Yellow Diamond - Periodic Table of Videos

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  • Опубліковано 5 вер 2024
  • The Sun-Drop diamond has sold for a staggering $10.9 million (plus buyer's premium). A world record for a yellow diamond.
    We discuss a bit of its science with Professor Martyn Poliakoff.
    More chemistry at www.periodicvid...
    Follow us on Facebook at / periodicvideos
    And on Twitter at / periodicvideos
    Periodic Videos films are by video journalist Brady Haran

КОМЕНТАРІ • 329

  • @01newuser
    @01newuser 12 років тому +4

    I never took chemistry at school, yet here I am ten years later following your channel. You got to love how the internet has made knowledge readily available, just one mouse click away. Thank you for sharing these things!

  • @makeitafrappe
    @makeitafrappe 12 років тому +6

    "I'd find it's spectrum, and then Neal would probably burn it. Then maybe we'd dip it in liquid oxygen."
    You guys are awesome.

  • @youtubuzr
    @youtubuzr 12 років тому +24

    "It's best done by heating the diamond and planting it in liquid oxygen."
    Brilliant! =D

  • @daultonbaird6314
    @daultonbaird6314 10 років тому +146

    I've never seen a blue diamond, but I Hope to.

  • @YZBot
    @YZBot 12 років тому +2

    On a similar note, I've seen similar changes in color when you add different elements to Gold. The common ones I've seen are white, red, and green gold. Not sure what is added. I've mostly seen it used on pocket watches where they put intricate designs on the cases.

  • @AluminumStudios
    @AluminumStudios 12 років тому +2

    Professor, you talk about the most interesting things in very understandable ways. I love these videos.

  • @daultonbaird6314
    @daultonbaird6314 10 років тому +64

    Do it man. Get a big ugly industrial diamond and burn it. Neil isn't busy right now. Is he?

  • @Aspire198
    @Aspire198 11 років тому +35

    Some men just want to watch the diamonds burn.......

  • @SEThatered
    @SEThatered 12 років тому +3

    I love this series! This Professor is such a nice person and a wonderful narrator.
    Thank you very much!

  • @grande1899
    @grande1899 12 років тому +22

    Minecraft diamonds have boron in them. It wall makes sense now.

  • @donbrewer6865
    @donbrewer6865 7 років тому +164

    Burn a $12mil diamond?
    This guy didn't choose the thug life; the thug life chose him.

  • @trespire
    @trespire 12 років тому +1

    @jawayetti Diamond (industrial) also has very good optical properties. Diamond windows are sometimes used as a transmission window for high power infra-red laser beam. As you said, the excellent thermal conductivity of diamond is utilized to avoid unwanted thermal deformation or lensing of the window, thus better laser quality even at very high power density (8kW / 22square mm).

  • @listlisa
    @listlisa 11 років тому +3

    Love these videos … CVD diamonds are being grown specifically because they can achieve a consistent and extremely high level of purity that isn’t found in nature. Because the purity can be manipulated so precisely, it’s possible to dope diamond with other elements to achieve different properties. Blue diamonds - diamond + boron - are the next, and perhaps last, generation of microchip. NOVA S04E01 is good for more info.

  • @caseygtr
    @caseygtr 12 років тому +2

    I've seen a blue diamond, the Hope Diamond at the Smithsonian. It is beautiful. If Professor Poliakoff ever finds himself in DC he should totally hit the Smithsonian.

  • @VladislavFomitchev
    @VladislavFomitchev 11 років тому +14

    Gets 12 million dollar diamond *Burns in liquid oxygen*

  • @jbrowsingj
    @jbrowsingj 12 років тому +1

    My father's a jeweler, and I remember being told that yellow diamonds are actually more common than colourless diamonds. If I remember correctly, Colour is one of the main ways to rank the value of diamonds, with colourless diamonds being significantly more expensive than yellow-brown diamonds.

  • @onemoremisfit
    @onemoremisfit 10 років тому +41

    If ya can't sell it, rent it out. $12,000,000 security deposit.

  • @LadyAnuB
    @LadyAnuB 11 років тому +9

    Large diamonds are rare, but average sizes are not. DeBeers and Anglo-American keep prices artificially high but restricting their availability. This has been documented in various sources with Frontline devoting a whole hour to the topic in 1994.

  • @Xenon1987A
    @Xenon1987A 11 років тому +8

    He forgot to tell that diamonds made by chemical vapor deposition are cheaper and with less defects than natural occuring ones.

  • @R.T.and.J
    @R.T.and.J 11 років тому +4

    There's also red diamonds, which are the rarest. Not sure what element they use, though.

  • @kurtilein3
    @kurtilein3 12 років тому

    one thing the professor could have mentioned:
    defects in the crystal lattice can also produce color in diamonds, without any other elements present. a yellow diamond can be turned green or blue using neutron radiation, and then you can get rid of some of the crystal defects using high-pressure-high-temperature treatment, which might result in orange or pink or greenish-yellow.

  • @HYEOL
    @HYEOL 10 років тому +4

    other source says its not replaced, its added in the room between the grid.

  • @emikochan13
    @emikochan13 12 років тому +2

    @squarechannel I've seen some salt crystals underground that are almost perfect cubes at strange angles, it looks amazing :P

  • @ookaookaooka
    @ookaookaooka 11 років тому +2

    His tie is amazing.

  • @rays3761
    @rays3761 11 років тому +5

    Make a video of a diamond burning and dunked in oxygen please. (It doesn't have to be expensive)

  • @Nataani2376
    @Nataani2376 12 років тому

    Unfortunately the other replies are incorrect (if you are reffering to natural pink diamonds.) Potassium burns with a pinkish flame, boron on the other hand only causes diamonds in the blue catagories. Pink diamonds can be synthetically made via irradiation. The reason for the colour is due to a lattice defect in the carbon lattice. Red, pink and brown are all caused by lattice defects. The most common naturally irradiated diamonds are green.

  • @paxer
    @paxer 11 років тому +1

    Could I theoretically make a diode by putting a blue and a yellow diamond together?

  • @123456789bradley
    @123456789bradley 12 років тому

    hey professor nice tie u got there of the periodic table never seen one like that before

  • @koosh138
    @koosh138 10 років тому +5

    Isn't there a green diamond in Dresden?

  • @oceanwong4906
    @oceanwong4906 11 років тому +2

    Is coloured diamond more conductive than transparent diamonds?

  • @Yetiforce
    @Yetiforce 11 років тому

    I want to see the extended footage of this one, where he goes into detail on how to burn it and what not.

  • @wnlharris
    @wnlharris 12 років тому

    I love the enthusiasm for burning diamonds

  • @kurtilein3
    @kurtilein3 12 років тому

    @electrodacus
    spectrum analysis as well as microscopic analysis of impurities can be used to distinguish synthetics from naturals. Also, the purest diamonds are natural, synthetic diamonds dont seem to get above slightly included or very slightly included. So internally flawless diamonds or very very slightly included ones, as of today, are natural. Also, a perfect white is unattainable in synthetic diamonds, so the highest colors, D, E and F, are reserved for naturals.

  • @Archimagus
    @Archimagus 12 років тому

    How did I know he would say he'd burn it? A true chemist.

  • @rickysmyth
    @rickysmyth 9 років тому +15

    If i got it, I'd give it to Neil to do things to it. A lump of rock just sitting there is boring

  • @MrGrevanar
    @MrGrevanar 11 років тому

    There have been attempts to use diamond as a semiconductor material before the discovery of graphene, but it never took off because it was not possible to grow either p- or n- doped diamond in high enough quality (one worked, but not the other and I'd have to look up which one).

  • @NirrumTheMad
    @NirrumTheMad 12 років тому

    @periodicvideos the $11m diamond however, is For the Universities personal candescent uses

  • @christiank221
    @christiank221 11 років тому

    I like this channel so much more than all the other science channels for one basic reason, the comments aren't all religion v. atheism!

  • @CmdrGendoIkari
    @CmdrGendoIkari 12 років тому

    @justinwhoknowsit - Red, pink & brown color diamonds are caused by crystal lattice defects during the formation of the diamond.

  • @KennyTheB
    @KennyTheB 11 років тому +18

    Professor Poliakoff, mark my words. If I win the lottery, I will purchase that diamond for that you can burn it. FOR SCIENCE

  • @Marchawc
    @Marchawc 12 років тому

    Question: Since, when enough pressure is exerted on graphite, it goes from a hexagonal to a cubic structure and from 2 to 10 on Moh's scale to become the hardest natural substance on Earth, in theory, could an even harder allotrope of any other element be formed given enough pressure? Just curious.

  • @sanandhara
    @sanandhara 12 років тому

    They are making very nice gem grade colorless diamond now in the lab at almost atmospheric pressure. It is called CVD, or chemical vapor deposition, and it is so good, hardly any jewelers could tell that it is lab made. And it IS real diamond, just not natural. :)

  • @sedwarg
    @sedwarg 12 років тому

    @electrodacus natural diamonds' value will probably go up at that point as it will be even rarer in comparison to the synthetic type

  • @Melthornal
    @Melthornal 12 років тому

    @MegaSkills9 I believe the pink color comes from absolutely absurdly high pressure, as opposed to impurities.

  • @procrozocker
    @procrozocker 9 років тому +2

    the point where the professor is speaking about the extra and less electron caused of the nitrogen ond the boron got me thinking. Could

    • @procrozocker
      @procrozocker 9 років тому +2

      It be that the diamond with the extra electron is electrical conductive and if yes could you make an semiconductor out of diamond?

    • @procrozocker
      @procrozocker 9 років тому +3

      Sorry i ment an p-n junktion Like in an diode out of it.

  • @LuxurioMusic
    @LuxurioMusic 11 років тому

    You are the person who made the assertion, all I'm simply asking for is evidence by you which can prove your hypothesis.

  • @grndmstrjoe
    @grndmstrjoe 12 років тому

    It's a shame that amazing items like this goes to 'private buyers'. This should have gone to a museum.

  • @ifsey
    @ifsey 12 років тому

    The boron diamonds... I would love to have one of those...

  • @EebstertheGreat
    @EebstertheGreat 11 років тому +6

    It actually is possible to make gem-quality diamonds in a lab, and some such diamonds are actually higher quality than the vast majority of naturally occurring diamonds. But the value of a diamond comes from its rarity, so lab-grown diamonds will never be as expensive as natural diamonds, even if they are superior gemstones.

  • @DUBstepify13
    @DUBstepify13 11 років тому

    rofl I can not stop laughing! Martin's face when he answers "We'd probably end up burning it because that would be a fitting event, best done by heating the diamond and plunging it into liquid hydrogen." I see the professor has experience burning precious diamonds and dissolving gold.

  • @MultiAxian
    @MultiAxian 12 років тому +1

    @electrodacus well, it's rare now, so they're paying for the present value of the material.

  • @hellavadeal
    @hellavadeal 12 років тому

    @AlexBrandsen Thanks for the quick response. . I saw an article about diamonds in Australia that claimed they dated way younger then we thought. It sounded suspicious. Has anyone tried, that you know of? I cannot remember the name of the article. I was thinking that what you said was more accurate. Always test everything. Thanks again.

  • @JLConawayII
    @JLConawayII 11 років тому +1

    Pretty much anything will burn if you get it hot enough and supply it with enough oxygen. A diamond is nearly pure carbon, similar to coal that you would burn in a stove but with a different molecular structure. Do a UA-cam search for "burning diamond in liquid oxygen".

  • @NedTheDread
    @NedTheDread 11 років тому

    I would actually pay to see that, even if it were a very small diamond, count me in!

  • @TheSpinTensor
    @TheSpinTensor 12 років тому

    @Strideo1 depends on pressure and temperature. I'm no expert in thermodynamics, but at roomtemperature and 1 bar it might be a few million years. maybe the prof. knows it.

  • @ironnica
    @ironnica 12 років тому

    Have had a very big interest in these. Read a few years ago that a company was able to make then via chemical vapour deposition. Had virtually no understanding of the science behind it (starting out as undergrad). It wasnt written by a scientist but i found it interesting that apparently De Beers tried nasty tactics to put these people out of business.

  • @YdeckW
    @YdeckW 12 років тому

    ''Very cross with us'', the famous catchphrase from 'Alo 'Alo

  • @EltonJThe
    @EltonJThe 11 років тому

    I'd definitely would contribute!

  • @Truthiness231
    @Truthiness231 12 років тому

    How could the prof. not have seen a blue diamond? The Hope diamond is a pretty good example...

  • @LordMigit
    @LordMigit 12 років тому

    so if there is nitrogen in a diamond, does that mean that it is weaker than a regular diamond because the normal structure is disrupted? Even if only slightly?
    Also what element makes a diamond red?

  • @JuanLeTwnz
    @JuanLeTwnz 12 років тому

    Regarding the largest yellow diamond, I always thought the golden jubilee diamond was yellow as well...or has it more of a brownish tone?

  • @pwed546
    @pwed546 12 років тому

    What is Silicon is in the place of a few carbons? To my knowledge, that would not change the optical properties of the diamond

  • @conoba
    @conoba 12 років тому

    Back in the 90s I tried making diamonds using a microwave plasma process. They all were less than 50 micrometers and dark brown due to impurities or faults in the lattice.

  • @heidigruber98
    @heidigruber98 12 років тому

    i love your tie!

  • @loocrepus
    @loocrepus 11 років тому +1

    i am not sure if the Prof. Poliakoff is right in asserting that natural diamonds are rare. Quite a lot of studies indicate the contrary. Only reason the value of diamonds are high is due to monopoly by De Beers, who buy out all diamonds from every where in the world and only release a few diamonds a year.

  • @TheRocinka
    @TheRocinka 12 років тому

    Thank you, professor.
    I like your lectures.

  • @Phacias
    @Phacias 12 років тому

    @Yndin It has the value of it's geological history.

  • @deadgamer42
    @deadgamer42 12 років тому

    2:56 the professor gangsta swag look.

  • @89Ayten
    @89Ayten 11 років тому +1

    Im a bit pragmatic but I hate how so many interesting materials aren't used for research in the volume that they should because of their "value" gold, diamond, platinum etc.

  • @funnyasdeath
    @funnyasdeath 12 років тому

    Neil and the Prof are the only people in the entire world capable of burning a $12,000,000 diamond

  • @iowanthomas
    @iowanthomas 12 років тому

    The strength would not be the same. Although the nitrogen would make the same number of bonds as carbon does in diamond (4), the C-C bond enthalpy is higher than that of the C-N bond enthalpy.

  • @101animations
    @101animations 11 років тому

    wait, does this mean it is possible to make semi-conductors with diamonds? i know it's possible with silicon and germanium by the same effect of an atom being replaced with an atom of either a group 3 or group 5 element.

  • @hukslee
    @hukslee 12 років тому

    So by Burning a diamond, it is implied that it will light like a coal? I am assuming that takes an immense amount of startup heat, but how long would that burn then?

  • @hikergate
    @hikergate 12 років тому

    Hey professor, great video. Love your explanation! Can you please make a video explaining how the company 'Gemesis' makes its jewelry quality yellow diamonds? Thanks a bunch Professor & Nottingham crew! :-)

  • @kurtilein3
    @kurtilein3 12 років тому

    @electrodacus
    i guess we have different definitions of purity here. Of course for synthetic diamonds you start out with the purest graphite you can get, so the diamond will be pure carbon.
    But it will have defects in the crystal lattice that negatively affect color and clarity. The perfect diamond has a D-color and IF / internally flawless clarity. Thats unattainable in synthetic diamonds.

  • @09876124
    @09876124 12 років тому

    Hey does the Nitrogen mean the diamond will be like a n type semi conductor?

  • @datsquazz
    @datsquazz 12 років тому

    At atmospheric pressure, yes
    At the pressures at which diamonds are formed, you get liquid diamond

  • @MultiAxian
    @MultiAxian 12 років тому

    @electrodacus yeah, but synthetic diamonds are different from natural diamonds, no matter how many synthetic diamonds you make will not change fact that natural diamonds are natural, and that in itself holds significant value. natural diamond reserves are only going to decrease while consumer demand is always going to stay high and that fact leads to the value of natural diamonds to increase. they are chemically indistinguishable, yes, but that never stopped the market from over-pricing stuff.

  • @sedwarg
    @sedwarg 12 років тому

    @xDestroyer2x You're only considering industrial use. For jewellery, and fashion people like things that are rare, and would be willing to pay more for real diamonds if synthetic ones became available. In the same way that people buy diamonds at all, and not swarovski crystals or some other crystal that looks identical.

  • @FenrirRobu
    @FenrirRobu 12 років тому

    @Olhado256 Ohh. Theoretically you could order a piece of uranium-245(+ -) or antimatter or plutonium or whatever, I'd cost you a lot. Either way, at least diamond gives off some clean energy decaying to graphite. Also think about the conditions it has gone to be such, as explained, it would cost a lot to make something like this today. Not the best thing to make or buy, but the price isn't unreasonable.

  • @punishedexistence
    @punishedexistence 11 років тому +1

    Well, actually it has 3 unpaired electrons and one set of paired electrons. Usually only the 3 unpaired ones participate in bonding and the lone pair is on its own, making it pyramidal. Just didn't want ya to think N has 9 valence electrons. :)

  • @justinwhoknowsit
    @justinwhoknowsit 12 років тому

    What is the abstract element in a Pink diamond?

  • @NirrumTheMad
    @NirrumTheMad 12 років тому

    Do a video on the MOLE

  • @maso0n
    @maso0n 12 років тому

    This is due to deformations in the crystal shape (rather than impurities).

  • @boblflef
    @boblflef 12 років тому

    @grndmstrjoe Or at least placed near the buyers window so it can be seen from outside through a hedge using binoculars.

  • @josan2964
    @josan2964 12 років тому

    @electrodacus You are correct. But I would like to add to your statement of: "Also the synthetic is chemically indistinguishable from the natural one"
    You're correct, but in most cases, you are not. A lot of natural diamonds do not form so perfectly as synthetic ones, and in most natural diamonds, there are flaws. which is why it's easy to tell a synthetic one, from a natural one, because natural ones come with flaws, or they may not be as transparent. This video is a perfect example.

  • @fatcat2939
    @fatcat2939 11 років тому

    Hell, hard too understand when their easily synthesized. My Mother has bought various colored 0.5k stones for less than $600 each.

  • @sdfdsv
    @sdfdsv 12 років тому

    Will it blend?

  • @wpaxton
    @wpaxton 12 років тому

    @wolgreth Yes, but not 100ct gem quality diamonds. Lab grown diamonds must, by law, have laser etchings if they are over one or two carats to distinguish them from natural diamonds (although a good gemologist can tell by looking at it).

  • @lucasguirod
    @lucasguirod 11 років тому

    What would happen if a Silicon compound would take the molecular structure of an diamond, and how would it look like?

  • @thainwatt
    @thainwatt 11 років тому +1

    that's so original

  • @laharl2k
    @laharl2k 12 років тому

    I for once would like to see a how a diamond burns, didn't know they could burn like normal carbon does. It looks so much like glass that thinking about it burning in flames sounds as strange as burning glass

  • @Guineh76
    @Guineh76 12 років тому

    Love this: We would get a lot of views, but a lot of people would be very cross with us.

  • @ShinimagisFTW
    @ShinimagisFTW 11 років тому

    What about black diamond. What would need to be added?

  • @Evan_Bell
    @Evan_Bell 11 років тому +2

    It can have infinite bonds. Did you mean 3 electrons? Nitrogen has 7 electrons. 2 one its first orbit, then 5.

  • @ricois3
    @ricois3 12 років тому

    Blue diamond : most famous diamond : Hope diamond!

  • @mooooooooimacow
    @mooooooooimacow 12 років тому

    diamonds are so pretty!

  • @OtakuBozu
    @OtakuBozu 12 років тому

    One famous example of a blue diamond is the famous, or some would say infamous, Hope Diamond.

  • @blendedchaitea
    @blendedchaitea 12 років тому

    I thought diamonds weren't all that rare in nature, but that De Beers controlled the diamond industry, driving the price up?

  • @hellavadeal
    @hellavadeal 12 років тому

    @AlexBrandsen That is how I see it. No one can know how old they are. Only how they form. Dating none organic material is still not accurate enough to give any definitive dates. But it must be very old to be found on the surface sense they are formed deep under ground.