| Title:  Diamond CAS Registry Number:  7782-40-3 Literature References:  A crystalline form of carbon.  Mined as a mineral, principally in South Africa.  (Non-commercial) synthesis from other carbon compds (e.g., lignin) by means of elevated temperatures (about 2700°) and pressures (about 800,000 lbs/sq inch):  Desch, Nature 152, 148 (1943); Neuhaus, Angew. Chem. 66, 525 (1954); Hall, Chem. Eng. News 33, 718 (1955); Bridgman, Sci. Am. 1955, 46; Hall, J. Chem. Educ. 38, 484 (1961); Bundy, Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 105, 951-982 (1964).  Books:  S. Tolansky, History and Use of Diamond (London, 1962) 166 pp; R. Berman, Physical Properties of Diamond (Oxford, 1965) 442 pp. Properties:  Face-centered cubic crystal lattice.  Burns when heated with a hot enough flame (over 800°, oxygen torch).  d425 3.513.  nD20 2.4173.  Hardness = 10 (Mohs' scale).  Sp heat at 100 K:  0.606 cal/g-atom/K.  Entropy at 298.16 K:  0.5684 cal/g-atom/K.  Band gap energy:  6.7 ev.  Dielectric constant 5.7.  Electron mobility:  ~1800 cm2/v-sec.  Hole mobility: 1200 cm2/v-sec.  Can be pulverized in a steel mortar.  Attacked by laboratory-type cleaning soln (potassium dichromate + concd H2SO4).  In the jewelry trade the unit of weight for diamonds is one carat = 200 mg.  Ref:  Wall Street J. 164, no. 36, p 10 (Aug 19, 1964). Index of refraction:  nD20 2.4173 Density:  d425 3.513 Use:  Jewelry.  Polishing, grinding, cutting glass, bearings for delicate instruments; manuf dies for tungsten wire and similar hard wires; making styli for recorder heads, long-lasting phonograph needles.  In semiconductor research.  |