Natural and Synthetic Diamond Materials

 

Diamond

Natural diamonds are already the material of choice for a large percentage of waterjet applications and they continue to replace conventional materials throughout the industry worldwide. Diamond’s superior atomic structure makes it the hardest known material. Natural diamond’s extreme hardness and thermal properties, when processed correctly, combine to form components that are a true asset for a wide range of applications and industries. The proven price to performance ratio of the diamond orifice consistently benefits each user of this product.

Synthetic

Synthetic diamonds are manufactured for applications that can benefit from the many advantageous properties evident in this supermaterial.  Synthetics have excellent optical, electrical, thermal, and hardness characteristics.  The ability to cut and shape these materials allows industries worldwide to incorporate synthetic diamond components into a multitude of uses that require extreme performance.

Ruby & Sapphire

Second after diamonds on the hardness scale, is corundum. Corundum, otherwise known as ruby or sapphire is an extremely durable material. Rubies and sapphires have unique characteristics that make them resistant to abrasion and wear. Corundum’s hardness and excellent optical characteristics make it a very useful material in a wide range of applications and industries.