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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Vishwam Sankaran

Scientists claim they’ve made first-ever ‘hexagonal diamond’

  • Chinese scientists claim to have successfully created hexagonal diamond in a laboratory, a form of carbon previously only found at meteorite impact sites.
  • This synthetic hexagonal diamond exhibits a slightly higher hardness, approximately 114 gigapascals, compared to natural cubic diamonds, which typically have a hardness of around 110 gigapascals.
  • Researchers from China's Henan Key Laboratory of Diamond Materials and Devices produced a millimetre-sized piece of pure hexagonal diamond by subjecting highly ordered graphite to extreme pressure of 20 gigapascals and temperatures between 1,300C and 1,900C.
  • The existence of hexagonal diamonds has long been debated due to a lack of solid experimental evidence, with its physical properties remaining largely unexplored until now.
  • This breakthrough resolves the long-standing controversy surrounding hexagonal diamond, offering new insights into carbon phase transitions and opening avenues for future research and technological applications.

IN FULL

Scientists create first-of-its-kind ‘hexagonal diamond’ harder than real thing

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