Ruby

ruby
Rough & Cut Ruby

Ruby – the name given to red, gem-quality corundum – is one of the best gemstones for jewellery settings. Rubies may be any shade of red, from pinkish to purplish or brownish red, depending on the chromium and iron content of the stone. Frequent twinning of the crystals makes the material liable to fracture, yet ruby is a tough mineral, second only to diamond in hardness. Crystal prisms are hexagonal with tapering or flat ends. As the crystals grow they form new layers, and depending on the geological conditions and minerals present, colour variations, called zoning, occur.

Worldwide in igneous and metamorphic rocks, or as waterworn pebbles in alluvial deposits. The finest ruby comes from Burma; those from Thailand, the main source, are brownish red; Afghanistan, Pakistan and Vietnam produce bright red stones; those from India, North Carolina (USA), Russia, Australia, and Norway are dark, sometimes even opaque.

In 1902, a Frenchman, Auguste Verneuil, produced a synthetic ruby crystal by exposing powdered aluminium oxide and colouring material to the flame of the blowtorch.

Ruby Pictures

A vibrant ruby in alabaster Polished ruby cabochons Ruby necklace on the petals of red roses

Cause of Color :

Chromium, Iron (may / may not be present).


Chemical Composition :

Aluminium Oxide – Al2O3 (trace elements Chromium, Iron, Titanium, etc. are responsible for the different colored varieties


Crystal System / Forms :

Trigonal System


Cuts & Uses :

Facetted cuts (usually mixed cuts), cabochons, beads, carvings, etc.


Dispersion : 0.018
Hardness : 9
Lustre : Vitreous
Magnification :
  • Crystals of calcite, dolomite, apatite, etc.
  • Silk – three directional needles of rutile intersecting at 60° / 120°; Needles of boehmite intersecting at almost 90°; Needles of ilmenite etc.
  • Parallel polysynthetic twin lamellae.
  • Color zoning and angular growth zoning.
  • Fingerprints and fluid inclusions.
  • Zircon halo inclusions etc.

Optic Character :

Anisotropic, D.R., Uniaxial negative


Pleochroism : Strong in deep colored varieties
Refractive Index / Birefringence :

1.762 – 1.770 / 0.008; Range: 1.754 – 1.778


Simulants (with separation tests) :

Natural / Synthetic Spinel (optic character, R.I., inclusions), Tourmaline (R.I., S.G., pleochroism, inclusions), Red Garnets (optic character, spectrum), Glass (optic character, inclusions, U.V. fluorescence), Glass (optic character, inclusions, U.V. fluorescence), Doublets (inclusions, U.V. fluorescence), Synthetic Cubic Zirconia (optic character, R.I., S.G.), etc.


Sources :

Myanmar (known as Burmese Ruby), Thailand, Sri Lanka, Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, Madagascar), India (Orissa, Kangyam – Kaur, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh), Vietnam.


Spectrum :

Strong absorption of the yellow, green and violet wavelengths. A broad band centered at around 550nm, a series of fine lines in the red, two of which appears as a single line which is actually ‘doublet’ at 694.2nm and 692.8nm (two lines closely spaced) which in appropriate lighting are fluorescent. Other lines are at 468nm, 475nm and 476.5nm. The presence of Iron in some rubies suppresses the fluorescence and imparts a duller color to the stone.


Synthesis :

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