Physical & Optical Properties

RI Range1.762–1.770
SG Range3.98–4.01
SG Typical4.00
Hardness (Mohs)9
Crystal SystemTrigonal
Optic CharacterDR Uniaxial (−)
Birefringence0.008
Dispersion0.018
Fluorescence LWStrong red
Fluorescence SWInert
Chelsea FilterVariable
PleochroismStrong Dichroic
ColorsRed Pink
SpeciesCorundum
Red Pink

Key Differentiators

Natural vs. Synthetic

Synthetic pink sapphire is commercially available (Flame fusion (Verneuil), Flux (Chatham, Kashan), Hydrothermal, and others). Distinguishing natural from synthetic typically requires microscopic examination of internal features.

GemID Pro includes a two-phase natural vs. synthetic testing protocol for Pink Sapphire.

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Common Simulants

Treatments

Price Context

Natural — low ($/ct)$200
Natural — high ($/ct)$8,000
NotePer carat; unheated fine Myanmar pink $2000–8000/ct; heated commercial $200–1500/ct; large fine unheated specimens with GIA/Gübelin reports can exceed $10,000/ct
Synthetic — low ($/ct)$5
Synthetic — high ($/ct)$30

Price context is approximate. GemID is not an appraisal tool. Results are indicators, not certified valuations.

About Pink Sapphire

Pink sapphire is chromium-colored corundum with insufficient saturation to qualify as ruby — the ruby/pink sapphire boundary is defined by dominant hue. Myanmar (Mogok) material often shows strong red LW fluorescence. Sri Lankan pink sapphires are pastel and highly valued. Easily confused with rubellite tourmaline, morganite, spinel, kunzite, and pink topaz — all separated by RI, SG, and optic character. Beryllium diffusion has created significant amounts of orange-pink treated material in trade.

Identifying a pink sapphire? GemID walks through these tests in order — RI, SG, fluorescence, and more.

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