Blue Diamond
Last updated: April 2026
Blue color in Type IIb diamonds is caused by trace boron. Natural Type IIb diamonds are extremely rare; most blue diamonds in commerce are color-treated or synthetic. All standard diamond ID properties apply (RI > 2.40, SR, hardness 10, adamantine luster); SW UV phosphorescence is the key field differentiator from other blue stones.
Physical & Optical Properties
Related: Diamond Varieties
Key Differentiators
- Strong blue phosphorescence after SW UV (5–30+ seconds)
- Inert under LW UV (unlike Type Ia)
- No 415nm Cape line on spectroscope
- Boron semiconductor — may read slightly lower on thermal tester
- RI > 2.40 (OTL), no facet doubling
Natural vs. Synthetic
Synthetic blue diamond is commercially available (HPHT (boron-doped), CVD (boron-doped)). Distinguishing natural from synthetic typically requires microscopic examination of internal features.
- SW UV Phosphorescence Pattern: Strong blue phosphorescence lasting 5–30+ seconds. Natural IIb typically shows longer sustained glow. Synthetic: Synthetic IIb (HPHT/CVD boron-doped) may also phosphoresce with similar color. Duration, intensity, and growth pattern differ — lab confirmation (DiamondView, FTIR) required for high-value stones.
GemID Pro includes a two-phase natural vs. synthetic testing protocol for Blue Diamond.
Start Free TrialCommon Simulants
- Blue sapphire: Doubly refractive uniaxial negative; RI 1.762–1.778; SG 4.00; strong trichroism.
- Aquamarine: Doubly refractive uniaxial negative; RI 1.577–1.583; SG only 2.72; much softer (7.5–8 Mohs).
- Blue spinel: Isotropic SR; RI ~1.718; no trichroism; SG ~3.60.
- Tanzanite: Biaxial positive DR; very strong trichroism (blue-violet-purple); lower SG (3.35); softer (6.5 Mohs).
- Iolite: Biaxial negative DR; pronounced trichroism (blue-gray-pale yellow); low SG (2.58–2.66); RI 1.542–1.551.
Commonly Confused With
Commonly confused with: Sapphire, Aquamarine, Spinel, Tanzanite, Iolite.
Treatments
- HPHT Color Treatment
- Irradiation (blue color)
Price Context
Price context is approximate. GemID is not an appraisal tool. Results are indicators, not certified valuations.
Measurement Guides
Identifying a blue diamond? GemID walks through these tests in order — RI, SG, fluorescence, and more.
Try GemID Free →