The mineral or gemstone chrysoberyl is an aluminate of beryllium with the formula BeAl2O4.The name chrysoberyl is derived from the Greek words χρυσός chrysos and βήρυλλος beryllos, meaning "a gold-white spar". Despite the similarity of their names, chrysoberyl and beryl are two completely different gemstones, although they both contain beryllium. Chrysoberyl is the third-hardest frequently encountered natural gemstone and lies at 8.5 on the hardness scale, between corundum gemstone and topaz .
An interesting feature of its crystals are the cyclic twins
called trillings. These twinned crystals have a hexagonal appearance, but are
the result of a triplet of twins with each "twin" oriented at 120° to
its neighbors and taking up 120° of the cyclic trilling. If only two of the
three possible twin orientations are present, a "V"-shaped twin
results.
Ordinary chrysoberyl is yellowish-green and transparent to
translucent. When the mineral exhibits good pale green to yellow color and is
transparent, then it is used as a gemstone. The three main varieties of
chrysoberyl are: ordinary yellow-to-green chrysoberyl, cat's eye or cymophane,
and alexandrite.
Yellow-green chrysoberyl was referred to as
"chrysolite" during the Victorian and Edwardian eras, which caused
confusion since that name has also been used for the mineral olivine
("peridot" as a gemstone); that name is no longer used in the gemological
nomenclature.
Alexandrite, a strongly pleochroic (trichroic) gem, will
exhibit emerald green, red and orange-yellow colors depending on viewing
direction in partially polarised light. However, its most distinctive property
is that it also changes color in artificial (tungsten/halogen) light compared
to daylight.
The color change from red to green is due to strong
absorption of light in a narrow yellow portion of the spectrum, while allowing
large bands of blue-greener and red wavelengths to be transmitted. Which of these
prevails to give the perceived hue depends on the spectral balance of the
illumination.
Fine-quality alexandrite has a green to bluish-green color
in daylight (relatively blue illumination of high color temperature), changing
to a red to purplish-red color in incandescent light (relatively yellow
illumination).However, fine-color material is extremely rare. Less-desirable
stones may have daylight colors of yellowish-green and incandescent colors of
brownish red.
Cymophane is popularly known as "cat eye gemstone".
This variety exhibits pleasing chatoyancy or opalescence that reminds one of an
eye of a cat. When cut to produce a cabochon, the mineral forms a light-green
specimen with a silky band of light extending across the surface of the stone.