On 10/6/07, Lan Barnes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've read in authoritive sources that current synthetic diamond processes
> can now make gem quality stones to remarkable sizes. Also, that the
> process is in no way controlled by the diamond cartel.
>
> So this is not a good time to be "investing" in diamonds, or indeed, in
> gem stones in general. (I bought a "Chatham emerald" for my first wife's
> engagement ring over 30 years ago. The jeweler said a pro could spot a
> Chatham as synthetic because it has _fewer_ flaws than a natural stone. It
> was a glorious stone and I could have cared less that it was pressed in a
> factory and not a mountain in India.)
>
> And maybe when diamonds inevitably collapse in price, we'll get those heat
> sinks.
>
According to Gemesis, one of the leading cultured diamond producers,
their stones, can still be told apart from the natural article by
professional diamond graders via photoluminescence and cathode
luminescence analyses. It seems they give off a different flourescence
signature than the natural stones and exhibit a double refraction due
to the type of strain placed on the crystal when it is made. It is
telling that the standard gemological tests show them to be
indistiguishable from the typeII natural diamonds, so much so that
they laser inscribe their diamonds and add a bit of nickel to them to
make the identification easier. I'd bet that these folks could make a
reasonably priced diamond heat sink, given that the quality of the
diamonds needn't be gem quality.

One way to make diamond prices go down is simply for all diamond
miners to refuse to sell to DeBeers. Daimonds are not actually that
rare a stone. DeBeers just buys every last one it can get their hands
on to withhold them from the market. Of course, convincing the likes
of the RUF to do that is a pipe dream.

Robert Donovan


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