How Hard Is Diamond?


Although diamond is known as the world’s hardest natural material and has been assigned a hardness of 10 on the Mohs hardness scale, that information is an oversimplification. Diamond crystals vary in hardness by direction.

Mineral Hardness Scales
MineralMohsVickers
(kg/mm2)
Talc127
Gypsum261
Calcite3157
Fluorite4315
Apatite5535
Orthoclase6817
Quartz71161
Topaz81567
Corundum92035
Diamond1010000
Mineral Hardness ScalesMineralMohsVickers
(kg/mm2)
Talc127Gypsum261Calcite3157Fluorite4315Apatite5535Orthoclase6817Quartz71161Topaz81567Corundum92035Diamond1010000

The direction of greatest hardness is parallel to the octahedral crystal planes. When diamond crystals are being cut and polished into gems, it is very difficult to cut them in that direction with a diamond saw. So instead of using a diamond saw or the traditional practice of breaking them by cleaving, much of this work is now done by laser sawing.

Facets cut parallel to the octahedral crystal direction are also difficult to polish, so cutters either change direction or risk leaving a “lizard skin” texture on the facet.

The softest direction in a diamond crystal is parallel to the cubic planes. The best polishing is done on facets that are parallel to that direction. Although that is the softest direction in a diamond, the hardness is several times harder than corundum, the second-hardest mineral of the Mohs hardness scale.


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