How to make Synthetic Ruby/Sapphire at home Update

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  • čas přidán 16. 11. 2019
  • Homemade Synthetic Ruby/Sapphire Update
    A quick update on my homemade Ruby/Sapphire project

Komentáře • 79

  • @unicornadrian1358
    @unicornadrian1358 Před 4 lety +45

    You need to add iron oxide to the blue sapphire to produce green sapphire. If you use vanadium oxide instead of chromium or titanium, you will get a colour change sapphire. Typically green in daylight and red under incandescent light. These are some fun things for you to experiment with.

    • @Palemagpie
      @Palemagpie Před 2 lety +1

      Wouldn't the iron oxide combine with the aluminium oxide to form thermite though?

    • @unicornadrian1358
      @unicornadrian1358 Před 2 lety +8

      @@Palemagpie no. Thermite is aluminium metal and iron oxide. The aluminium pulls the oxygen from the FeO2/3 to become Al2O3 and molten iron.
      The amounts needed to colour sapphire are minute.

    • @phillipstroll7385
      @phillipstroll7385 Před 2 lety

      Why go through all this? They aren't worth anything and they don't clean up like real gems do they?

    • @TheAechBomb
      @TheAechBomb Před 2 lety +7

      @@phillipstroll7385 no, but it is something awesome you can do just for yourself

  • @Nuovoswiss
    @Nuovoswiss Před 4 lety +34

    You're going to want to get some automated grinding equipment. You can remove the external Al2O3 with SiC sandpaper or SiC powder impregnated grinding pads. Technically you can use Al2O3 to grind Al2O3, but it's much slower. In addition to removing excess/coarse outer material, you will also use that equipment to polish the synthetic stones to a mirror-smooth surface.

  • @Vei2aC
    @Vei2aC Před 3 lety +13

    to remove the oxide coating, what i do, is just do a secondary heating of just the gems by themself, with no powder, you end up with a smooth uniform gem.

  • @sumdumbmick
    @sumdumbmick Před 4 lety +20

    you can clean up the outside of your sapphires by running the arc welder electrodes over the outside after you pull out of the powder. this means the extra Al2O3 is just more material to grow your sapphire, instead of something to get rid of.
    you can also use this remelting to adjust the shape of your sapphire a little bit.

    • @sumdumbmick
      @sumdumbmick Před 4 lety +1

      NightHawkInLight took this tip but because he refuses to accept that commenters can have worthwhile ideas, instead he only credited youtubers, despite the fact that they didn't actually provide the ideas he used.

    • @basedhacker
      @basedhacker Před 4 lety

      intelligent idea

  • @mwilson14
    @mwilson14 Před 4 lety +24

    I thought I had commented on this video when you released it, but I don't see my comment. I know I discussed with you in previous comments that using cobalt oxide isn't technically blue sapphire, but it must have been another video. This is considered cobalt blue pigment, but nonetheless, the result is pretty and I've done this fusion of cobalt oxide with aluminum oxide. The blue color is just too pretty to stay away from. I can help you create blue sapphire with titanium dioxide and iron oxide. The reason you get different coloration is due to the environmental oxygen during the heating process.
    You can adjust the color of the end product by using either an oxidizing flame or a reducing flame. You can turn an ugly brown/green/orange/yellow/gray/black/plaid product blue during heat treatment. I'll check my notes, but the grey and black colored sapphire needs an oxidizing flame and the other colors need a reducing flame to change it to blue. I may have that backwards, but I do have that information in my notes. As far as the color plaid, I made that up. I still can't make plaid sapphire unfortunately. :)
    I can send you a ton of technical information from my own research and experiments from the past couple years.--I was actually creating blue sapphire yesterday through a flux melt method which I had successfully attempted a couple years ago. Sadly, the blue sapphire I made a couple years ago was larger and nicer than the stuff I made yesterday. LOL. The quality of anything I've made is only worth of proof of concept applications, so basically, it's all crap, but still cool to me.

    • @SomeAustrianGuy
      @SomeAustrianGuy  Před 4 lety +12

      I remember your comment, I think it was on my first ruby video. I´ve tried your formula and after a few experiments I got a pretty blue colour. I know that cobalt oxide is a bit of cheating, but it´s a lot easier to get a nice blue. I´ve also used cobalt to make blue cobalt glass. I´ve never heat treated my stones and that´s probably why most of them are so ugly. I highly value your comments, they helped me a lot. Unfortunately i don't have much time for experiments at the moment, most of my videos were recorded a few months ago. I hope that i'll be able to make more ruby in the summer months.

    • @mwilson14
      @mwilson14 Před 4 lety +2

      @@SomeAustrianGuy I've been wanting to make cobalt blue glass as well, but I haven't got around to trying it yet. I've tried to make clear glass and have been successful at the microscopic level. lol. I've got a small bead of glass that I made and somehow I got gold coating the outside of the bead in patches. I know how the gold got into the batch (previously roasted sulfides in the same container), but I don't know why it formed a layer on the surface of the bead. I kept it in a vial and have it stored away. It's nearly perfectly round.
      I'm extremely glad you were able to get a blue color with the sapphire formula I provided. That's really awesome! I've been hoping someone else would duplicate the results I got and hopefully improve on it.
      I understand about not having any time for experiments as I've been going through the same thing.

    • @delarbusto2915
      @delarbusto2915 Před rokem

      hey I am a student from barcelona spain, and I am looking to replicate this for my bachelor project. Is there any way I could get into contact with you?

  • @whynotdean8966
    @whynotdean8966 Před 2 lety +5

    Realize I'm a couple years late for this, but maybe sand blast the excess A2lO3? NightHawkInLight even has a homemade one with a small (precise) nozzle.

  • @CooperViolins
    @CooperViolins Před 4 lety +6

    to remove the outside use a diamond lapidary wheel

  • @excitedbox5705
    @excitedbox5705 Před 4 lety +11

    Try streaming argon into your reaction chamber to get better control over the color. My guess is you are getting nitorgen, co2, and oxygen contamination. Since argon is inert you should have better results. Even better results can be obtained under vacuum. First purge the chamber with argon and then pump it down.

    • @firespark7092
      @firespark7092 Před 4 lety +2

      you wouldn't be able to create an arc in a vacuum though if my understanding is correct

    • @pixelpatter01
      @pixelpatter01 Před 4 lety

      @@firespark7092 Theoretically you are correct, but attaining a vacuum that will be an insulator is very difficult. The Argon purge and pump-down with DIY type gear would work as low pressure gas is a better conductor than high pressure gas. Neon tubes and most other gas discharge lamps are at a below atmospheric pressure. Xenon tubes excepted.. Since he is using carbon rods he could even purge with Carbon Dioxide because there is already carbon ,oxygen, and aluminum in the arc.

  • @zs6585
    @zs6585 Před 4 lety +3

    Very nice Video, i watch them all the time when im bored

  • @jerrywhidby.
    @jerrywhidby. Před 4 lety

    Thank you for the update.

  • @andyweb7779
    @andyweb7779 Před 3 lety +2

    Once you have the rough sapphire with oxide crust re-melt it with an arc welder

  • @dxdxdxxd
    @dxdxdxxd Před 2 lety +2

    I have Cr2O3 for ruby, but i have Cobalt oxide (CoO) with colour looks similar to yours cobalt trioxide (Co2O3..well I'm not sure if exactly this element exists). Will it works? What you think about that?

  • @jameswilliams185
    @jameswilliams185 Před rokem +1

    In my personal experience, the more cobalt oxide you add as a contaminant, the more those sapphires can resist carbon discoloration.

  • @tp5805
    @tp5805 Před 4 lety

    best youtube channel like for real

  • @antoineamyot6570
    @antoineamyot6570 Před rokem

    Hi, i tried making a synthetic sapphire, i tried making a mixture and put barely any copper oxide. At first it was white, so i added more, the it was a bit yellow (maybe from the rods. And finally it was just black. Why cant i get the blue colour?

  • @515161
    @515161 Před 3 lety

    Would a big powerful over for glass making work?

  • @karlswanson95
    @karlswanson95 Před 6 měsíci

    Might be interesting to create a lumogarnet. A yellow one that I saw was Gadolinium Aluminum Gallium Garnet. I do not know the ratios but it is used to convert UV and X-rays to visible light, and it is very good at this.

  • @chrismccarver2734
    @chrismccarver2734 Před rokem

    So hey have you ever tried using a small amount of termite in a controlled environment? It'd probably vaporize the aluminum oxide

  • @2000freefuel
    @2000freefuel Před 3 lety +1

    Have you tried putting the gems in a rock tumbler with a very aggressive cutting compound?

    • @emmanotsostrong
      @emmanotsostrong Před 2 lety

      The broken off aluminum oxide would act as its own grinding compound.

  • @DruggiePlays
    @DruggiePlays Před 4 lety

    keep us updated

  • @blackirish781
    @blackirish781 Před 4 lety +2

    Maybe sandblast the oxide off with more aluminium oxide?

  • @Palemagpie
    @Palemagpie Před 2 lety +1

    What about using mercury metal on the surface of the finished sapphire to remove the aluminium?
    It should absorb the aluminium and produce thin rising tendrils of aluminium oxide. Although I have no idea how it would react to the bonded aluminium in the sapphire. so, be careful of that. Plus a fume hood. Because we all know mercury vapor ain't great for the ol'....lungs

  • @tahanlaoboy
    @tahanlaoboy Před 3 lety

    Nice, thanks

  • @user-kj6nf1zc4v
    @user-kj6nf1zc4v Před 9 měsíci

    You could use a gem polishing wheel used in opal industry there are different grades of hardness and grades of course to fine

  • @il_vero_saspacifico6141

    Cool

  • @milktooth4528
    @milktooth4528 Před 4 lety +12

    When will we see the face behind these ingenious videos?

  • @FyaaahS
    @FyaaahS Před 2 lety

    Use graphite instead?

  • @viktorlevai7061
    @viktorlevai7061 Před rokem

    Hi,
    I am based in Austria and really like your videos.
    I'd like to ask you if you know where i could get aluminium oxide and chrom oxide in Vienna?

    • @SomeAustrianGuy
      @SomeAustrianGuy  Před rokem

      Hey, ich kauf meine Rohstoffe meistens beim Keramikbedarf Skokan. Aber generell bekommst du Aluminiumoxid und Chromoxid bei fast jedem Töpfergeschäft.

  • @idontknowmyfirstname69
    @idontknowmyfirstname69 Před 4 měsíci

    Silicon carbide grinding burr or mounted disk... Green carbide would worknbest... Its cheap and will chew aluminum oxide up like its nothing

  • @chefdeprestigellc8855
    @chefdeprestigellc8855 Před 3 lety +1

    Lapidary wheel can remove Das Oxides yaaa

  • @maxg1133
    @maxg1133 Před 2 lety

    Have u tried remelting it

  • @satina1169
    @satina1169 Před 8 měsíci

    Kannst du auch so Saphir Kugeln herstellen?

  • @thomaskovacs5094
    @thomaskovacs5094 Před rokem +1

    Need diamond abrasive grinding wheels for an angle grinder

  • @FuturisticPast1515
    @FuturisticPast1515 Před 5 měsíci

    Will it pass a diamond tester

  • @WeekendsOutsideFL
    @WeekendsOutsideFL Před rokem +1

    Well it’s a nice start, but it’s still a ways off from making a gorgeous shiny faceted stone :)

  • @Ma_X64
    @Ma_X64 Před 2 měsíci

    Aluminum oxide dissolves in alkalis.

  • @phil5506
    @phil5506 Před 7 měsíci

    Servus,
    probiere es auch gerade aus. 😁
    Mal sehen was passiert. ^^

  • @shaddayseraphim
    @shaddayseraphim Před 3 lety

    Use a graphite Crucible with your arc welder heating up The Crucible first it will help hold powder in and will help prevent the stone from taking on carbon when you put the arc welder to the aluminum oxide and chromium. When melted spray with isopropyl alcohol flip the stone in The Crucible and hit it again with the arc welder.

  • @majourney9598
    @majourney9598 Před 2 lety

    Where is the video?

  • @Stoffemollan
    @Stoffemollan Před 4 lety

    Why not remelt your Sapphires to get rid of oxides and also get a better shape?

    • @SomeAustrianGuy
      @SomeAustrianGuy  Před 4 lety +1

      That would be the best way, but I´m not able to keep that much Sapphire molten. The idea was to build the crystal in layers to avoid this problem.

    • @Stoffemollan
      @Stoffemollan Před 4 lety

      @@SomeAustrianGuyYes exactly. I was thinking u could just go over the surface with that electric "pen" u showed in other video when u made small ones and melt bit by bit.

  • @ericweiss8264
    @ericweiss8264 Před 2 lety

    Ball mill/rock tumbler

  • @llXchonll
    @llXchonll Před 9 měsíci

    Gallium to remove it

  • @Harith21AL
    @Harith21AL Před 2 lety

    Diamond polish will remove it

  • @dogedoggie1890
    @dogedoggie1890 Před 3 lety

    just take a diamond grinding disk and cut the alluminium oxide off

  • @hyperhektor7733
    @hyperhektor7733 Před 4 lety +1

    1:29 i got an idea, someone with a plasmacutter could inject the chemical powder in the air stream,
    and the just ignite the arc.
    btw (german) ich habe vor einiger Zeit mal was zur Cobaltglasherstellung gelesen und das Cobaltoxid(2+3) nicht ungefährlich sind die Dämpfe. (generell auch wichtig zu wissen de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metalldampffieber)

    • @SomeAustrianGuy
      @SomeAustrianGuy  Před 4 lety

      Wegen dem Metalldampffieber braucht man sich nicht wirklich sorgen machen, da man ne ziemlich große Menge von dem Zeug bräucht. Das ist eher bei Zinkdämpfen relevant. Viel wichtiger ist, dass Cobaltoxid krebserzeugend ist.

    • @hyperhektor7733
      @hyperhektor7733 Před 4 lety

      @@SomeAustrianGuy ich hatte mal 2 Atemzüge Aludampf unbewusst eingeatmet das geht genauso fix wie Zink xD. Wieso bist du dir so sicher das Cobaltdämpfe weniger gefährlich sind ?

    • @SomeAustrianGuy
      @SomeAustrianGuy  Před 4 lety

      @@hyperhektor7733 Cobaltdämpfe sind keinesfalls weniger gefährlich. Sie sind sogar deutlich schädlicher, hab nur gemeint im Vergleich zur krebserzeugenden Wirkung ist das Metalldampffieber fast harmlos. Wie hast du's denn geschafft Aludampf einzuatmen?

    • @hyperhektor7733
      @hyperhektor7733 Před 4 lety

      @@SomeAustrianGuy hatte vor etlichen Jahren mal einen Experimentaufbau aus einem Buch* nachgebaut.Es ging um das erzeugen vom Plasma, genau genommen Metalldampf-plasma. Damals wusste ich nicht genau was Plasma überhaupt ist (heißes Gas...) und das man Metalldampf einatmen kann xD. Ich hatte Aluminiumpulver mit wasser vermischt und das ganze per Hochspannungskondesator verdampft.
      *www.zvab.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=30501642443&searchurl=an%3Dguenter%2Bwahl%26hl%3Don%26sortby%3D20%26tn%3Dminispione&cm_sp=snippet-_-srp1-_-title3
      oder auch das
      www.zvab.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=19060381187&searchurl=an%3Dwahl%2Bg%25FCnter%26hl%3Don%26sortby%3D20&cm_sp=snippet-_-srp1-_-title23
      Da wird u.a. vorgestellt was im SDI Projekt für Experimente mit Energiewaffen/Geräte gemacht wurden und wie man das in winzig nachbauen kann xD.(Railgun,Coilgun,Plasmakanone,Plasmoidkanone,Laser,Maser,Ultraschall,Sender , nichttödliche Waffen u.a.)
      Für das Geld ein spannendes Buch, damals wo es noch kein Internet gab. Einige Sachen aus dem Buch gibt's aber auch heute nicht mal auf Google/Wikipedia zu finden.

  • @k192447
    @k192447 Před 2 lety

    pouca técnica.

  • @Balvinarts
    @Balvinarts Před 2 lety

    Use a grinder

  • @3eezie483
    @3eezie483 Před 9 měsíci

    power tool or dremel with diamond tip burr to remove the layer.

  • @bernarddemonceaux9000
    @bernarddemonceaux9000 Před 3 lety

    *Do you know Verneuil saphires lol*🛎

  • @bruhmania7359
    @bruhmania7359 Před 3 lety

    i wonder why they're so opaque

    • @SomeAustrianGuy
      @SomeAustrianGuy  Před 3 lety +1

      They cool down from 2000 ° C to room temperature in a few minutes, which leads to strong tensions and cracks in the material. Industrial ruby ​​is cooled very slowly, sometimes over several weeks.

    • @bruhmania7359
      @bruhmania7359 Před 3 lety

      @@SomeAustrianGuy so cooling it slowly would theoretically fix it?

  • @ChimeraChemLab
    @ChimeraChemLab Před 4 lety +1

    It's not sapphire.
    Sapphire: Al2O3 + TIxOx +FExOx.

  • @Weminal1
    @Weminal1 Před 2 lety

    click bait, you dont show how they are made

    • @nostromza3433
      @nostromza3433 Před rokem

      Actually he explains how they were made dumb dumb

    • @Weminal1
      @Weminal1 Před rokem

      @@nostromza3433
      A explanation without proof is useless
      If you want you can see that as a explanation why i'm right ;)

  • @nostromza3433
    @nostromza3433 Před rokem +1

    How do we make them clear like the man made ones online? @SomeAustrainGuy?