The Rome Industrial Diamond Conference showcases the strength of Element Six in multiple areas

The 2nd Industrial Diamond Conference (also known as the 2nd Diamond at Work Conference) came to an end in Rome on April 20, 2007. The number of participants and papers in this conference has reached a new high, which means that people are increasingly interested in the industrial application of diamond in various fields. A total of more than 350 representatives from 51 countries participated in the session, and more than 90 papers were presented at the conference. Aidan Spooner, a director of Diamond at Work, points out the importance of the conference in raising awareness about the future of industrial diamonds and their applications. “We are only learning about the tip of the iceberg for commercial applications of diamonds,” he said. The purpose of the Industrial Diamond Conference is to make it a current and future focus for global investors.
“It turns out that the Diamond at Work conference has become an important platform for everyone to share current and future applications based on diamond materials,” said Christian Helt, CEO of Element Six. “For the company, attending the conference can be in telecommunications. The strengths of Element Six are demonstrated in the traditional strengths of electronics, electronics and superhard materials technology."
Element Six engineers and researchers have made important contributions to the success of the Industrial Diamond Conference. Element Six employees submitted a total of eight papers, covering the latest characterization methods for diamond abrasives for grinding wheels, research progress in the field of X-rays for synthetic diamonds, and prospects for the application of diamonds in quantum computing.
Element Six believes that these papers show a number of highlights. They reflect the expertise of Element Six in material processing and a wider range of end applications, including the use of cutting tools to process increasingly complex workpiece materials such as metal matrix composites. Diamond Microwave Devices, a subsidiary of Element Six, was founded in December 2006 and presented a paper on the application of CVD diamond metal-semiconductor field-effect transistors at this session, which will likely produce for advanced radio communications. deep influence. Future research on all materials will depend on the current advances in simultaneous accelerated radiation research. In the future, synthetic diamonds will shine in a series of fields such as X-ray optics. (This article was compiled by Beijing Shibo Technology Development Co., Ltd.)