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Corundum |
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corundum (kərŭn`dəm), mineral, aluminum oxide, Al2O3. The clear varieties are used as gems and the opaque as abrasive materials. Corundum occurs in crystals of the hexagonal system and in masses. It is transparent to opaque and has a vitreous to adamantine luster. The transparent gem varieties are colorless, pink, red, blue, green, yellow, and violet; the common varieties are blue-gray to brown. Emery is a common corundum, used as an abrasive and distinguished by its impurities of magnetite and hematite. The chief corundum gems are the ruby ruby, precious stone, the transparent red variety of corundum, found chiefly in Myanmar, Thailand, and Sri Lanka and classified among the most valuable of gems. The Myanmarese stones are blood red, the most valued tint being the "pigeon's blood.
..... Click the link for more information. (red) and the sapphire sapphire, precious stone. A transparent blue corundum, it is classified among the most valuable of gems. Sapphires are found chiefly in Thailand, India, Sri Lanka, and Myanmar and also in Australia and in the United States (in Montana). ..... Click the link for more information. (blue). Yellow, pink, green, and white stones are also called yellow, pink, green, and white sapphires. Corundum gems are also made synthetically. The chief sources of natural corundum are Myanmar, Sri Lanka, India, Thailand, Republic of South Africa, Tanzania, and the United States (North Carolina, Georgia, and Montana). Most of the emery is mined in Naxos and the other Cyclades and in Asia Minor. corundumAluminum oxide mineral (Al2O3) that is, after diamond, the hardest known natural substance. Gem varieties are sapphire and ruby; mixtures with iron oxides and other minerals are called emery. Corundum is widespread in nature, although large deposits are rare. Rich deposits occur in India, Russia, Zimbabwe, and South Africa. In addition to being a precious gem, corundum is used as an abrasive for grinding optical glass and for polishing metals and has also been made into sandpapers and grinding wheels. For most industrial applications, however, it has been replaced by synthetic materials such as alumina; synthetic corundum is also manufactured. corundum a white, grey, blue, green, red, yellow, or brown mineral, found in metamorphosed shales and limestones, in veins, and in some igneous rocks. It is used as an abrasive and as gemstone; the red variety is ruby, the blue is sapphire. Composition: aluminium oxide. Formula: Al2O3. Crystal structure: hexagonal (rhombohedral) corundum [kə′rən·dəm] (mineralogy) Al2O3A hard mineral occurring in various colors and crystallizing in the hexagonal system; crystals are usually prismatic or in rounded barrel shapes; gem varieties are ruby and sapphire. corundum A hard, abrasive mineral, principally aluminum oxide, applied to a surface to make it non-slippery; for example, on the walking surface of a ramp. Corundum a mineral, a natural anhydrous alumina, Al2O3. Corundum crystallizes in the trigonal system. Its crystal structure consists of aluminum atoms surrounded by six oxygen atoms, which form a highly dense hexagonal packing. The oxygen layers are located parallel to the (0001) face of corundum. The aluminum occupies two-thirds of the octahedral cavities in the packing of the oxygen ions. Corundum is rarely found as large dipyramidal, barrel-shaped, tabular, or rhombohedral crystals; most often it forms, together with other minerals, coarse and fine granular aggregates. Corundum has a hardness of 9 on the mineralogical scale and a density of 3,950–4,100 kg/m3. It is characterized by high chemical stability and high melting point (2020°-2050°PC). The color of corundum varies depending on the composition of the admixtures (Fe, Cr, Ti). The most common colors are gray-brown, pinkish to red, and blue-gray to dark blue. Corundum is found in silica-deficient igneous rocks (syenites), in anorthite-corundum dikes, in the contacts between syenites and gneisses, in regionally metamorphic rocks (emeries), and in secondary quartzites and desilicated pegmatites. There are large deposits of corundum in the USSR in Kazakhstan and the Urals. Abroad, there are major deposits in Africa (Malagasy Republic, Southern Rhodesia, Republic of South Africa) and in India, Burma, Sri Lanka, Greece, and Turkey. Beautifully colored transparent or translucent natural crystals (red, ruby; blue, sapphire; and colorless, leucosapphire) have been used since antiquity as high-quality gems. Granular aggre-gates of nontransparent corundum are used as abrasives in the production of grinding and polishing powders (for polishing and cutting metal, hard rocks, and glass) and as a refractory. Artificial corundum is obtained on an industrial scale by melting bauxite in an electric furnace with a reducing agent (iron filings). It is also used as an abrasive. Cutting tools that are used for the mechanical treatment of metals at high temperatures are made from corundum by the methods of powder metallurgy. Monocrystalline transparent synthetic corundum in the form of boules and rods is prepared by melting and recrystallizing alumina in an oxygen-hydrogen flame. The boules thus produced may be colored by Cr to red, by V to grayish green in daylight and violet under artificial illumination, by Mn to yellowish pink, by Ni to yellow, and by Ti to pinkish violet. Upon faceting, synthetic corundum is used in jewelry-making under various names, such as sapphire, ruby, topaz, alexandrite, and amethyst. Red corundum, known as ruby, is used as jewel bearings in watches and other precision instruments while corundum rods are used in lasers. Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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