Hydrofluroic acid is damaging for diamonds. Oxygen isn't too good for them either, if you heat the diamond up.
Man made diamonds are chemically the same as natural diamonds.
No, water and diamonds do not react chemically at all.
Fires and Attacks
Diamond is a chemically inert allotropic form of carbon, as its strong carbon-carbon bonds make it resistant to most chemical reactions. This stability is due to the tightly packed crystal lattice structure of carbon atoms in a diamond.
wind storn
You clean a man made diamond the same way that you would clean any other diamond. Chemically speaking there is absolutely no difference between a diamond that is made by a man made process and a diamond that was made by a geologic process.
It is a crystalline allotropic modification of carbon. Diamonds are hardest element known and is chemically very inert.
It stops working.
because it destructs thing
No, carbon cannot be removed from a diamond as it is a pure form of carbon. The structure of a diamond is a tightly bonded network of carbon atoms, and it is not possible to chemically or physically remove the carbon without altering the structure of the diamond.
Correct.Although they are based on the same element (carbon) they have vastly different structures and atomic arrangements, resulting in very different physical and chemical properties. Such forms are known chemically as allotropes.
it produces a lot of dust and ,it destructs the aesthetic and destroys vegetation