Gemstone Elements: Chromium

| 5 min read

Have you ever wondered what makes gemstones the color they are? There are two different ways they gain their color – idiochromatic gems are those which contain a color-inducing element as part of their chemical composition. Peridot and Malachite are examples of this. Most gems, however, are found as colorless gems and impurities in the gem, or crystal lattice deformations cause their various colors. These are called allochromatic, which describes any gem you can think of which is available in more than one color. A short list of elements is responsible for these variations in color. Perhaps the most important is the element chromium.

Raw Chromium on the Periodic Table

Named after the Greek word ‘chroma’, meaning simply ‘color’, chromium can create a whole host of bright colors in various compounds. Chromium has the chemical symbol Cr and sits at 24 on the periodic table (meaning that it has 24 protons in its nucleus). It was first recognized as an element in 1798, when it was isolated by Louis Nicolas Vauquelin, who even noted its presence in Ruby and Emerald. Known for its anti-tarnishing properties, chromium is used in stainless steel and chrome plating. This property was known in the ancient world, where it was sometimes used to tip weaponry. Chromium is a transition metal, which means that its electron shell isn’t completely filled. This means that it forms in many states and can form numerous compounds. It is usually found in nature in compounds, but is very rarely found in pure form in kimberlite pipes alongside Diamonds. Chromium III is found as an interstitial in many gemstones – meaning that it is an impurity in the crystal structure, or as a substitution, where it replaces another atom.

Crystal structure of a gemstone

One of the things that is so fascinating about chromium is that it doesn’t cause just one color in gemstones. It usually causes gems to be green, but it can also cause red, blue, or even color change in certain gems. It makes both Topaz and Ruby red, but how? Let’s use Ruby as an example, which has a chemical formula of Al2O3. The aluminum is in the form Al3+, which happens to be a similar size to Cr3+, which replaces around one in a hundred aluminum atoms, becoming surrounded by six O2- ions. However, because Cr3+ has an incomplete electron shell, the unpaired electrons can get excited and can absorb particular wavelengths of light, giving a gem its color. In the case of Ruby, green and violet wavelengths are absorbed and red light is transmitted, giving the gem a red color.

Rough Ruby and Emerald on the host rock

Interestingly, the chromium in Ruby also causes a very brief fluorescence (the ability to glow when exposed to light) of a few nanoseconds in the red wavelength, which adds to the vividness of the gem’s color and luster. So chromium actually creates the red color in a Ruby in two different ways concurrently – by transmitting and simultaneously fluorescing red light.

Passage of light waves through Ruby and Emerald

More usually, chromium impurities cause a gem to be seen as green. Green gemstones colored by chromium include Emerald, Chrome Diopside, Chrome Tourmaline, Jadeite, Tsavorite Garnet and Demantoid Garnet. So why does the same impurity cause these gems to become green? The answer is in the way chromium interacts with the host molecules. In the case of an Emerald, the bonds between the Beryl and the chromium are slightly weaker than in a Ruby. These weaker bonds produce a huge shift in the bandwidth of light absorbed by the gem. Yellow-red is absorbed by the gem and blue-green is transmitted, producing a green color to the eye.

Rough Kyanite and Chrome Diopside on the host rock

Chromium causes some gems to turn blue, such as some Topaz, Aquaprase™ and (along with iron and titanium impurities) Kyanite. This occurs in the same way, but with even weaker bonds between atoms, the bandwidth of light absorbed shifts again to produce a blue color. Even more astonishingly, chromium causes almost all color change in gemstones. The only gem which can change color which is not colored by chromium is Color Change Fluorite. Color changing varieties of the following gems are all colored by chromium – Alexandrite, Csarite®, Garnet and Sapphire, as well as extremely rare museum pieces of Spinel and Kyanite. In these instances, the chromium causes two transmissions in equal balance – blue/green and red. Because these colors are in balance, they appear different colors in different lighting conditions. Daylight contains more blue light, so more blue light is returned to the eye. In incandescent light, which has more long-wave red light, red is returned to the eye. This means that the same gem can appear blue to green during the day and red under candlelight. All color change gemstones work in this same way.

What causes the color change in Alexandrite

The change in interaction between chromium and its host mineral cause it to create a different color in different gemstones. A concentration of chromium as low as 0.03% can create a spectacular color, or even a color changing gem. Unfortunately, chromium makes up only 100 parts per million of the Earth’s crust and it is not evenly distributed across the planet. Finding places where it has found its way into the crystal lattice of a gemstone which is already rare, sadly makes these spectacularly colored gems extremely difficult to find.

Click to shop Ruby, Emerald, Kyanite and any other gemstone.

Our Most Popular Blog Posts

Our Latest Blog Posts