Scientific News Prospecting, production activity and waste handling of minerals Synthetics CHEMISTRY PUTS NEW SPARKLE IN DIAMONDS
CHEMISTRY PUTS NEW SPARKLE IN DIAMONDS
Diamonds are getting
bigger, more colorful and cheaper, thanks to chemistry.
A favorite gem at Valentine's Day is getting a makeover with synthetic diamond
making processes, according to the Feb. 2 issue of Chemical & Engineering
News, the weekly newsmagazine of the American Chemical Society, the world's
largest scientific society.
The diamond-making business has been around for years and although synthetic
diamonds had many important uses, including saw blades, drill bits and
exfoliants, they were tiny and not gem quality. Only recently has chemistry been
able to grow large, gem quality stones at approximately one-third the price of
mined diamonds, says C&EN.
Companies such as Gemesis in Florida and Apollo Diamond in Boston are now
creating lab-grown diamonds that can be produced to more than a carat in size
and are virtually indistinguishable from their mined counterparts, says the
newsmagazine. They are chemically and physically true diamonds.
Synthetic diamond-makers start with a tiny diamond "seed" around
which the new diamond grows. But that's not chemistry's only role in the diamond
market. Even natural diamonds can be changed with chemistry, says the
newsmagazine.
Colored diamonds, which are valuable and very rare, can be created by
introducing carefully controlled elemental "impurities" into the stone,
says C&EN. For instance, nitrogen produces a yellow stone. Infusing
boron into the growing diamond produces a blue gem.
http://pubs.acs.org/cen/coverstory/8205/8205diamonds.html
Contact: Allison Byrum, a_byrum@acs.org,
202-872-4400, American
Chemical Society
The source of the given news and copyrights belong to the
American
Chemical Society
Publishing date: February 18, 2004
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