Sammyg
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If diamonds are made of carbon? and coal is made out carbon, why are diamonds transparent and coal is not transparent?
Sammyg said:If diamonds are made of carbon? and coal is made out carbon, why are diamonds transparent and coal is not transparent?
Bob S said:Diamond density is about 3.5 to 3.53 grams per cubic cm, while graphite is only 2.0 to 2.25 grams per cubic cm.
Diamond is one of several carbon allotropes, which include fullerenes {buckyballs), nanotubes, graphite, graphene, and coal (not really an allotrope). Graphite is a good electrical conductor, while diamond is a good insulator. Diamond is a very good thermal conductor but at the same time an electrical insulator (doesn't obey the Wiedeman Franz law). If sulfur can have red, yellow, and black allotropes, why can't carbon have one that is transparent?Vanadium 50 said:And what does that have to do with transparency?
Division said:Diamonds are carbon put into high amounts of pressure and heat.
The whole process is very expencive, too expencive for any practical use in making them. The quantity of diamond you get out of any amount of carbon is too costly to be beneficial, therefore, this process is rarely used, if ever.
Phrak said:Yes, but the industry produces in the region of 3 billion carats, or 600 metric tons of synthetic diamonds a year.
Maybe we can explain using semiconductor concept. Semiconductor has a band gap which is the difference between valence band and conduction band, and photons of larger energy than this band gap can be absorbed. In diamond the band gab is larger than visual light I think, but in silicon it is not. So silicon can be used as a infrared light pass filter blocking visual light. Coal is obviously mixture of many crystal like forms so the overall band gap is almost zero, meaning that all frequency light will be absorbed.Sammyg said:If diamonds are made of carbon? and coal is made out carbon, why are diamonds transparent and coal is not transparent?