Apparently, there are internet rumours about charcoal briquettes, peanut butter and microwaves, as a combination to produce diamonds.
You can consider this an Internet rumour.
Natural diamonds are formed deep within the earth's mantle under extreme pressure and intense high heat, conditions that are only possible to reproduce in a well-funded laboratory.
Believing that a person can match these phenomenon, with the ingredients listed above, based on an Internet post, may render the reader at least gullible.
This is not good use of a microwave: it cannot achieve the heat required to form a diamond.
yellow canary diamond
Take the stone to a certified gemologist, who will be able to tell you the origin of the diamond. To the amateur, a yellow diamond just looks like a yellow diamond.
Diamond vaporizes when heated in a microwave due to the high temperatures reached inside the microwave oven, which can break the strong bonds between carbon atoms in the diamond structure. This results in the diamond turning into gas or vapor rather than melting into a liquid state.
There is no particular song titled yellow diamond but Rihanna's new song "We found love" has the lyrics yellow diamond in it.
You first draw a diamond on the top which is yellow, then you make a red diamond to the right in the middle, then a blue diamond, then write Steelers in the middle.
Both "canary" and "yellow" are words that can be used to describe a yellow colored diamond, althoguh keep in mind that a true, natural yellow diamond is NOT graded on the same scale as a white diamond that has a lot of yellow in it .
Yellow diamond has intense hues of yellow that look similar to gold; however, yellow diamond is not considered gold. The unique yellow color present in these diamonds is the result of the presence of nitrogen impurities which comes due to the composition of the crystal structure. Yellow diamonds are called Canary diamonds, sparkly and valuable pieces of lab-grown diamond jewelry. The nitrogen molecules in the diamond stone absorb the blue light, which makes the stone take a yellow hue. Yellow diamond stones differ from gold as they are fancy-colored diamonds depending on the nitrogen present. These diamonds can range from light yellow hue to bright, vivid, and more intense yellow hue.
Depending on the intensity of the yellow colour (nitrogen) in the stone, the diamond could be 'called' by many names. Generally, visibly yellow diamonds can range from a 'light yellow' colour to an 'intense fancy yellow' colour. Canary diamond is another name given to some yellow diamonds. As well, 'colourless' diamonds graded from H through Z are also called 'yellow'. A certified gemologist can give you the exact name for the colour of the diamond in question.
The Tiffany Yellow Diamond is the worlds second largest canary yellow diamond. In 1983 the diamond was appraised and valued at 12 million dollars.
You can only copy items in blue yellow red and gold.
If you are looking for anything that you'd be able to sell as "diamonds" similar to a jewelry store, no, you can't.