Carat (purity)

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For other uses of the word "carat", see Carat.

The carat (abbreviation ct or Kt) is a measure of the purity of gold alloys. In the United States and Canada, the spelling karat is used, while the spelling carat is used to refer to the measure of mass for gemstones (see Carat (mass)).

Contents

[edit] Measure

As a measure of purity, one carat is \tfrac{1}{24} purity by mass:

X = 24\,\frac{M_g}{M_m}

where

X is the carat rating of the material,
Mg is the mass of pure gold or platinum in the material, and
Mm is the total mass of the material.

Therefore 24-carat gold is fine (99.9% Au w/w), 18-carat gold is 75% gold, 12-carat gold is 50% gold, and so forth.

Historically, in England the carat was divisible into four grains, and the grain was divisible into four quarts. For example, a gold alloy of \tfrac{381}{384} fineness (that is, 99.2% purity) could have been described as being 23-carat, 3-grain, 1-quart gold.

The carat system is increasingly being complemented or superseded by the millesimal fineness system in which the purity of precious metals is denoted by parts per thousand of pure metal in the alloy.

The most common carats used for gold in bullion, jewellery making and by goldsmiths are:

  • 24 carat (millesimal fineness 999)
  • 22 carat (millesimal fineness 916)
  • 20 carat (millesimal fineness 833)
  • 18 carat (millesimal fineness 750)
  • 15 carat (millesimal fineness 625)
  • 14 carat (millesimal fineness 585)
  • 10 carat (millesimal fineness 417)
  • 9 carat (millesimal fineness 375)

[edit] Derivation

The word carat is derived from the Greek kerátiōn (κεράτιων), “fruit of the carob”, via Arabic qīrāṭ (قيراط) and Italian. Carob seeds were used as weights on precision scales because of their reputation for having a uniform weight. However, a 2006 study[1] by Lindsay Turnbull and others found this to not be the case – carob seeds have as much variation in their weights as other seeds.[2] In the distant past, different countries each had their own carat, roughly equivalent to a carob seed. In the mid-16th century, the carat was adopted as a measure of gold purity, roughly equivalent to the Roman siliqua (\tfrac{1}{24} of a golden solidus of Constantine I). As a measure of diamond weight, from 1575, the Greek measure was the equivalent of the Roman siliqua, which was \tfrac{1}{24} of a golden solidus of Constantine; but was likely never used to measure the weight for gold.[3]

[edit] Terminology

22/22K - a quality mark indicating the purity of gold most popularly used in india. This purity was adapted and practiced by the big jewellers and was latter passed to jewel smiths The first 22 signifies the "Skin purity" of gold jewellery and the second 22 signifies that after melting purity of the gold jewellery will be 22K (22 Karat) or 91.67% of pure gold. This symbol or stamp is very popular on the gold jewellery business in Asian countries like India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Yemen, and Gulf Countries.

This practice was pioneered and introduced in the early mid-1980s by Nemichand Bamalwa & Sons of Kolkata, India, sparking a revolution in India as it forced jewellers to indicate correctly the after-melting purity, and heightened consumer awareness made it a most sought-after stamp or quality mark.

Chuk Kam (玉金) – In Cantonese (Chinese) this term means pure gold, literally "Jade Gold". It is defined as 99.0% gold minimum with a 1.0% negative tolerance allowed.[4][5] The quality of gold is guaranteed with a "Certificate of Gold" upon purchases in Hong Kong and Macau.

[edit] International caratages of gold jewellery

Region[4] Typical Caratage (fineness)
Arabic countries, Oriental East (China, Hong Kong, Taiwan) 24 carat "Chuk Kam" (99.0% min)
Arabic countries, India,Sri Lanka & subcontinent 22 carat (91.6%)
Arabic countries in Gulf region 21 carat (87.5%), 18 carat (75.0%) in most Egypt
Europe - Southern / Mediterranean 18 carat (75.0%)
Europe - Northern / USA etc 8-18 carat (33.3 - 75.0%)
Russia / former USSR 9 (37.5%) and 14 carat / old 583 and new 585 проба (58.5%)

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Turnbull et al. (2006)
  2. ^ New Scientist (2006) — review of Turnbull et al. (2006)
  3. ^ Harper, (2001)
  4. ^ a b World Gold Council (2003)
  5. ^ Fallon, (2006)

[edit] References