to be etched away with hydrofluoric acid. 
     The embodiment with spring structures will now be explained in more detail with reference to FIGS. 3A-3D. 
     In the subsequent embodiments elements which correspond to elements of the previous drawings will be characterized by the same reference numerals but increased by a basic number such as  100 ,  200 ,  300  or  400  in order to differentiate the different embodiments. The previous description of the individual elements also applies for the correspondingly numbered elements in the further embodiments, unless something is stated to the contrary. 
     The reference numeral  110  signifies a SOI substrate which originally had the form of a continuous wafer substantially circular in plan view in accordance with the broken lines  111 . The SOI substrate also consists here of an insulator  116 , an oxide layer  114 , and a monocrystalline Si layer  112 , which has also been reduced in thickness here to about 10 nm to 100 nm. In this embodiment a thicker Si(C) layer  118  having a thickness approximately 10 times larger than the thickness of the Si layer  112  is also present on the Si layer  112 . This Si(C) layer  118 , i.e. Si with carbon doping, was epitaxially grown in accordance with one of the initially named methods onto the layer  112 , so that the carbon atoms are located at substitutional lattice sites. A further thin monocrystalline Si layer  120  with the same thickness as that of the layer  112  is present on the Si(C) layer  118 . The Si—Si(C)—Si layer system  112 ,  118 ,  120  is designated in FIGS. 3A,  3 C and  3 D by  121  and is only shown at the right-hand side of the respective drawing for the sake of representation. The structure  121 , however, extends over the full area of the wafer. 
     In the plan view of FIG. 3B only a strip of the wafer is shown. It will, however, be understood that the structure shown there extends circularly about the center point C. 
     FIGS. 3A,  3 C and  3 D are to be understood as cross-sections which are shown in accordance with the section plane III—III in FIG.  3 B. 
     The structure shown in FIG. 3A includes spring structures  117  in the marginal region which are shown in plan view in FIG.  3 B and are realized in this embodiment by the generation of suitably arranged and dimensioned holes  119 . In other words, the spring structures  117  are formed by the regions of the wafer which remain between the holes. 
     This type of structuring can also take place by an etching process. For example, the holes  119  can be holes which are elliptical in plan view and which are produced by means of photolithography and chemical etching or plasma etching. 
     After the etching away of the middle regions  123  of the SOI substrate beneath the Si layer  112 , a ring-like region  125  remains from the original substrate  110  which serves as a holder for the membrane-like middle region of the layer system  121  consisting of the continuous middle portion  127  and the ring-like region  129  having the spring structure  127 , with the middle portion  127  now being at least substantially relaxed, since the spring structure  117  has expanded, i.e. yielded elastically, as a result of the tensile stress which previously prevailed in the previously strained middle portion. 
     The carbon concentration in the carbon-rich Si layer  118  has also been set here so that the middle portion  127  has the desired lattice constant in accordance with the relationship (1) after the relaxation. 
     A carrier substrate  142 , for example of silicon, is now bonded onto the middle portion  127 , for example from below, as is schematically illustrated in FIG.  3 C. The middle region  144  consisting of the middle portion  127  bonded onto the carrier substrate  142  can now either be separated from the ring-like holder  125  and passed on for further use as shown in FIG. 3D, or the holder  125  can be retained and can serve for the handling of the middle region during further use. 
     Many variants are conceivable. 
     A further possibility of attaching the carrier substrate  142  consists, for example, in attaching this not from below but rather onto the top of the wafer (related to the representation drawn in FIG.  3 C). This is easier from a practical standpoint because there is no projecting frame, since the frame, i.e. the holder  125 , extends downwardly in the orientation of the wafer as shown. The Si(C) layer  118  or the Si—Si(C)—Si layer system  121  is largely symmetrical, so that it makes no difference whether one subsequently grows a diamond from the underside or from the top side. After the bonding of the carrier substrate to the top side of the wafer, which can also take place over the entire surface and not only over the middle membrane region  127 , the projecting frame  125  can also be removed. 
     When, as described above, an SOI substrate  110  is used, it is necessary for the Si(C) layer  118  to be included between two Si layers  112  and  120 . One needs the lower Si layer  112  as a single crystal epitaxial substrate, because one cannot grow a single crystal layer on the amorphous, non-crystalline oxide. Here the oxide layer  114  serves as an etch stop. After the subsequent removal of the oxide layer  114 , the two Si layers could then be removed and the diamond layer grown directly on the Si(C) layer  118 . The removal of the Si layers  112  and  120  is, however, not absolutely necessary. 
     As a further example, a silicon substrate  210  can be used instead of the SOI substrate  110 , as is shown in FIG.  4 . In this variant, the Si(C) layer  218  is grown epitaxially directly onto the Si substrate. The Si(C) layer  218  then directly acts as an etch stop. 
     In this connection it is pointed out that for certain, well-known silicon etching solutions a high carbon doped silicon layer represents an excellent etch stop (see the literature; V. Lehmann et al., J. Electrochem. Soc. 138 (1991) L3). Accordingly, it is also possible to realize the above-mentioned etched spring structure at the margin of a wafer in combination with the etching of the silicon wafer away from the rear of the wafer without an SOI substrate. In this case the carbon-rich silicon epitaxial layer directly serves as an etch stop layer, whereas in the previous description the etch stop layer was the buried oxide layer of the SOI substrate that was used. The further steps (relaxation of the separated carbon-rich layer via the spring structure at the edge of the layer, wafer bonding of the layer to a silicon carrier substrate and diamond growth) should be carried out analogously to those described above. That is to say, the oxide layer  114  can be omitted. 
     The above-described variant of using a silicon substrate instead of an SOI substrate could also be realized as shown in FIG.  5 . Here, the carbon-rich silicon layer  318  is grown epitaxially onto the silicon substrate  310  and provided with a cladding layer  320  of silicon, analogously to the embodiment of FIG.  1 . When removing the middle region  323  of the Si substrate  310 , a thin layer  312  of the substrate  310  consisting of silicon is now left beneath the middle region  327  of the silicon layer  318  doped with carbon, so that this region  327  is now located between two relatively thin Si layers  312 ,  320 , similar to the sandwich arrangement consisting of the layers  12 ,  18 ,  20  of the embodiment of FIG.  1 . 
     In an arrangement of this kind the spring structures  317  can be produced by the formation of suitable holes  319  in the three layers  312 ,  318 ,  320 . 
     The spring structures can also be realized in different manner. One alternative is shown in FIG. 6, where the spring structures  4  and  7  are formed by easily deformable spokes  448  which extend between the middle part  427  and the holder  425  and are separated from one another by corresponding openings  419 . In this embodiment the middle region  427  can consist in accordance with FIG. 3A only of Si(C) or of a layer system of Si—Si(C)—Si layers  412 ,  418 ,  420 .