I cannot. It takes geologic time, heat, and pressure to metamorphose coal into diamond(s).
The related link below will guide you through one of the moderately challenging methods of artificially producing diamonds from coal.
Nope, you have to mine for diamonds with an iron pickaxe.
No. Diamonds and coal are both allotropes of carbon. Coal and diamonds are not made from one another.
Coal and diamonds are both forms of carbon.
Diamonds in the Coal was created on 1992-01-14.
No, diamonds are not made from coal. While both coal and diamonds are made of carbon, the conditions required to create diamonds are much more intense and happen deep within the Earth's mantle. Coal forms through the decomposition of plant matter over millions of years.
Diamonds are found in coal mines because both diamonds and coal form under similar geologic conditions deep within the Earth's crust. When the intense heat and pressure are present during the formation of coal, it provides an environment where diamonds can also crystallize. This is why diamonds can occasionally be found in coal mines.
Coal cannot be turned into diamonds through a simple process. Diamonds are formed deep within the Earth's mantle under extreme pressure and heat over millions of years, whereas coal is formed closer to the Earth's surface under less intense conditions. It is not practically possible to convert coal into diamonds in a laboratory setting.
Both diamonds and coal contain carbon atoms in their crystal structure. Diamonds have a tetrahedral lattice structure, while coal has an amorphous structure.
Coal has been called 'black diamonds'. This is probably because coal and diamonds are both formed from carbon.
coal
Both diamonds and coal consist of carbon atoms.
pure carbon is coal, also diamonds are coal that was under a lot of pressure. so both diamonds and coal are pure carbon.