Chemists Directly Grow Diamondsโฃ Using an Electron Beam
Researchers have successfully synthesized nanodiamonds fromโข adamantane molecules using an electron beam, challenging previous assumptionsโข about the interaction between โelectron beams and organic matter. The breakthrough, published in Science on September 4, 2025, demonstrates aโ new method for controlling chemical reactionsโ and offers insights intoโ diamond formation in natural settings.
The team,ledโ by Eiichi Nakamura,utilized transmission electron โขmicroscopy (TEM) to monitor โthe conversion ofโข solid adamantane under electron irradiation. Submicrocrystals were bombarded with electrons at energiesโ of 80-200 kiloelectron volts at temperatures ranging from 100-296 kelvins in a vacuum for tens of seconds. This processโค revealed the step-by-step formation of nanodiamonds, a feat previously thought โimpractical due to the expectation that โelectron beamsโ would rapidly decompose organic molecules.
“Computational data gives youโฃ ‘virtual’ reaction paths, but I wanted to see it with my eyes,” explained โNakamura, who has spent 30 years in synthetic โขchemistry โand 15 โyears performing computational quantum chemical calculations.โ “However, the common wisdom among TEM specialists was that organic molecules decomposeโข quickly as you shineโค an electron beam on them. My research โsince 2004 has been a constant battle to show otherwise.”
The experiment resultedโ in the creation of defect-free, โcubic nanodiamonds upโข toโข 10 nanometers in diameter, accompaniedโ by the release of hydrogen gas. Time-resolved TEM images showed adamantane โขoligomers evolvingโ into spherical nanodiamonds,with โthe rate of C-H โbond cleavage playing a key โrole in the process. Crucially, other hydrocarbons tested did not โฃyield โnanodiamonds, confirming adamantane’s unique suitability as โฃa precursor.
This research has broad implications for fields like โฃelectron lithography,surface โคengineering,and โขelectron microscopy,offering a โคnew โคunderstanding ofโค how toโค control chemistry at the nanoscale. The findings also support โฃexisting theories โabout diamond formationโ in meteorites and uranium-bearing sedimentary rocks, suggesting high-energy particle irradiation could be the drivingโข force. Nakamura also believes the method could โbe usedโฃ toโข synthesize doped quantum dots, vital โคcomponents for quantum computers and sensors.
“This example of diamond synthesisโ is the ultimate exhibition that electrons โdo not destroy organic molecules but let them undergo well-defined chemicalโ reactions,โค if we install suitable properties in molecules to beโ irradiated,” Nakamura stated. โฃHe envisions this workโ will โfundamentally change how scientists approach interactions โคunder electron irradiation.
The study, titled “Rapid, โฃlow-temperature nanodiamond formation by electron-beam activation of adamantane C-H bonds,” was authored by Jiarui โคFu, Takayuki Nakamuro and Eiichiโฃ Nakamura. (DOI: 10.1126/science.adw2025). The โresearchโค was funded by JSPS KAKENHI and JST PRESTO.





