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Ch. 5: Imitation Gems & Artificial Production

Ch. 5:  Imitation Gems & Artificial Production Page of 311 Ch. 5:  Imitation Gems & Artificial Production Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
PRECIOUS STONES.
81
and Dana, many agreeing and many disagreeing. Damour and Gannal, of Brazil, considered that the Diamond might be due to the reduction of carbon bi-sulphide (an evil smellĀ­ing impurity of coal gas). A. Favre, and later the Hon. St. Claire Deville, were led by a study of the minerals associated with the Diamonds of Brazil to consider their formation the result of the reduction of fluorine or chlorine compounds of carbon. Whether this may be the true origin of Brazilian Diamonds or not, it is the writer's opinion that if successful experiments are undertaken in the laboratory it will be in the reduction of such carbon compounds.
Perhaps one of the first experiments on the artificial production of Diamonds to meet with any success was carried out by Despritz in 1853. The method employed by him was to pass the electric spark in vacuo for a month, using a platinum rod as one terminal and a carbon cylinder as the other. The platinum terminal was found to be encrusted with minute octahedral crystals which answered all the tests applicable to the Diamond.
In 1880 J. B. Hannay,1 of Glasgow, carried out no less than eighty experiments upon the reduction of a carbon comĀ­pound, only three of which were successful. Iron tubes 20 inches long by 1 inch thick and 1/2 inch bore were filled about two-thirds full of pure paraffin spirit with a little charcoal, and then sealed off. The sealing of these tubes was the most difficult part of the undertaking. In the earlier experiments screw stoppers, luted in with a mixture of silicate of soda and manganese dioxide, were used, but
Ch. 5:  Imitation Gems & Artificial Production Page of 311 Ch. 5:  Imitation Gems & Artificial Production
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