Thank you for your kind replies.
I am not a chemist, (Student of Gemology) & unfortunately I don't have access to any significant device.
OK. So you're looking from some sort of bench top, wet chemistry assay for carbon. Tricky. Try burning it.
I am suspicious about a piece of rock to be diamond of an industrial quality. The specific gravity & the general characteristics such as its inclusions & hardness do match, nanodiamond crystals within the crystal is totally observable under 40x magnification.
The terms "nanodiamod" and "observable under 40 X" aren't making sense to me. You have a rock, from a river bed, that is part diamond, and part not, which matches some physical tests, but not some others, but is a single crystal throughout? I'm not following.
it weighs about 1 gram & is from a natural source (Alluvial).
But some of the optical properties show some variations! The crystal must be of a cubic type, but it doesn't really behave that way...
I am willing to be sure if this crystal really is diamond or not...
Is there any way to determine the chemical formula of this crystal using simple experiments just to get some idea of what it could be?
Thanks in advance.
Try instead to prove that it's topaz. If you fail, then you can believe it is diamond. I don't know of a simple chemical test for topaz either, 'tho.