Dr_Diesel
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2019
- Messages
- 942
Well this is just freaky!
Has anyone ever heard of Blue fluorescence in a Blue Sapphire?????
Has anyone ever heard of Blue fluorescence in a Blue Sapphire?????
So, I fumbled my beautifully organized "box of rocks" and CLUNK, CRACKLE PSHHHH! 15 gems scattered across my desk and wood floor.
Nice one! Clutz.
Several of the stones were fluorescent, so I turned the lights off and brought out my 365nm LWUV torch. I managed to find them all pretty easily....but two things were unexpected:
1) Some of my Gray Burma Spinel showed weak red fluorescence. Maybe not a surprise since they are likely from Mogok where trivalent chromium is plentiful.
BUT THEN...
2) I saw a weak/moderate blue fluorescence illuminating a stone that was precisely the size and shape of my little unheated "Velvet Blue" unheated sapphire. I turned on the lights and sure enough!
I Googled this phenomenon and found nothing. Only an article on chalky, uneven SWUV blue fluorescence in heated sapphire, but the lab certificate and clear presence of rutile silk rules that out.
I tried to search for blue fluorescence caused by rutile and again, nothing.
I thought maybe rutile was just scattering light across the stone and made it "seem" to glow. Nope. It was a different color. It was the color of the blue fluorescence that we see in diamond. Moreover it is perfectly even throughout the stone and not chalky in appearance. If the stone were heat treated with boron, it would likely get into cracks and show a streaky appearance. I'm baffled.
I mean, I always thought this stone "glowed" in natural light, but blue fluorescence wa about the last thing on my mind.
HAS ANYONE EVER HEARD OF THIS BEFORE????
Is this some sort of bizarre unicorn, or is there something else going on here?
Please tag anyone who might be in the know. @landscape perhaps? @Karl_K ? What the heck is this???
***There is an article about hydrothermal synthetic sapphire showing moderate chalky green fluorescence under LWUV, but this is blue. Like boron blue. I also don't see the growth patterns that they describe in the article. Could the lab (LGL London Gem Lab in Sri Lanka) have been wrong? I am grasping at straws, as I can't make head or tails of this. Is this some sort of bizarre unicorn, or is there something else going on here?
Please tag anyone who might be in the know. @landscape perhaps? @Karl_K ? What the heck is this???
Anyway, I'll let the photos speak:




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