| | |   Molybdenum trioxide crystals. These are lovely transparent crystals of molybdenum trioxide which I made myself using nothing more than an acetylene welding torch and a molybdenum plate.  Lovely.  Just lovely.  Too bad I was trying to make diamonds, not molybdenum trioxide.  It seems that blowing an ordinary acetylene torch at a molydenum or silicon plate held at the right temperature will cause a thin film of diamond to form slowly on the surface.  After my first attempt at this I saw a few tiny flakes of what was unmistably transparent crystal material.  Needless to say I was pretty excited by this.  Unfortunately, when I continued the experiment I started getting lots and LOTS of this beautiful crystal material, so much that it could not possibly be diamond, since what was expected was a few microns of polycrystalline film, not macroscopic crystals like these.  Sadly, it is simply molydenum trioxide, a species that forms in air at high enough temperatures.
 I'm still working on the diamond making, it will be a Popular Science column if I get it to work.
 Source: Theodore Gray
 Contributor: Theodore Gray
 Acquired: 27 December, 2008
 Text Updated: 28 December, 2008
 Price: Free
 Size: 1"
 Composition: MoO3
 | 
 |   | 
 |