Can a diamond be manufactured from cremation remains?

I was told about this company (Life Gem) recently and I’m curious if the process is possible.

Uh, well, if the company claims to do it, then I guess it is possible, no? Are you suggesting that you think LifeGem is lying? Synthetic diamonds are certain feasible, so I suppose they just start with the carbon from the person’s remains, rather than starting from any old carbon lying around.

I suspect scam? Diamond are pure carbon. Your cemation remains are mainly inorganic ash with almost no carbon

Coincidentally, I just saw this:
Beethoven Diamond

I would suspect ash actually is mostly carbon and crushed apatite.

http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,55231,00.html

And the wikipedia article:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LifeGem

Seems legit.

How would you know whether the diamond they give you was indeed made from the remains they received? You wouldn’t, unless you watched them do it.

Snopes: diamonds are forever?

Snopes’ take… it might be possible, but there’s no way to guarantee that lifeGem is actually making diamonds out of the specified cremains, rather than someone else’s, or out of the usual raw materials for artificial diamonds

Interesting! Tyvm

Can a diamond be manufactured from cremation remains? - NO.

Cremation temperatures burns up most if not all of the carbon.

Not exactly the usual cremation process to make you into a diamond

OTOH there is a new process involving the deposition of carbon ions from organic vapors and at very high temperatures which is alleged to produce genuine diamonds. Perfect in every way. DeBeers is jealuous.

Once again you got it wrong spingears. Cremation temperature in no way burns up the carbon. So the answer is YES, just as everyone before your post posited.

spingears, Did you even condsier reading your very own fucking cite???

.

Not only does the site you linked to mention more than TWICE, that cremains are composed of carbon ash, but it even talks about LifeGem and their technique. What the hell are you doing? Playing with Google and reading only the first three lines of the first link they give you?
Do us all a favor and stop trying to answer questions which you know absolutely nothing about.

Man, calm down.

For that matter, how do you know the ashes they give you are indeed, the ashes of your loved one? The whole setup is a matter of faith, before you ever actually get to the cremain bling.

So are many other aspects of “cremation services” are you even sure that the ashes in the jar are your departed loved one?

I would like some support for this claim. Much of the carbon combines with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide that is vented from the crematorium with other gases produced by burning. What carbon molecule would remain in the ashes? The term “carbon ash” sounds like an oxymoron to me.

I have done some research, and come up withthis estimate of the chemical composition of human cremains:

No carbon listed at all.

That was a helpful link, and I admit I was hasty, but not completely wrong.

From your link

Thanks sam, I should have read further.