In
1950, De Beers had a worldwide monopoly on the production
of natural diamonds. It directly controlled all the
pipe mines in the world-- there were only seven, and
they were all in southern and central Africa-- and it
had arrangements, either direct or surreptitious, with
the governments of all the major diamond-producing countries
to buy whatever diamonds were found in those regions
by native diggers or fortune hunters. It also had the
financial and political resources to preemptively buy
out any new diamond discovery in most parts of the world.
There was, however,
another threat to the diamond invention that emerged
that year: the possibility that diamonds could be produced
in a laboratory or even a factory. A team of scientists
at the De Beers Research Laboratories had come to the
conclusion that it was only a matter of time before
a process was found for synthesizing diamonds. They
had received information that both the United States
and the Soviet Union were encouraging research aimed
at mass producing industrial-grade diamonds. Converting
carbon, which was one of the most common of all substances
on earth, to diamonds was basically an engineering problem.
It required constructing a vessel strong enough to withstand
the heat and pressure necessary for inducing the synthesis.
In a meeting with Sir Ernest Oppenheimer, they had themselves
argued that advanced metallurgic alloys and high-pressure
physics made the solution of this problem inevitable.
They proposed that De Beers itself take the lead in
developing this diamond-making technology, then through
patents and licenses attempt to control synthetic diamond
production. They warned that if an outside party made
the breakthrough, De Beers might lose its monopoly position.
Sir Ernest had listened
patiently to their arguments for a crash program on
diamond synthesis. Then, after considering the matter,
he turned them down, and said, "Only God can make a
diamond." His dogma notwithstanding, his scientific
assessment of the situation proved wrong. Within two
years, a diamond was produced in a laboratory in Sweden.
For at least 300 years
scientists had experimented with the conversion of carbon
to diamonds. For example, as early as 1694, Florentine
academicians gathered around a terrace to witness the
following experiment: A magnificently cut diamond was
placed in a crucible under a powerful glass lens. As
the sun's rays focused on it, it began giving off acrid
black vapors. A few minutes later, it disappeared in
a cloud of smoke, leaving not a trace of diamond in
the crucible. The academicians suggested that the diamond
was pure carbon, and under the fiery heat it had turned
to the gaseous form, carbon dioxide. But they could
not prove this assertion.
A century later, an
English chemist, Smithson Tennant, burned a diamond
in a sealed vessel filled with pure oxygen. It also
decomposed into an acrid vapor. Through chemical analysis,
Tennant was able to determine that this vapor was carbon
dioxide, and that the weight of the carbon in the vapor
exactly matched the weight of that of the diamond that
had vaporized. From this and other experiments, it was
scientifically established that a diamond was carbon.
If diamonds could be
transformed through a simple chemical reaction into
carbon, it followed that carbon, through a reverse process,
could be converted to diamonds. From the nineteenth
century onward, the idea that the commonest of elements,
carbon, could be turned into rare diamonds in the laboratory
intrigued both scientists and confidence men and led
to a wide range of experiments as well as dubious claims.
In 1880, a twenty-five-year-old
Scottish chemist named James Ballantyne Hannay, working
in a laboratory in Glasgow, attempted to achieve this
sought-after synthesis by exploding carbonaceous material.
He first sealed a mixture of powdered carbon, bone oil,
and paraffin in coiled tubes, and then placed the tubes
into a furnace. When the heat and pressure built up
sufficiently, the tubes exploded and splattered the
furnace walls with white-hot debris. After waiting for
the furnace to cool, Hannay carefully scraped a number
of minute particles off the sur~ace with a tweezers
and found that these specks scratched glass-one test
of a diamond. Triumphantly, Hannay claimed that he had
manufactured diamonds and sent about a dozen specimens
to the British Museum of Natural History in London.
At the time, however,
most of Hannay's contemporaries doubted that he had,
in fact, achieved the synthesis of carbon to diamond
crystals. Some scientists argued that he had mis-analyzed
the crystals that had resulted from his experiments
as diamonds, and others openly insinuated that Hannay
had himself put the diamonds into the tubes to fraudulently
create a reputation for himself. Since the crystals
that Hannay claimed were produced through his process
were too minute to be used in either jewelry or industrial
tools, the issue of whether or not these were authentic
diamonds remained a purely academic one. More than a
half century later, however, Hannay's crystals were
rediscovered by the British Museum and, under X-ray
analysis, proved to be diamonds of an extremely rare
variety called "Type II." The fact that Type II diamonds
were not generally recovered from mines at the time
of Hannay's experiments indicated that he had indeed
manufactured them.
Hannay was not the
only experimenter in the nineteenth century who claimed
success in synthesizing diamonds. In both Russia and
France, scientists achieved similar results in the laboratory
by applying heat and pressure to carbon. They were not
able to persuade their peers, however, that the microscopic
crystals their ingenious experiments yielded bore more
than a passing resemblance to diamonds. The main effect
of these early experiments was to induce an element
of fear in the bankers who had invested heavily in natural
diamonds. In 1905, for example, a self-styled French
inventor named Henri Lemoine informed Sir Julius Wernher
that he had discovered a process for mass-producing
gem-sized diamonds from lumps of coal. Sir Julius, a
British banker who was one of the four life governors
of De Beers Consolidated Mines, feared that unless such
an invention were brought under control it would wreck
the diamond industry. Even the mere rumor of its existence
could cause a selling panic among the investors in De
Beers. Under these circumstances, he decided that there
was only one prudent course of action: He would demand
a demonstration, and if the invention worked, he would
buy it-and then delay or suppress it.
Lemoine proved most
cooperative. He agreed to sell the invention in exchange
for a royalty and money to further develop it. He also
invited Sir Julius to his laboratory in Paris to witness
personally the synthesis of gem-sized diamonds.
Several weeks later,
Sir Julius arrived at the Paris laboratory, which was
located in the basement of an abandoned warehouse. He
was accompanied by Francis Oats, the top executive at
De Beers, and two other associates. Lemoine seated the
group around a huge furnace and then left the room.
A few minutes later,
the French inventor reappeared stark naked. He said
that he had removed all his clothes so that they could
see that he was concealing no diamonds. Then, like some
medieval alchemist, he proceeded to pour various unidentified
substances into a small crucible and mix them together.
After displaying the mixture to the four gentlemen from
London, he placed it in the furnace and threw a number
of switches.
As the furnace blazed
away, the naked inventor stood in front of it, and explained
that the key to the synthesis was the secret formula
of the ingredients in the crucible, which lie could
not disclose. Then, after a quarter of an hour, he turned
the switches off. Reaching into the furnace with a pair
of tongs, he removed the white-hot crucible and placed
it on a table in front of the men.
After it had cooled,
he stirred the concoction with a pair of tweezers, and
began plucking out from it well-formed though relatively
small diamonds. In all, he produced some twenty gem
diamonds, which he passed around for the group's inspection.
Peering at them, one
after another, through his jeweler's loupe, Francis
Oats found that they curiously resembled in color and
shape the diamonds that were extracted from De Beers
Jagersfontein mine in South Africa. Highly skeptical
of the demonstration, Oats then demanded that Lemoine
repeat the procedure.
Without any objections,
Lemoine mixed another batch of ingredients in the crucible,
and again cooked it for fifteen minutes in the furnace.
This time he extracted from the smoldering brew thirty
gem diamonds.
After examining this
second batch of diamonds with their loupes, Sir Julius
conferred with Oats in private. Oats suspected that
the whole experiment was nothing more than a hoax. Sir
Julius understood Oats' doubts, but believed that there
was still some chance that this French inventor had
stumbled on the secret formula for diamonds. He therefore
offered to advance Lemoine money to develop his invention
on the condition that its existence remain secret.
Over the next three
years, Sir Julius gave Lemoine 64,000 pounds sterling,
an enormous sum of money. In return, Sir Julius received
an option to buy the secret formula which had been deposited
by Lemoine under seal in a London bank.
In 1908, however, a
Persian jeweler admitted that he had sold Lemoine a
supply of small, uncut diamonds from the Jagersfontein
mine that exactly matched the description of the diamonds
that had supposedly been manufactured in the furnace.
Lemoine was then indicted and brought to trial for defrauding
Sir Julius of 64,000 pounds sterling. Despite his continued
protestation that his invention worked, Lemoine was
unable to duplicate his experiment for the court, and
when his secret formula was unsealed by court order
it was no more than a mixture powdered with carbon and
sugar. Before the court could pass judgment on him,
Lemoine fled the country.
In 1948, Soviet scientists
began to experiment with the concept of growing diamond
crystals from "seeds," just as rock candy crystals are
grown from a single molecule of sugar. To accomplish
this end, a minute fragment of diamond was bombarded
by carbon iodine gas, and gradually, carbon molecules
attached themselves to the structure of the diamond
"seed," thereby enlarging the crystal. These experiments
were conducted at the time under a veil of complete
secrecy.
Meanwhile, in Sweden,
engineers at ASEA, an engineering company, focused their
efforts on constructing a hydraulic press which could
produce the enormous pressures necessary for the synthesis
of diamonds. They used six cone-shaped pistons which,
when they came together, formed a perfect sphere. Although
the attempts to convert carbon in the form of graphite
into diamonds in this press failed, the engineers succeeded,
in 1953, in converting a mixture of iron and carbon
into some forty diamond crystals. ASEA executives decided,
however, to keep the results secret while they developed
a more commercial process for directly converting graphite
to diamonds.
The real engineering
triumph came in the United States, however. In Schenectady,
New York, a team of research scientists at the General
Electric Company devised a hydraulic press which was
far more powerful than the one in Sweden. It had the
ability to generate pressures of more than a million
pounds per square inch, and its tungsten carbide walls
could contain temperatures of over 5000 degrees Fahrenheit.
Equations worked out at Oxford by Sir Francis Simon
and R. Berman had predicted that at these pressures
and temperatures graphite would be directly converted
into diamond crystals.
Then in 1954, the General
Electric scientists began feeding graphite into the
press. After enormous amounts of pressure were applied,
they recovered minute diamonds-one millimeter in length.
Under X-ray examination, it became clear that the amorphous
carbon molecules in graphite, which resembled a hairnet,
had been rearranged under the heat and pressure into
a tetrahedron diamond structure. These were not false
diamonds; they were the same as mined diamonds. The
next problem for the General Electric scientists and
engineers was to invent a commercial process through
which these diamonds could be manufactured more cheaply
than equivalent diamonds extracted from a mine. They
began experimenting with different catalysts-nickel,
iron, tantalum-which when placed in the press with the
graphite would allow the reaction to take place faster
and at less cost in terms of energy expended. By the
end of the year, the engineers had designed a system
of belts and presses that would continuously turn out
diamonds at costs competitive with those of producing
natural diamonds.
Up to this point, the
General Electric experiments had been a closely guarded
secret, but in February of 1955 General Electric decided
to issue a press release outlining its achievements
in diamond synthesis. Suddenly, the world knew that
diamonds could be easily manufactured.
The shares of De Beers
stock plummeted after the news of the General Electric
invention. To be sure, General Electric's diamonds were
too small and discolored by the catalyst to be used
as gems, but as General Electric spokesmen had pointed
out, they were perfectly suitable for industrial purposes
such as grinding and shaping tools. Since these "Industrial"
diamonds had accounted for one-quarter of its total
profit, De Beers faced potentially disastrous competition
from this American industrial giant. Even though General
Electric had not yet claimed the capacity to synthesize
larger and better quality diamonds, many investors feared
they soon would.
De Beers outwardly
attempted to maintain a facade of world patents before
the South Africans did. In mid-September, the Administration
acceded to this urgent request, and General Electric
took out the patents on its technology for synthesizing
diamonds. The science of diamond-making was no longer
secret.
De Beers, even though
it was five years behind General Electric in perfecting
the commercial manufacturing process for diamonds, was
not yet defeated. It still possessed a worldwide marketing
network for industrial diamonds and vast financial resources.
After first attempting to litigate the patent rights,
De Beers finally agreed to pay General Electric some
$8 million plus royalties for the right to manufacture
diamonds under the process invented by General Electric.
It then entered into a series of cross-licensing agreements
with General Electric which made it difficult, if not
impossible, for other companies to compete in synthetic
diamonds. To further enhance its position, Harry Oppenheimer
arranged to buy the Swedish factory from ASEA, as well
as all its patents and technology. By 1961, in addition
to the Swedish presses, De Beers had seventy-five hydraulic
presses in operation in South Africa squeezing out diamonds,
and then it opened another factory in Shannon, Ireland.
De Beers called its synthetic diamond division Ultra
High Pressure Units, Inc.
While De Beers and
General Electric were dividing up the markets in the
Western world, the Soviet Union created its own massive
synthetic diamond industry in Kiev. The Soviets used
the basic General Electric process, but they built the
hydraulic presses on a much larger scale. As a result,
the Soviets had a capacity to manufacture over 10 million
carats of diamonds a year.
By the mid-1960s, the
diamonds pouring out of synthetic presses in South Africa,
the United States and the Soviet Union were measured
not in carats or ounces but in tons. Initially, man-made
diamonds were not larger than bits of sand and were
used almost exclusively as abrasive grit for grinding
wheels and diamond saws. Gradually, however, techniques
were developed for bonding the minute crystals of diamonds
together into larger units that were used for a large
range of industrial purposes. Indeed, except for drilling
bits and wire-drawing dies, which still required natural
diamonds, synthetic diamonds were adapted for most industrial
purposes.
Again the diamond invention
was threatened. In October of 1966, Harry Oppenheimer
flew to New York where he met with William Courdier,
the General Electric executive in charge of synthetic
diamond production, and other senior General Electric
executives. Because of American antitrust laws, however,
General Electric refused to go along with any strategy
for coordination or controlling of synthetic diamonds.
De Beers had to find new means of protecting its invention.
By 1970, more than half
the diamonds produced in the world were man-made. Unlike
prices for gem diamonds, which rose steadily during
the postwar period, the prices of industrial diamonds
dropped sharply. If it were not for the fact that the
world's consumption of industrial diamonds had actually
quadrupled between 1955 and 1970, and a host of new
uses had been found for diamond abrasives, natural diamonds
would no doubt have been wholly replaced by synthetic
ones. Even with this vast expansion of the market for
industrial diamonds, the price fell to less than 50
cents a carat for diamond abrasives.
Furthermore, in the
midst of this heated competition, Dr. Bernard Senior,
one of the four scientists who achieved the diamond
synthesis for De Beers, resigned from De Beers laboratory
with the intention of going into the diamond-making
business himself. Since his employment agreement prevented
him from competing with De Beers in South Africa, Dr.
Senior moved to the island of Mauritius and established
there the Southern Cross Diamond Company for the purpose
of manufacturing diamonds. In response to this new threat,
De Beers quickly moved to impound Dr. Senior's bank
accounts in South Africa, and placed great, and in some
cases irresistible, pressure on companies in South Africa
not to ship Dr. Senior the supplies he needed for his
factory. In addition, it filed a large number of legal
actions designed to harass Senior's company. Eventually,
because of such actions, the Southern Cross Company
ceased to be a serious threat to De Beers.
There was, however,
further disturbing news from America. General Electric
announced in May 1970 that its scientists had accomplished
De Beer's worst nightmare. They had synthesized gem-quality
diamonds that weighed over one carat. Even the scientists
conducting the experiment were surprised by the incredible
results. The synthesis required, it was explained, two
distinct phases. First, graphite was converted in an
ordinary hydraulic press to diamond crystals no larger
than a grain of sand and weighing only 1500th of a carat.
Then, in the second stage of the process, these crystals
were put at either end of a metal tube which also contained
a carbonaceous solution. The tube was left in a specially
constructed hydraulic press that could maintain enormous
heat and pressure for as long as a week. Under these
conditions, the carbonaceous solution became unstable
and released carbon atoms, which would eventually move
to the cooler ends of the tube and attach themselves
around the diamond "seed." Gradually, the crystals would
begin to grow in size. After 167 hours, when the press
was opened, there were blue-white diamonds of gem quality
that weighed between .60 and 1.1 carats. Presumably,
if the press had been kept closed longer, the crystals
would have grown even larger. The General Electric vice-president
for research and development summed up the achievement
as a "goal that has tantalized and frustrated scientists
for nearly two centuries. . . . This comes very close
to fulfilling the dreams of alchemists."
Under closer scrutiny,
it was found that the General Electric diamonds were
not of perfect quality, but they were equal, if not
superior, to most commercial-grade gems. After they
were cut and polished, these man-made diamonds could
not be differentiated from natural diamonds by the naked
eye. In fact, even an expert, using a jeweler's loupe,
could not discern any difference. (The only telltale
difference between the General Electric diamonds and
natural ones was that the former tended to phosphoresce
under an ultraviolet lamp, whereas the latter tended
not to.)
De Beers reacted to
the synthesis of gem diamonds in the same calm tone
in which it had reacted fifteen years earlier to the
synthesis of industrial diamonds. It claimed that it
had known for "several years" that gem-sized diamonds
could be created under laboratory conditions, but that
since the cost of production would be "many times greater
than finding and obtaining the natural product," it
was convinced that such a synthesis would prove to be
"economically impractical." Publicly, De Beers insisted
that it would not alter its "plans for the future."
General Electric also
attempted to reassure American diamond dealers that
General Electric was not about to flood the market with
synthetic gem diamonds. Its spokesman told dealers:
"Keep your diamonds. . . . We are not competing. We
have no reason to harm the diamond industry."
Despite these disclaimers,
General Electric had evaluated the feasibility of manufacturing
gem diamonds. It eventually decided against it for two
reasons. First, there was a problem of what economists
call "opportunity costs." Manufacturing gem diamonds
required tying up the press for nearly a week. In that
same period, the presses could produce batches of powdered
diamonds for industrial purposes every three minutes.
Even though diamond powder could be sold for roughly
only one percent what gem diamonds could be sold for,
it would still be far more profitable to use the press
for powder rather than gems.
To be sure, General
Electric recognized that it would be possible to develop
catalysts that would accelerate the time needed to produce
gems and to engineer more efficient presses that would
allow more diamonds to be grown in the same cycle. However,
even if it were possible to mass-produce gem diamonds
at costs comparable to those of industrial diamonds,
there would be a more serious problem. If the public
realized that diamonds could be manufactured in unlimited
quantities in a factory, the entire market for diamonds
might suddenly collapse. A senior General Electric executive
who was involved in the decision not to manufacture
gem diamonds explained to me, "We would be destroyed
by the success of our own invention. The more diamonds
that we made, the cheaper they would become. Then the
mystique would be gone, and the price would drop to
next to nothing." General Electric decided not to invest
hundreds of millions of dollars in presses to produce
gem diamonds. Although their chief rivals had decided
not to go ahead with manufacturing, it now became a
war against time for the De Beers cartel. The science
and technology that made it possible to manufacture
real diamonds threatened to create a supply of diamonds
that was beyond the control of De Beers.
The diamond invention,
which had given value to diamonds for more than a half
century, could survive only as long as this new invention,
diamond synthesis, did not become commercially feasible.
De Beers thus set out to retard it through secret agreements
and financial interventions.
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