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THE BOOK OF DIAMONDS
large, the publications have not been as extended as one would at first expect. It appears, without doubt, that many of the workers have considered more the synthetic prepara­tion of carbon for the diamond than the study of the dif­ferent allotropic forms of carbon.
Among the first attempts to make synthetic diamonds may be mentioned that of J. B. Hannay of Glasgow, who commenced his experiments in 1879. After many trials, some of which resulted in violent explosions, he is said to have succeeded. The method adopted by Mr. Hannay is described as follows:
A tube twenty inches long by four inches in diameter was bored so as to have an internal diameter of half an inch. In the tube was placed a mixture of ninety per cent of rectified bone oil, and ten per cent of paraffin spirit, together with four grams of the metal lithium. The open end of the tube was welded air-tight, and the whole mass was heated to redness for fourteen hours; on opening it a great volume of gas rushed from the tube, and within was a hard, smooth mass adhering to the sides of the tube. It was quite black, and appeared to be composed of iron and lithium, but on closer inspection small transparent pieces were found imbedded in it. The mass was dissolved, and the small transparent pieces proved to be 'crystalline carbon', exactly like diamonds but almost micro­scopic.
Out of eighty complex and extensive experiments only three succeeded. Violent explosions were frequent, steel tubes burst, scat­tering their fragments around, and furnaces were blown up. 'The continued strain on the nerves', writes Mr. Hannay, 'watching the temperature of the furnace, and in a state of tension in case of an explosion, induces a nervous state which is extremely weakening, and when the explosion occurs it sometimes shakes one so severely that sickness supervenes'.1
1 Williams, Gardner F., The Diamond Mines of South Africa, B. F. Buck and Co., N. Y., 1906, Vol. II, p. 138.
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