Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5402312 | Journal of Luminescence | 2010 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Photoluminescence and optical transmission spectra of several samples of natural and synthetic diamond and its imitators - fianite and corundum - are investigated. The band-A of luminescence at 440Â nm, the vibronic N3 system of luminescence and absorption at 415.2Â nm, the fundamental absorption edge at 225Â nm, and the secondary absorption below 308Â nm are the main identifying markers of natural diamonds. For synthetic diamonds, however, such identifying markers are the free-exciton luminescence at 235Â nm, the band-A, and the fundamental absorption edge. Fianites can be identified by the structureless wideband at 500Â nm and the wide transmission band in the entire visible range. Colored corundum samples with chrome impurities emit the narrow line at 693Â nm and show the absorption band in the 500-600Â nm spectral range. A new method for diamond express identification is developed on the basis of measurement of photoluminescence and optical transmission spectra of the samples. It is shown that a diamond tester can be designed combining a spectrometer and a KrCl-excilamp radiating at 222Â nm.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Authors
E.I. Lipatov, S.M. Avdeev, V.F. Tarasenko,