
Diamond is carbon in its most concentrated form. Except for trace impurities like boron and nitrogen, diamond is composed solely of carbon, the chemical element that is fundamental to all life.

But diamond is distinctly different from its close cousins the common
mineral graphite and lonsdaleite, both of which are also composed of
carbon. Why is diamond the hardest surface known while graphite is
exceedingly soft? Why is diamond transparent while graphite is opaque and
metallic black? What is it that makes diamond so unique?
The key to these questions lie in diamond's particular arrangement of carbon atoms or its crystal structure--the feature that defines any mineral's fundamental properties. A crystal is a solid body formed from the bonding of atomic
elements or compounds in a repeating arrangement. Often, crystals possess smooth
external faces. Due to their symmetrical and finite nature, the
building blocks of crystals are limited to relatively small numbers of
atoms, and their chemical compositions to simple numerical combinations of
elements.
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