World's Largest Gold Crystal Found
It's the
size of a golf ball, but a lot more valuable: Scientists at Los Alamos National
Laboratory's Lujan Neutron Scattering Center have verified that a heavy piece
of gold, found years ago in Venezuela, is, in fact, a single crystal of the
valuable element — and it's worth an estimated $1.5 million.
The lump of
gold, which weighs 217.78 grams (about 7.7 ounces), was brought to Los Alamos
to confirm whether it was a single crystal of gold, or a more common multiple-crystal
structure. "The structure or atomic arrangement of gold crystals of this
size has never been studied before, and we have a unique opportunity to do
so," Miami University geologist John Rakovan said in a statement.
To
determine the nugget's internal structure, Rakovan and his colleagues used two
sophisticated machines: a neutron single-crystal diffraction (SCD) instrument,
which determines the atomic arrangement of single crystals; and a
high-pressure/preferred orientation (or HIPPO) instrument, which measures the
crystal structure and the orientation of crystals in a polycrystalline
material. These noninvasive techniques determined that the gold piece was,
indeed, a very large and very rare single crystal of gold.
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