MOHS SCALE OF HARDNESS

Minerals, including gemstones, are rated and ranked according to their hardness. While hardness is generally associated with durability, the ability to resist breakage is better described as toughness. When referring to gemstones, hardness more accurately means the gemstone's ability to resist abrasion.

Regardless of which scale is used, the diamond is considered the hardest substance known to man. The most common measure of a gemstone's degree of hardness is based on the Mohs Scale. Devised by German mineralogist Friedrich Mohs, the Mohs Scale grades minerals on a comparative scale from 1 (very soft) to 10 (very hard).

What the scale means is that a mineral of a given hardness rating will scratch other minerals of the same rating, as well as any minerals of a lower hardness rating. For example, rubies and sapphires, which are composed of the mineral corundum and have a Mohs rating of 9, will scratch each other, as well as topaz (rating 8) and quartz (rating 7). But they will not scratch diamonds, which are rated 10.
 

  • Scale #
  • Gemstone
    • 1
    • Talc
    • 2
    • Gypsum
    • 3
    • Calcite
    • 4
    • Fluorite
    • 5
    • Apatite
    • 6
    • Feldspar, Black Agate
    • 7
    • Quartz (Amethyst)
    • 6.5-7.5
    • Garnet, Black Agate
    • 7.5
    • Beryl (Emerald)
    • 8
    • Topaz
    • 9
    • Corundum (Ruby and Sapphire)
    • 10
    • Diamond

What the scale does not make obvious is that the numeric values assigned to each interval of hardness are not equal. Some gemstones are disproportionately harder than others:
 

  • Gemstone
  • Mohs Rating
  • Grinding Test Results
    • Diamond
    • 10
    • Approximately 90 times harder than corundum
    • Ruby/Sapphire (corundum)
    • 9
    • Approximately 5 times harder than topaz
    • Topaz
    • 8
    • Little difference between topaz and quartz
    • Emerald
    • 7.5
    • -
    • Quartz
    • 7
    • -