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This article is written in American English , which has its own spelling conventions (center, color, defense, realize, traveled) and some terms may be different or absent from other varieties of English. According to the relevant style guide, this should not be changed without broad consensus.
Featured article Diamond is a featured article; it (or a previous version of it) has been identified as one of the best articles produced by the Wikipedia community. Even so, if you can update or improve it, please do so.
Main Page trophy This article appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page as Today's featured article on May 11, 2005.
In the news Article milestones
DateProcessResult
March 10, 2005 Featured article candidate Not promoted
April 16, 2005 Featured article candidate Promoted
January 23, 2007 Featured topic candidate Not promoted
August 25, 2009 Featured article review Kept
In the news A news item involving this article was featured on Wikipedia's Main Page in the "In the news" column on January 17, 2010.
Current status: Featured article
This level-4 vital article is rated FA-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale.
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Media mention
This article has been June 2004:
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Section size for Diamond (46 sections)
Section name Byte count Prose size (words)
Header Total Header Total
(Top) 4,954 4,954 285 285
Etymology, earliest use and composition discovery 5,657 5,657 200 200
Properties 3,678 45,275 269 3,045
Thermodynamics 5,878 5,878 318 318
Crystal structure 2,165 2,165 195 195
Crystal habit 3,859 3,859 282 282
Mechanical 19 11,511 0 763
Hardness 6,169 6,169 530 530
Toughness 1,792 1,792 115 115
Yield strength 1,766 1,766 51 51
Elasticity and tensile strength 1,765 1,765 67 67
Electrical conductivity 2,920 2,920 164 164
Surface property 2,033 2,033 131 131
Chemical stability 2,902 2,902 209 209
Color 6,677 6,677 454 454
Clarity 1,835 1,835 136 136
Fluorescence 1,209 1,209 101 101
Thermal conductivity 608 608 23 23
Geology 4,160 24,049 268 2,047
Surface distribution 3,879 3,879 387 387
Exploration 1,574 1,574 212 212
Ages 1,237 1,237 153 153
Origin in mantle 3,919 3,919 363 363
Carbon sources 2,044 2,044 227 227
Formation and growth 1,179 1,179 152 152
Transport to the surface 762 762 95 95
Double diamonds 1,385 1,385 46 46
In space 3,910 3,910 144 144
Industry 518 44,243 52 3,083
Gem-grade diamonds 15,116 25,444 1,056 1,765
Cutting 5,884 5,884 389 389
Marketing 4,444 4,444 320 320
Industrial-grade diamonds 4,975 4,975 371 371
Mining 8,476 13,306 610 895
Political issues 4,830 4,830 285 285
Synthetics, simulants, and enhancements 46 12,427 0 989
Synthetics 5,101 5,101 348 348
Simulants 727 727 69 69
Enhancements 1,613 1,613 137 137
Identification 4,940 4,940 435 435
See also 186 186 0 0
Notes 26 26 0 0
Citations 34 34 0 0
General and cited references 4,032 4,032 0 0
Further reading 664 664 0 0
External links 1,312 1,312 0 0
Total 142,859 142,859 9,649 9,649
WikiProject Spoken Wikipedia There is a request, submitted by Catfurball (talk), for an audio version of this article to be created. For further information, see WikiProject Spoken Wikipedia.
The rationale behind the request is: Important.

Chemistry

[edit ]

Wow, is this a bad article. The lead states:"Because the arrangement of atoms in diamond is extremely rigid, few types of impurity can contaminate it (two exceptions are boron and nitrogen)." This is absolute rubbish. It isn't its "rigidity" that gives bulk diamond its impermeability (if that's what is meant by contamination). It is easy to "contaminate" a diamond CVD film with you name it. How big is the difference between contaminating a 1 inch cube (say) of pure iron vs. pure diamond? Not much. Ion implantation into (the near surface of) a diamond is also trivial. If the editors meant that NATURAL diamonds (on Earth) are typically quite pure, then SAY THAT! I suspect, but just an ignorant suspicion, that diamond must transition between impure high-carbon 'stuff' to the pure allotrope. I expect that at some point there's LOTS of contaminants in the nascent diamond. Aren't most natural diamonds black? What's that?? (the preceding is a digression, I'm ignorant on their natural occurrence.) There are so many FALSE statements in this article that it needs a total rewrite. There are many other bloopers but I don't have the patience to list them all. (For instance, did you know that hydrogen will leave an ash when burnt? No? Well, just read this article. When a diamond burns (in O2), any contaminants are left as ash. Ridiculous. (as is the assumption of complete combustion of the carbon) Another false claim is that diamond contains the most atoms per unit volume. (aside: at first, I thought the editor meant per unit cell volume!, not sure why s/he used the word "unit" since it doesn't add clarity (but it is not wrong)). Estimates of hydrogen density in the sun's core is ~10,000 kg/m^3, and without qualifying pressure and temperature the claim is likely false. I could go on...)40.142.183.146 (talk) 20:59, 20 August 2023 (UTC) [reply ]

Don't forget that vinyl will wear down a diamond!! 203.221.187.176 (talk) — Preceding undated comment added 21:17, 13 September 2023 (UTC) [reply ]

Does the "rigidity" come from repulsion between a given carbon atom and its 12 2nd nearest neighbors? Rigid sphere models have these atoms approximately touching.

The article states "At room temperature, diamonds do not react with any chemical reagents including strong acids and bases." Perhaps this part of the article is old-fashioned. Stronger reagents are often studied today. Does diamond dust react with liquid chlorine trifluoride? What about triflic acid? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2603:8001:5900:534:1EB7:FFE1:F987:FB30 (talk) 09:27, 21 September 2025 (UTC) [reply ]

Too low

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See "Mining companies' expenses average 40 to 60 US dollars per carat for natural colorless diamonds, ". This seems to be too low. It might be vandalism. 93.97.135.187 (talk) 11:51, 24 September 2025 (UTC) [reply ]

It's not, diamonds are just a scam SecretCoder123 (talk) 00:15, 27 April 2026 (UTC) [reply ]

Semi-protected edit request on 27 April 2026

[edit ]
This edit request has been answered. Set the |answered= parameter to no to reactivate your request.

Change the theoretically predicted phase diagram of carbon to the theoretically predicted phase diagram of carbon, from 1989 and updated with newer work found in the wikipedia page for carbon. SecretCoder123 (talk) 00:10, 27 April 2026 (UTC) [reply ]

Not done: according to the page's protection level, you should be able to edit the page yourself. If you seem to be unable to, please reopen the request with further details. Day Creature (talk) 00:31, 27 April 2026 (UTC) [reply ]

TFA consideration

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Hello talk page watchers, it has been a long time since this article was chosen as today's featured article, so I am considering this for a re-run. When skimming through the article, I noticed some uncited text, and I think the article could use a copy-edit due to the addition of new prose since it was promoted. Is anyone interested in taking a look so that the article is ready to run again? Are there other concerns that should be resolved before this runs at TFA? Z1720 (talk) 02:12, 5 June 2026 (UTC) [reply ]

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /