Chrysoberyl

Crystal system · Orthorhombic

Chrysoberyl is an oxide mineral valued for its hardness and gem potential, with known Chinese sources.

Chrysoberyl specimen
Photo: Matteo Chinellato · CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons

About Chrysoberylextended article

Crystal Structure
Orthorhombic BeAl₂O₄ — closely related to olivine structure.
Elemental Composition (by mass)
ElementMass %Visual
O Oxygen50.40%
Al Aluminum42.50%
Be Beryllium7.10%
Computed from simplified end-member formula. Solid-solution series, water content, and trace substitutions cause real-world variation.
IMA Abbreviation (Whitney-Evans 2010)
Cbr
→ Chrysoberyl
BeAl₂O₄
Standard symbol from American Mineralogist (Whitney & Evans, 2010). Used in thin-section labeling, phase diagrams, and IMA-style species records.
Pronunciation
/ˌkrɪsəˈbɛrəl/
kris-uh-BEH-ril
Greek "gold beryl"
Lapidary & Faceting Recommendations
Recommended cut:
oval / round brilliant
Also seen:
cushion, pear, cabochon (cat's eye)
Typical yield:
35% of rough
Cat's-eye variety cabbed; clean rough faceted oval or round.
Diaphaneity (Transparency)
transparent
Including alexandrite and cat's eye.
Type Locality
Vyborg / Finland
Described 1789 by Werner
Specific Gravity
3.70–3.78
g/cm³
medium
Heavier than beryl despite similar composition.
For comparison: water = 1.00, glass ≈ 2.5, quartz = 2.65, corundum ≈ 4.00, galena ≈ 7.50, gold ≈ 19.3.
Characteristic Inclusions
Silk (parallel fibers)solid★ diagnostic
Causes cat's eye (chatoyancy) when oriented and cut as cabochon.
Diagnostic inclusions are characteristic enough to help identify origin or species under 10× loupe.
Twinning Laws
Trilling (cyclic)contact
Three crystals related by 120° — produces pseudo-hexagonal "wheels".
Pleochroism (trichroic)
Axis a
red
Axis b
orange
Axis c
yellow-green
Strength: strong
Alexandrite variety: the color-change phenomenon is reinforced by trichroism.
PolymorphsShares the formula BeAl2O4 with: Alexandrite — same chemistry, different crystal structure.
Mohs 8.5
Vickers (~) 1650 HV
Knoop (~) 1340 HK
Geological setting
PegmatiteMetamorphic
Element composition by mass

Formula: BeAl₂O₄ · molar mass: 126.97 g/mol

O 50.4%
Al 42.5%
Be 7.1%

Computed from atomic weights (IUPAC 2021). Site-occupancy groups (Fe,Mn) split equally.

Mohs Hardness 8.5

Chrysoberyl sits at 8.5 on the Mohs scale — very hard; only diamond or corundum scratches it.

Colors:
Streak
White
Crystal system
Orthorhombic
Pronunciation/ˈkrɪsəˌbɛrɪl/
Oxides & HydroxidesOxides
TL;DR · 1 min read
Chrysoberyl (BeAl₂O₄) is the third-hardest natural mineral (Mohs 8. 5) after diamond and corundum.

Chrysoberyl (BeAl₂O₄) is the third-hardest natural mineral (Mohs 8.5) after diamond and corundum. Its three gem varieties are iconic: alexandrite (color-change green-to-red, Cr-bearing), cymophane (chatoyant cat’s-eye), and yellow-green chrysoberyl. Russia, Sri Lanka, and Brazil supply gem material; cyclic twinning produces the distinctive “trilling” hexagonal pseudosymmetry.

More minerals to explore

Varieties of Chrysoberyl

Chrysoberyl is a parent species — the following named varieties differ in color or chemistry but share the same fundamental mineralogy.

  • Alexandrite (u53d8u77f3)
    color-change green-red
    Chromium-bearing chrysoberyl with strong color change: green in daylight, red under incandescent.
  • Cymophane (Cat's Eye) (u91d1u7effu732bu773c)
    cat's eye chatoyancy
    Cat's-eye chrysoberyl variety with strong chatoyant band.

About Chrysoberyl

Chrysoberyl belongs to the oxide class in the chrysoberyl group and has the chemical formula BeAl2O4. It crystallizes in the orthorhombic system and is one of the most visually varied minerals in the collector market. Its combination of structural character and global distribution make it a recognized species in both systematic and aesthetic collections.

Identification & care

Chrysoberyl typically forms tabular, pseudo-hexagonal (twinned); striated; cyclic twins common. Its color range is broad, including pale yellow-green, yellow, golden-yellow, green, brownish, and alexandrite changes color. The luster is vitreous, the streak is white, and specimens range from transparent to translucent. The cleavage is distinct {110}. The fracture is conchoidal to uneven, which aids identification.

Collector context

How it forms

Chrysoberyl forms in granitic pegmatites, mica schists, hydrothermal veins; associated with beryllium-rich environments. It is commonly found in association with beryl, tourmaline, apatite, phlogopite, feldspar.

Classic Chinese localities

Chrysoberyl is widely represented across Chinese provinces, including Hunan, Yunnan, Inner Mongolia, Fujian.

Why collectors care

Collectors pursue natural crystals of Chrysoberyl because they preserve what cutting removes — the crystal form, color zoning, and growth history of a species also valued as a cut gem. A terminated chrysoberyl crystal with good clarity connects the collector directly to the geology that produced the stone.

What affects value

Value in Chrysoberyl is assessed, in typical order of weight, against: (1) locality provenance; (2) crystal size; (3) transparency and internal clarity; (4) color intensity and saturation; (5) crystal form and termination sharpness; (6) matrix and associated-species aesthetics; (7) gem-cutting potential. Verified locality documentation and cutting potential further elevate collector demand.

Naming history

The name Chrysoberyl has a specific etymological and historical context — see Mindat's reference entry for provenance details. We have retained naming data at the record level; published prose is paraphrased from factual fields rather than copied from source.

Frequently asked questions

What is Chrysoberyl?

Chrysoberyl is an oxide mineral valued for its hardness and gem potential, with known Chinese sources.

What is the chemical formula of Chrysoberyl?

The chemical formula of Chrysoberyl is BeAl2O4.

What crystal system does Chrysoberyl belong to?

Chrysoberyl crystallises in the Orthorhombic crystal system.

References & databases

Mindat.org is the world’s largest open mineralogy database. Our descriptions are written independently and fact-checked.