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Posted

is it possible, in any way, to destroy a diamond....

 

i know they are the hardest substance on earth, but is it possible....

 

e.g. put them next to a nuke! or in a black hole

 

ps. dont use another diamond!

Posted

If you hit a diamond with a lump hammer, on an anvil, it will shatter into dust. They are not that hard, sudden shocks shatter them the same as toughened glass.

Posted

Or, you could put them under extremely high temperature and make them turn into carbon dioxide! DONT try this at home, I don't want to be paying bills for people foolish enough to try it and say "aommaster told me too!"

Posted

Um, why would you destroy a diamond anyway.If i had one that i could destroy id keep it... :cool:

And I think a black hole is a little to extreme

Posted

Apparently, diamonds will burn at the same temperature as coal, being made of the same substance. So, just throw them on the fire.

Posted

actualy, industrial grade diamonds aren`t all that expensive, if you take the stylus from the tone arm on an old record player, there`s usualy 2 needle like diamonds on those,

they`re not very big, but perfect if you wanted to experiment with destroying one :)

Posted

I'd take the diamond, pretend to destroy it, and sell it.

 

But the burning like coal thing sounds like a way to bypass fossil fuels. You know, have everyone donate a ring for the local power plant.

 

 

(no, really, I'm not that stupid)

Posted
i agree with some of the above if i was given a diamond why the heck would i destroy it

 

If i were given a diamond i would wonder why it was given to me.

Posted
but could u beat it in a scratch test

 

if you had all the time in the world! :) Scratching just means making a tiny 'trench' on the surface. This means that some of the atoms have been rubbed away. So, if you had all the time in the world, you could, in effect change it to dust!

  • 1 month later...
Posted
Apparently, diamonds will burn at the same temperature as coal, being made of the same substance. So, just throw them on the fire.

 

(at the risk of sounding like a complete moron)

 

You're kidding, right? I have a hard time wrapping my mind around the concept of burning a diamond. I mean, I'm no chemist, but hey...

Posted

Yeah I don't think that Glider is right either (though I'm not sure). Isn't the melting point of diamonds near 4500 degrees Celsius?

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