What Are the Key Properties and Uses of Diamonds?

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Diamond is the hardest natural element, making it resistant to scratching by any other material except itself, which is why it is used to cut other diamonds. Despite its hardness, diamond can wear down due to the forces exerted during cutting, as the thin layer of diamond dust on cutting wheels is gradually eroded rather than the individual crystals being destroyed. Polishing with diamond paste creates small, uniform scratches that enhance the surface finish rather than damage it, as the process is akin to controlled abrasion. The fragility of the diamond edge means that it can still be affected by external forces, similar to how a steel knife dulls over time. Understanding the physical properties of diamond, including its index of refraction, is essential for appreciating its uses and characteristics.
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Hey guys, I'm doing a project on the physical properties and :. uses of diamond. I've got this week to research, and next week I have to create my presentation. I've been looking up all the uses/properties of diamond.

I know that:
diamond is the hardest natural element
this means that diamond can't be scratched by any other natural element apart from itself.
And this is why they use diamonds to cut other diamonds when creating "brilliant diamond stones".

However, this confuses me:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamond_blade
I understand the process of how the diamond blade works, but surely, if diamond is so hard, why does it get worn down?

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I am also curious to how Diamond polishing paste works? surely a slurry of suspended diamond particles would scratch the surface, as opposed to polish it, due to its hardness.

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Many Thanks in advance for any help I receive!
 
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Diamond is hard but not inifnitely hard so it still gets eroded by other materials. The stainless steel of a knife blade is harder than a tomato but will get blunt if you cut enough of them.
Diamond cutting wheels only have a thin layer of diamond dust on them, it's more a case of the dust being worn off the wheel as nuch as individual diamond crystals being destroyed.

Polishing a surface is the same as scratching it - just with smaller, uniformly distributed scratches.
 
thank you very much mgb_phys! :)
 
Think of it this way. Suppose you hit the tip of a diamond with a hammer. It will probably hurt the hammer, but it will also hurt the tip of the diamond. Think of this, if you carve a spear from wood with a pocket knife, you will notice that if you try to stab things with it, the tip fold in easily.

The diamond blade is similar to this. The very edge of a blade is fragile. Take a steel knife. If you cut enough potatos with it, eventually the blade will wear down. No matter how hard something is, when it exerts a force on something, that thing will exert the same force back on the edge, and a force exerted on the edge will always take a tiny bit from that edge.

I hope I helped you understand that part about the diamond blade.
 
lolbombs said:
I've been looking up all the uses/properties of diamond.
I suggest you also do some research on the index of refraction of diamonds and how that contributes to their sparkle.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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