pull down to refresh

Making diamonds is cheaper than ever, creating a weird problem: too many diamonds.
In an age when you can get just about anything online, it's probably no surprise that you can buy a diamond-making machine for $200,000 on Chinese eCommerce site Alibaba. If, like me, you haven't been paying attention to the diamond industry, it turns out that the availability of these machines reflects an ongoing trend toward democratizing diamond production—a process that began decades ago and continues to evolve.
The history of lab-grown diamonds dates back at least half a century. According to Harvard graduate student Javid Lakha, writing in a comprehensive piece on lab-grown diamonds published in Works in Progress last month, the first successful synthesis of diamonds in a laboratory setting occurred in the 1950s. Lakha recounts how Howard Tracy Hall, a chemist at General Electric, created the first lab-grown diamonds using a high-pressure, high-temperature (HPHT) process that mimicked the conditions under which diamonds form in nature.
Since then, diamond-making technology has advanced significantly. Today, there are two primary methods for creating lab-grown diamonds: the HPHT process and chemical vapor deposition (CVD). Both types of machines are now listed on Alibaba, with prices starting at around $200,000, as pointed out in a Hacker News comment by engineer John Nagle (who goes by "Animats" on Hacker News). A CVD machine we found is more pricey, at around $450,000.
Yes, of course they should be easily identifiable. In nature, things are not totally perfect because many factors influence the creation of a diamond. But I don't think there is a diamond making machine that you can buy on Alibaba.
reply
I smell a Chinese scam, if it were so the diamond market would have collapsed. To create diamonds you need laboratory equipment to replicate the creation process at high pressures.
reply
As far as I know, lab-made diamonds are easily identifiable.
reply
11 sats \ 1 reply \ @hodlme 13 Sep
They're a bit too perfect, which begs the question of why you would want a natural diamond when you could have these.
reply
It's a good question. As for me, I'm not a fan of jewelry, but I understand that those who do like it want natural jewelry and not something made in a laboratory. Laboratory-made diamonds are used in industry, for example, to make cutting wheels.
reply
Wow, that's really something surprising about the diamond machine and I think it's a sign that the industry is growing more and more.
reply
Buy one and print Diamonds Make a baller rapper watch
reply