A Defect Study and Classification of Brown Diamonds with Deformation-Related Color
At a Glance
Section titled āAt a Glanceā| Metadata | Details |
|---|---|
| Publication Date | 2020-10-12 |
| Journal | Minerals |
| Authors | Thomas Hainschwang, Franck Notari, Gianna Pamies |
| Institutions | Oerlikon (Liechtenstein) |
| Citations | 26 |
Abstract
Section titled āAbstractāFor this study, the properties of a large sample of various types of brown diamonds with a deformation-related (referred to as āDRā in this work) color were studied to properly characterize and classify such diamonds, and to compare them to pink to purple to red diamonds. The acquisition of low temperature NIR spectra for a large range of brown diamonds and photoexcitation studies combined with various treatment experiments have opened new windows into certain defect characteristics of brown diamonds, such as the amber centers and naturally occurring H1b and H1c centers. It was determined that the amber centers (referred to as āACā in this work) exhibit rather variable behaviors to annealing and photoexcitation; the annealing temperature of these defects were determined to range from 1150 to >1850 °C and it was found that the 4063 cmā1 AC was the precursor defect of many other ACs. It is suggested that the amber centers in diamonds that contain at least some C centers are essentially identical to the ones seen in diamonds without C centers, but that they likely have a negative charge. The study of the naturally occurring H1b and H1c link them to the amber centers, specifically to the one at 4063 cmā1. Annealing experiments have shown that the H1b and H1c defects and the 4063 cmā1 AC were in line with each other. The obvious links between these defects points towards our suggestion that the H1b and H1c defects are standalone defects that consist of multiple vacancies and nitrogen and that they areāin the case of brown diamondsāa side product of the AC formation. A new classification of DR brown diamonds was elaborated that separates the diamonds in six different classes, depending on type and AC. This classification had been completed recently with the classification of brown diamonds with a non-deformation-related color (referred to as āNDRā), giving a total of 11 classes of brown diamonds.
Tech Support
Section titled āTech SupportāOriginal Source
Section titled āOriginal SourceāReferences
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