Metal-coated crystal
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Metal-coated crystals are artificial products made by coating crystals, such as quartz, with metal to give them an iridescent metallic sheen. Crystals treated this way are used as gemstones and for other decorative purposes. Possible coatings include gold, indium, titanium, niobium and copper. Other names for crystals treated so include aqua aura, angel aura, flame aura, opal aura or rainbow quartz.
Production[]
Such products are created in a vacuum chamber by vapour deposition. Quartz is heated to 871 °C in vacuum, and golden wire is heated to even higher temperature, either by resistive heating with direct electrical current, or by magnetron.[1] Gold sublimation occurs, and subsequently deposition on crystal's surface.
When viewed under a gemological microscope in diffused direct transmitted light, aqua aura displays the following properties:[2]
- a coppery surface iridescence in tangential illumination
- diffused dark outlines of some facet junctions
- a patchy blue colour distribution on some facets
- white facet junctions, irregular white abrasions and surface pits, where the treatment either did not "take" or had been abraded away.
The brilliant color of these products is the result of optical interference effects produced by layers of metal.
See also[]
References[]
- ^ "How is Aura Rainbow Quartz Made?".
- ^ Robert Webster, Michael O'Donoghue (January 2006). Gems: Their Sources, Descriptions and Identification. ISBN 9780750658560.
External links[]
Media related to Aqua aura at Wikimedia Commons
- Crystals
- Gemstones