Dehydration of Diaspore and Goethite during Low-Temperature Heating as Criterion to Separate Unheated from Heated Rubies and Sapphires

Gem-quality rubies and sapphires are often commercially heat treated at about 800 °C or higher to enhance their color and clarity, and hence quality. For this study, selected corundum samples containing diaspore and goethite inclusions were heated step-by-step to a maximum of 1000 °C with the aim of...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inMinerals (Basel) Vol. 13; no. 12; p. 1557
Main Authors Krzemnicki, Michael S, Lefèvre, Pierre, Zhou, Wei, Braun, Judith, Spiekermann, Georg
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Basel MDPI AG 01.12.2023
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Gem-quality rubies and sapphires are often commercially heat treated at about 800 °C or higher to enhance their color and clarity, and hence quality. For this study, selected corundum samples containing diaspore and goethite inclusions were heated step-by-step to a maximum of 1000 °C with the aim of monitoring the dehydration and phase transformation of these oxyhydroxides to corundum and hematite during heating. Based on our experiments and in agreement with the literature, the dehydration of diaspore in corundum occurs between 525 and 550 °C, whereas goethite transforms to hematite between 300 and 325 °C. As both diaspore and goethite may be present as inclusions in rubies, sapphires, and other corundum varieties (e.g., pink sapphires, padparadscha), these dehydration reactions and phase transformations can be considered important criteria to separate unheated from heated stones, specifically in cases in which other methods (e.g., microscopy, FTIR) are unsuccessful.
ISSN:2075-163X
2075-163X
DOI:10.3390/min13121557