- The first attempts to create diamonds in the lab began in 1797, but the earliest successes came in 1879 and 1893. The first commercial success was achieved in 1954, using a belt press to produce the necessary high pressure and temperature.
- Lab-created diamonds used as gemstones are manufactured using the HPHT or the CVP methods. HPHT uses various presses to supply requisite pressure and temperature; CVP uses a hydrocarbon chemical gas mixture.
- Real diamonds are assessed according to cut, color, clarity and carat weight. Lab-created diamonds can be chemically, physically and optically identical but might be identified using spectroscopy with different wavelengths.
- Lab-created diamonds are available in yellow and blue. Unlike real diamonds, they are rarely colorless. Other colors such as pink or green are achieved through irradiation.
- Lab-created diamonds are significantly cheaper than real ones. A 3-carat diamond will retail for approximately $40,000 as of August 2009, while an identical lab created stone will cost only $600.













