Beryllium Diffusion – Deep Diagnostic Reference
Full per-method detection protocol for beryllium lattice diffusion in corundum, with disclosure standards and stability data.
Process and Conditions
Rough sapphire is packed in beryllium-bearing powder (chrysoberyl or synthetic BeO)
and fired at 1700–1800 °C in an oxidising atmosphere for 12–100 hours.
Be²⁺ ions (ionic radius 0.27 Å) are small enough to diffuse through the corundum
lattice – unlike Ti or Cr, which remain near-surface. They act as charge compensators
enabling trapped-hole colour centres (h-Fe: iron paired with oxygen vacancies),
producing strong orange/yellow absorption throughout the stone.
The Songea (Tanzania) case study (from 2001 onward) demonstrated that ordinary sapphire
could be transformed into commercially intense padparadscha-like material unachievable
by plain heat treatment.
Be²⁺ diffuses into corundum at processing temperatures by creating charge-compensated
trapped-hole chromophores responsible for the yellow-orange coloration (Emmett et al. 2003).
Diffusion of beryllium into various types of sapphire can shift their chemistry from
donor- to acceptor-dominated, forming the hole chromophore (Emmett et al. 2023).
Detection – Full Protocol (Loupe to SIMS)
| Method | Finding | Reliability | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10× loupe / naked eye | Colour may appear suspiciously homogeneous and intense for the origin; padparadscha oranges from Sri Lanka rarely achieve this saturation naturally | Indicative only | Cannot distinguish from plain heat |
| Immersion microscope (40×, dark-field, di-iodomethane) | In poorly-treated or small stones: slight colour concentration at facet junctions ('spider-web' faint); less pronounced than Ti surface diffusion because penetration is deeper; may appear where facets approach the girdle | Suggestive – not conclusive | More reliable for Ti surface diffusion; less reliable for Be |
| Chelsea Colour Filter | No specific diagnostic reaction | Not useful | Skip in workflow |
| UV fluorescence (LWUV/SWUV) | No reliable discrimination on its own | Not useful | Skip in workflow |
| LA-ICP-MS (Laser Ablation ICP-MS) | Be >1–2 ppm in orange/yellow corundum is diagnostic; natural corundum contains <0.1 ppm Be | Definitive | Industry standard for lab detection; Emmett et al. 2003 establishes ppm threshold |
| SIMS (Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry) | Concentration profile from surface to interior; diffusion gradient (high at surface, declining inward) confirms treatment; flat low profile confirms natural | Gold standard | Highest sensitivity (~ppb); maps the Be gradient unambiguously |
| LIBS (Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy) | Detects Be semi-quantitatively; semi-destructive; less precise than LA-ICP-MS | Supportive | Occasionally used in trade; not preferred for definitive reports |
Effect on the Gem
- Colour is lattice-deep: re-cutting does not remove it (distinguish from Ti surface diffusion)
- Produces intense orange, yellow, or padparadscha (orange-pink) colours throughout the stone
- Some colour zoning may persist if natural chemistry was uneven
- Ruby subjected to Be diffusion can show reddening or colour improvement in marginally red stones
Disclosure Standards
- CIBJO / AGTA: must be disclosed as a treatment; AGTA code "U" (diffusion)
- GIA: reports "lattice diffusion treatment – beryllium present"; NOT acceptable
to describe the stone simply as "heated" - LMHC: classified as a treatment requiring specific disclosure separate from
plain heat treatment (H); coded H(b) or H(Be) on many laboratory reports - Gem-A: students must understand that Be-diffusion is a fundamentally different
treatment from plain heating and requires a separate disclosure statement
Stability
- Permanent under normal wearing conditions; lattice-level diffusion is not
reversible by light, heat, or solvents - Re-polishing does NOT remove colour (distinguish from Ti surface diffusion)
- Ultrasonic and steam cleaning: safe
- The treatment itself is stable but does not affect overall corundum durability (Mohs 9)
Sources
- Emmett, J.L. et al. 2003. Beryllium Diffusion of Ruby and Sapphire. Gems & Gemology.
DOI: 10.5741/gems.39.2.84 [VERIFIED – live Crossref API confirmed] - Emmett, J.L. et al. 2023. Yellow Sapphire: Natural, Heat-Treated, Beryllium-Diffused,
and Synthetic. Gems & Gemology. DOI: 10.5741/gems.59.3.268 [VERIFIED] - McClure, S.F. et al. 2010. Gemstone Enhancement and Its Detection in the 2000s.
Gems & Gemology. DOI: 10.5741/gems.46.3.218 [VERIFIED]