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For other uses, see Boron (disambiguation).
beryllium ← boron → carbon
-
↑
B
↓
Al
5B
Periodic table
Appearance
black/brown
General properties
Name, symbol, number
boron, B, 5
Pronunciation
/ˈbɔrɒn/
Element category
metalloid
Group, period, block
13, 2, p
Standard atomic weight
10.811(7) g·mol−1
Electron configuration
[He] 2s2 2p1
Electrons per shell
2, 3 (Image)
Physical properties
Phase
solid
Liquid density at m.p.
2.08 g·cm−3
Melting point
2349 K, 2076 °C, 3769 °F
Boiling point
4200 K, 3927 °C, 7101 °F
Heat of fusion
50.2 kJ·mol−1
Heat of vaporization
480 kJ·mol−1
Specific heat capacity
(25 °C) 11.087 J·mol−1·K−1
Vapor pressure
P/Pa
1
10
100
1 k
10 k
100 k
at T/K
2348
2562
2822
3141
3545
4072
Atomic properties
Oxidation states
4,1 3, 2, 12
(mildly acidic oxide)
Electronegativity
2.04 (Pauling scale)
Ionization energies
(more)
1st: 800.6 kJ·mol−1
2nd: 2427.1 kJ·mol−1
3rd: 3659.7 kJ·mol−1
Atomic radius
90 pm
Covalent radius
84±3 pm
Van der Waals radius
192 pm
Miscellanea
Magnetic ordering
diamagnetic3
Electrical resistivity
(20 °C) ~106 Ω·m
Thermal conductivity
(300 K) 27.4 W·m−1·K−1
Thermal expansion
(25 °C) (ß form) 5–7 4 µm·m−1·K−1
Speed of sound (thin rod)
(20 °C) 16,200 m/s
Mohs hardness
~9.5
CAS registry number
7440-42-8
Most stable isotopes
Main article: Isotopes of boron
iso
NA
half-life
DM
DE (MeV)
DP
10B
19.9(7)%*
10B is stable with 5 neutrons5
11B
80.1(7)%*
11B is stable with 6 neutrons5
*Boron-10 content may be as low as 19.1% and as
high as 20.3% in natural samples. Boron-11 is
the remainder in such cases.6
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Boron is the chemical element with atomic number 5 and the chemical symbol B. Boron is a trivalent metalloid element which occurs abundantly in the evaporite ores borax and ulexite. Several allotropes of boron exist: amorphous boron is a brown powder; whereas crystalline boron is black, extremely hard (about 9.5 on Mohs' scale), and a poor conductor at room temperature. Elemental boron is used as a dopant in the semiconductor industry, while boron compounds play important roles as light structural materials, insecticides and preservatives, and reagents for chemical synthesis. Boron is an essential plant nutrient. Whereas lack of boron results in boron deficiency disorder, high soil concentrations of boron may also be toxic to plants. As an ultratrace element, boron is necessary for the optimal health of rats and presumably other mammals, though its physiological role in animals is not yet fully understood. Contents 1 Characteristics 1.1 Allotropes 1.2 Chemistry of the element 1.2.1 Chemical compounds 1.3 Isotopes 1.3.1 Enriched boron (boron-10) 1.3.2 Depleted boron (boron-11) 1.3.3 NMR spectroscopy 1.4 Occurrence 2 History and etymology 3 Production 3.1 Isotope enrichment 3.2 Market trend 4 Applications 4.1 Insulation 4.2 Detergents formulations and bleaching agents 4.3 Glass and ceramics 4.4 Shielding in nuclear reactors 4.5 Semiconductor industry 4.6 Engineering materials 4.7 High-hardness compounds 4.7.1 Niche uses 4.7.2 Research areas 5 Biological role 5.1 Analytical quantification 5.2 Health issues 6 See also 7 References 8 External links // Characteristics Allotropes boron chunks Main article: Allotropes of boronBoron is similar to carbon in its capability to form stable covalently bonded molecular networks. Even nominally disordered (amorphous) boron contains regular boron icosahedra which are, however, bonded randomly to each other without long-range order.78 Crystalline boron is a very hard, black material with a high melting point of above 2000 °C. It exists in four major polymorphs: α, β, γ and T. Whereas α, β and T phases are based on B12 icosahedra, the γ-phase can be described as a rocksalt-type arrangement of the icosahedra and B2 atomic pairs.9 It can be produced by compressing other boron phases to 12-20 GPa and heating to 1500-1800 °C; it remains stable after releasing the temperature and pressure. The T phase is produced at similar pressures, but higher temperatures of 1800-2200 °C. As to the α and β phases, they might both coexist at ambient conditions with the β phase being more stable.910 Compressing boron above 160 GPa produces a boron phase with an as yet unknown structure, and this phase is a superconductor at temperatures 6-12 K.11 Boron phase α β γ T Symmetry Rhombohedral Rhombohedral Orthorhombic Tetragonal Atoms/unit cell9 12 ~105 28 Density (g/cm3)12131415 2.46 2.35 2.52 2.36 Vickers hardness (GPa)1617 42 45 50-58 Bulk modulus (GPa)1718 185 224 227 Bandgap (eV)1719 2 1.6 2.1 Chemistry of the element See also: Category:Boron compoundsChemically, boron is closer to silicon than to aluminium. Crystalline boron is chemically inert and resistant to attack by boiling hydrofluoric or hydrochloric acid. When finely divided, it is attacked slowly by hot concentrated hydrogen peroxide, hot concentrated nitric acid, hot sulfuric acid or hot mixture of sulfuric and chromic acids.2021 Oxidation of boron depends upon the crystallinity, particle size, purity and temperature. Boron does not react with air at room temperature, but at higher temperatures it burns to form boron trioxide: 4 B + 3 O2 → 2 B2O3Boron reacts with sulfur to similarly to give boron sulfide, B2S3. Boron undergoes halogenation to give trihalides, e.g.: 2 B + 3 Br2 → 2 BBr3These compounds are however usually made from the oxides. Chemical compoundsBoron forms a full range of compounds where boron has the formal oxidation state III. These include oxides, sulfides, nitrides, and halides. A large number of organoboron compounds have also been described, e.g. triphenylboron. In its halides, boron can form compounds whose formal oxidation state is less than three, such as in the highly unstable boron fluorides BF and B2F4.Greenwood, Norman N.; Earnshaw, A. (1997), Chemistry of the Elements (2nd ed.), Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann, ISBN 0-7506-3365-4 The most distinctive chemical compounds of boron are its hydrides, which adopt structures not commonly seen with other elements. Included in this series are diborane (B2H6), decaborane (B10H14), and the carboranes (e.g., C2B10H12). Like many elements that form highly covalent bonds, oxidation states are often have little meaning in the hydrides of boron, e.g. the polyhedral boranes. Isotopes Main article: Isotopes of boronBoron has two naturally occurring and stable isotopes, 11B (80.1%) and 10B (19.9%). The mass difference results in a wide range of δ11B values, which are defined as a fractional difference between the 11B and 10B and traditionally expressed in parts per thousand, in natural waters ranging from -16 to +59. There are 13 known isotopes of boron, the shortest-lived isotope is 7B which decays through proton emission and alpha decay. It has a half-life of 3.5×10−22 s. Isotopic fractionation of boron is controlled by the exchange reactions of the boron species B(OH)3 and B(OH)4. Boron isotopes are also fractionated during mineral crystallization, during H2O phase changes in hydrothermal systems, and during hydrothermal alteration of rock. The latter effect results in preferential removal of the 10B(OH)4 ion onto clays. It results in solutions enriched in 11B(OH)3 and therefore may be responsible for the large 11B enrichment in seawater relative to both oceanic crust and continental crust; this difference may act as an isotopic signature.22 The exotic 17B exhibits a nuclear halo, i.e. its radius is appreciably larger than that predicted by the liquid drop model.23 Enriched boron (boron-10) Neutron cross section of boron (top curve is for 10B and bottom curve for 11B)The 10B isotope is good at capturing thermal neutrons. Natural boron is about 20% 10B and 80%11B. The nuclear industry enriches natural boron to nearly pure 10B. The waste product, or depleted boron, is nearly pure 11B. 11B is a candidate as a fuel for aneutronic fusion and is used in the semiconductor industry. Enriched boron or 10B is used in both radiation shielding and in boron neutron capture therapy. In the latter, a compound containing 10B is attached to a muscle near a tumor. The patient is then treated with a relatively low dose of thermal neutrons. This causes energetic and short range alpha radiation from the boron to bombard the tumor.242526 In nuclear reactors, 10B is used for reactivity control and in emergency shutdown systems. It can serve either function in the form of borosilicate control rods or as boric acid. In pressurized water reactors, boric acid is added to the reactor coolant when the plant is shut down for refueling. It is then slowly filtered out over many months as fissile material is used up and the fuel becomes less reactive.27 In future manned interplanetary spacecraft, 10B has a theoretical role as structural material (as boron fibers or BN nanotube material) which would also serve a special role in the radiation shield. One of the difficulties in dealing with cosmic rays, which are mostly high energy protons, is that some secondary radiation from interaction of cosmic rays and spacecraft materials is high energy spallation neutrons. Such neutrons can be moderated by materials high in light elements such as polyethylene, but the moderated neutrons continue to be a radiation hazard unless actively absorbed in the shielding. Among light elements that absorb thermal neutrons, 6Li and 10B appear as potential spacecraft structural materials which serve both for mechanical reinforcement and radiation protection.28 Depleted boron (boron-11)Cosmic radiation will produce secondary neutrons if it hits spacecraft structures; and neutrons cause fission in 10B if it is present in the spacecraft's semiconductors, producing a gamma ray, an alpha particle, and a lithium ion. The resultant fission products may then dump charge into nearby semiconductor 'chip' structures, causing data loss (bit flipping, or single event upset). In radiation hardened semiconductor designs, one countermeasure is to use depleted boron which is greatly enriched in 11B and contains almost no 10B. 11B is largely immune to radiation damage. Depleted boron is a by-product of the nuclear industry.27 11B is also a candidate as a fuel for aneutronic fusion. When struck by a proton with energy of about 500 keV, it produces three alpha particles and 8.7 MeV of energy. Most other fusion reactions involving hydrogen and helium produce penetrating neutron radiation, which weakens reactor structures and induces long term radioactivity thereby endangering operating personnel. Whereas, the alpha particles from 11B fusion can be turned directly into electric power, and all radiation stops as soon as the reactor is turned off.29 NMR spectroscopyBoth 10B and 11B possess nuclear spin. The nuclear spin of 10B is 3 and that of 11B is 3/2. These isotopes are, therefore, of use in nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy; and spectrometers specially adapted to detecting the boron-11 nuclei are available commercially. The 10B and 11B nuclei also cause splitting in the resonances of attached nuclei.30 Occurrence See also: Category:Borate minerals A fragment of ulexite Borax crystalsBoron is a relatively rare element in the Earth's crust, representing only 0.001%. The worldwide commercial borate deposits are estimated as 10 million tonnes.3132 Turkey and the United States are the world's largest producers of boron.3334 Turkey has almost 72% of the world’s boron reserves.35 Boron does not appear on Earth in elemental form but is found combined in borax, boric acid, colemanite, kernite, ulexite and borates. Boric acid is sometimes found in volcanic spring waters. Ulexite is a borate mineral; it is a fibrous crystal where individual fibers can guide light like optical fibers.36 Economically important sources of boron are rasorite (kernite) and tincal (borax ore). They are both found in the Mojave Desert of California, but the largest borax deposits are in Central and Western Turkey including the provinces of Eskişehir, Kütahya and Balıkesir.373839 History and etymology SassoliteThe name boron originates from the Arabic word buraq or the Persian word burah;40 which are names for the mineral borax.41 Boron compounds were known thousands of years ago. Borax was known from the deserts of western Tibet, where it received the name of tincal, derived from the Sanskrit. Borax glazes were used in China from AD300, and some tincal even reached the West, where the Arabic alchemist Geber seems to mention it in 700. Marco Polo brought some glazes back to Italy in the 13th century. Agricola, around 1600, reports its use as a flux in metallurgy. In 1777, boric acid was recognized in the hot springs (soffioni) near Florence, Italy, and became known as sal sedativum, with mainly medical uses. The rare mineral is called sassolite, which is found at Sasso, Italy. This was the main source of European borax from 1827 to 1872, at which date American sources replaced it.4243 Boron was not recognized as an element until it was isolated by Sir Humphry Davy, Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac and Louis Jacques Thénard in 1808 through the reaction of boric acid and potassium. Davy called the element boracium.44 Jöns Jakob Berzelius identified boron as an element in 1824. The first pure boron was arguably produced by the American chemist W. Weintraub in 1909.2145 ProductionPure elemental boron is difficult to extract. The earliest methods involved reduction of boric oxide with metals such as magnesium or aluminium. However the product is almost always contaminated with metal borides. Pure boron can be prepared by reducing volatile boron halides with hydrogen at high temperatures. Ultrapure boron, for the use in semiconductor industry, is produced by the decomposition of diborane at high temperatures and then further purified with the zone melting or Czochralski processes.46 Isotope enrichmentBecause of its high neutron cross-section, boron-10 is often used to control fission in nuclear reactors as a neutron-capturing substance.47 Several industrial-scale enrichment processes have been developed, however only the fractionated vacuum distillation of the dimethyl ether adduct of boron trifluoride (DME-BF3) and column chromatography of borates are being used.48 Market trendEstimated global consumption of boron rose to a record 1.8 million tonnes of B2O3 in 2005, following a period of strong growth in demand from Asia, Europe and North America. Boron mining and refining capacities are considered to be adequate to meet expected levels of growth through the next decade. The form in which boron is consumed has changed in recent years. The use of ores like colemanite has declined following concerns over arsenic content. Consumers have moved towards the use of refined borates and boric acid that have a lower pollutant content. The average cost of crystalline boron is $5/g.49 Increasing demand for boric acid has led a number of producers to invest in additional capacity. Eti Mine Company of Turkey opened a new boric acid plant with the production capacity of 100,000 tonnes per year at Emet in 2003. Rio Tinto Group increased the capacity of its boron plant from 260,000 tonnes per year in 2003 to 310,000 tonnes per year by May 2005, with plans to grow this to 366,000 tonnes per year in 2006. Chinese boron producers have been unable to meet rapidly growing demand for high quality borates. This has led to imports of disodium tetraborate growing by a hundredfold between 2000 and 2005 and boric acid imports increasing by 28% per year over the same period.5051 The rise in global demand has been driven by high growth rates in fiberglass and borosilicate production. A rapid increase in the manufacture of reinforcement-grade fiberglass in Asia with a consequent increase in demand for borates has offset the development of boron-free reinforcement-grade fiberglass in Europe and the USA. The recent rises in energy prices may lead to greater use of insulation-grade fiberglass, with consequent growth in the boron consumption. Roskill Consulting Group forecasts that world demand for boron will grow by 3.4% per year to reach 21 million tonnes by 2010. The highest growth in demand is expected to be in Asia where demand could rise by an average 5.7% per year.5052 Applications InsulationThe main use of boron compounds is in the form of Sodium tetraborate pentahydrate (Na2B4O7 for making insulating fiberglass and sodium perborate bleach.53 Detergents formulations and bleaching agentsBorax is used in laundry products, mainly as a precursor to bleaches. Specifically, sodium perborate serves as a source of active oxygen in many detergents, laundry detergents, cleaning products, and laundry bleaches. It is also present in some tooth bleaching formulas.53 Glass and ceramics Borosilicate glassware. Displayed are two beakers and a test tube.Nearly all boron ore extracted from the Earth is destined for refinement into boric acid and sodium tetraborate. In the United States, 70% of the boron is used for the production of glass and ceramics.54 Borosilicate glass, which is typically 12%-15% B2O3, 80% SiO2, and 2% Al2O3, has a low coefficient of thermal expansion giving it a good resistance to thermal shock. Duran and Pyrex are two major brand names for this glass.55 Boron filaments are high-strength, lightweight materials that are chiefly used for advanced aerospace structures as a component of composite materials, as well as limited production consumer and sporting goods such as golf clubs and fishing rods.5657 The fibers can be produced by chemical vapor deposition of boron on a tungsten filament.3358 Boron fibers and sub-millimeter sized crystalline boron springs are produced by laser-assisted chemical vapor deposition. Translation of the focused laser beam allows to produce even complex helical structures. Such structures show good mechanical properties (elastic modulus 450 GPa, fracture strain 3.7 %, fracture stress 17 GPa) and can be applied as reinforcement of ceramics or in micromechanical systems.59 Shielding in nuclear reactorsBoron shielding is used as a control for nuclear reactors, taking advantage of its high cross-section for neutron capture. Semiconductor industryBoron is an important technological dopant for such important semiconductors as silicon, germanium and silicon carbide. Having one less valence electron than the host atom, it donates a hole resulting in p-type conductivity. Traditional method of introducing boron into semiconductors is via its atomic diffusion at high temperatures. This process uses either solid (B2O3), liquid (BBr3) or gaseous boron sources (B2H6 or BF3). However, after 1970s, it was mostly replaced by ion implantation, which relies mostly on BF3 as a boron source.60 Boron trichloride gas is also an important chemical in semiconductor industry, however not for doping but rather for plasma etching of metals and their oxides.61 Triethylborane is also injected into vapor deposition reactors as a boron source. Examples are the plasma deposition of boron-containing hard carbon films, silicon nitride-boron nitride films, and for doping of diamond film with boron.62 Engineering materials Boron carbide is used for inner plates of ballistic vestsBoron carbide, a ceramic material which is obtained by decomposing B2O3 with carbon in the electric furnace: 2 B2O3 + 7 C → B4C + 6 COIt is used in tank armor, bulletproof vests, and numerous other structural applications. Its ability to absorb neutrons without forming long lived radionuclides makes the material attractive as an absorbent for neutron radiation arising in nuclear power plants. Nuclear applications of boron carbide include shielding, control rod and shut down pellets. Within control rods, boron carbide is often powdered, to increase its surface area.63 High-hardness compounds Main article: Superhard materials Mechanical properties of BCN solids 64 and ReB265 Material Diamond cubic-BC2N cubic-BC5 cubic-BN B4C ReB2 Vickers hardness (GPa) 115 76 71 62 38 22 Fracture toughness (MPa m1/2) 5.3 4.5 9.5 6.8 3.5Several boron compounds are known for their extreme hardness and toughness, including Heterodiamond (also called BCN); Boron nitride. This material is isoelectronic to carbon. Similar to carbon, it has both hexagonal (soft graphite-like h-BN) and cubic (hard, diamond-like c-BN) forms. h-BN is used as a high temperature component and lubricant. c-BN, also known under commercial name borazon,66 is a superior abrasive. Its hardness is only slightly smaller, but chemical stability is superior to that of diamond. Rhenium diboride can be produced at ambient pressures, but is rather expensive because of rhenium. The hardness of ReB2 exhibits considerable anisotropy because of its hexagonal layered structure. Its value is comparable to that of tungsten carbide, silicon carbide, titanium diboride or zirconium diboride.67 AlMgB14 + TiB2 composites possess high hardness and wear resistance and are used in either bulk form or as coatings for components exposed to high temperatures and wear loads.68Boron carbide and cubic boron nitride powders are widely used as abrasives. Metal borides are used for coating tools through chemical vapor deposition or physical vapor deposition. Implantation of boron ions into metals and alloys, through ion implantation or ion beam deposition, results in a spectacular increase in surface resistance and microhardness. Laser alloying has also been successfully used for the same purpose. These borides are an alternative to diamond coated tools, and their (treated) surfaces have similar properties to those of the bulk boride.69 Niche uses Boron is a part of neodymium magnet (Nd2Fe14B), which is the strongest type of permanent magnet. They are found in a variety of domestic and professional electromechanical and electronic devices, such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), various motors and actuators, computer HDDs, CD and DVD players, mobile phones, timer switches, speakers, etc.3 Navy emergency flareboron: Definition from Answers.com boron n. ( Symbol B ) A soft, brown, amorphous or crystalline nonmetallic element, extracted chiefly from kernite and borax and used in flares, www.answers.com/topic/boron Boron on the brink BORON -- Shopkeeper Tammy Brown was listing some of the local institutions rocked by this town's recent labor lockout -- businesses, churches, schools -- when her husband seated a few feet away gave up his brooding silence to interrupt. "Living," Arlin Brown said in a quiet voice that betrayed his frustration at having been forced out of his job of 34 years, along with more than 550 co-workers ...
Launch of Apollo 15
Starch and casein-based adhesives contain sodium tetraborate decahydrate (Na2B4O7•10 H2O)
Anti-corrosion systems also contain sodium tetraborate decahydrate.70
Sodium borates are used as a flux for soldering silver and gold and with ammonium chloride for welding ferrous metals.71 They are also fire retarding additives to plastics and rubber articles.72
Boric acid (also known as orthoboric acid) H3BO3 is used in the production of textile fiberglass and flat panel displays 73 and in many PVAc and PVOH based adhesives.
Boric acid also has antiseptic, antifungal, and antiviral properties and for this reasons is applied as a water clarifier in swimming pool water treatment.74 Boric acid is also traditionally used as an insecticide, notably against ants, fleas, and cockroaches.75
Triethylborane is a substance which ignites the JP-7 fuel of the Pratt & Whitney J58 turbojet/ramjet engines powering the Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird.76 It was also used to ignite the F-1 Engines on the Saturn V Rocket utilized by NASA's Apollo and Skylab programs from 1967 until 1973. Triethylborane is suitable for this because of its pyrophoric properties, especially the fact that it burns with very high temperature.77 Triethylborane is an industrial initiator in radical reactions, where it is effective even at low temperatures.
Research areas
Magnesium diboride is an important superconducting material with the transition temperature of 39 K. MgB2 wires are produced with the powder-in-tube process and applied in superconducting magnets.7879 Boron compounds show promise in treating arthritis.80 Because of its distinctive green flame, amorphous boron is used in pyrotechnic flares.81 It is also used as a melting point depressant in nickel-chromium braze alloys.82 Biological roleThere is a boron-containing natural antibiotic, boromycin, isolated from streptomyces.8384 Boron is an essential plant nutrient, required primarily for maintaining the integrity of cell walls. Conversely, high soil concentrations of > 1.0 ppm can cause marginal and tip necrosis in leaves as well as poor overall growth performance. Levels as low as 0.8 ppm can cause these same symptoms to appear in plants particularly sensitive to boron in the soil. Nearly all plants, even those somewhat tolerant of boron in the soil, will show at least some symptoms of boron toxicity when boron content in the soil is greater than 1.8 ppm. When this content exceeds 2.0 ppm, few plants will perform well and some may not survive. When boron levels in plant tissue exceed 200 ppm symptoms of boron toxicity are likely to appear.858687 As an ultratrace element, boron is necessary for the optimal health of rats, although it is necessary in such small amounts that ultrapurified foods and dust filtration of air is necessary to show the effects of boron deficiency, which manifest as poor coat/hair quality. Presumably, boron is necessary to other mammals. No deficiency syndrome in humans has been described. Small amounts of boron occur widely in the diet, and the amounts needed in the diet would, by analogy with rodent studies, be very small. The exact physiological role of boron in the animal kingdom is poorly understood.88 Boron occurs in all foods produced from plants. Since 1989 its nutritional value has been argued. It is thought that boron plays several biochemical roles in animals, including humans.89 The U.S. Department of agriculture conducted an experiment in which postmenopausal women took 3 mg of boron a day. The results showed that supplemental boron reduced excretion of calcium by 44%, and activated estrogen and vitamin D. However, whether these effects were conventionally nutritional, or medicinal, could not be determined. The US National Institutes of Health quotes this source: Total daily boron intake in normal human diets ranges from 2.1–4.3 mg boron/day.9091 Analytical quantificationFor determination of boron content in food or materials the colorimetric curcumin method is used. Boron has to be transferred to boric acid or borates and on reaction with curcumin in acidic solution, a red colored boron-chelate complex, rosocyanine, is formed.92 Health issuesElemental boron and borates are non-toxic to humans and animals (approximately similar to table salt). The LD50 (dose at which there is 50% mortality) for animals is about 6 g per kg of body weight. Substances with LD50 above 2 g are considered non-toxic. The minimum lethal dose for humans has not been established, but an intake of 4 g/day was reported without incidents, and medical dosages of 20 g of boric acid for neutron capture therapy caused no problems. Fish have survived for 30 min in a saturated boric acid solution and can survive longer in strong borax solutions.93 Borates are more toxic to insects than to mammals. The boranes and similar gaseous compounds are quite poisonous. As usual, it is not an element that is intrinsically poisonous, but toxicity depends on structure.4243 The boranes (boron hydrogen compounds) are toxic as well as highly flammable and require special care when handling. Sodium borohydride presents a fire hazard due to its reducing nature, and the liberation of hydrogen on contact with acid. Boron halides are corrosive.94 Congenital endothelial dystrophy type 2, a rare form of corneal dystrophy, is linked to mutations in SLC4A11 gene that encodes a transporter reportedly regulating the intracellular concentration of boron.95 See also Allotropes of boron Category:Boron compounds Boron deficiency Boron oxide Boron nitride Boron neutron capture therapy Boronic acid Hydroboration-oxidation reaction Suzuki coupling References ^ Fernando, W.T.M.L.; O'Brien, L.C.; Bernath, P.F. (1990). "Fourier Transform Spectroscopy: B4Σ−−X4Σ−". J. Chem. 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External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Boron Look up boron in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Boron WebElements.com – Boron National Pollutant Inventory - Boron and compounds v • d • e Boron compoundsBAs · BBr3 · BCl3 · BF3 · BI3 · BN · BP · B2F4 · B2H6 · B2O3 · B2S3 · B4C · B6O v • d • e Periodic table H He Li Be B C N O F Ne Na Mg Al Si P S Cl Ar K Ca Sc Ti V Cr Mn Fe Co Ni Cu Zn Ga Ge As Se Br Kr Rb Sr Y Zr Nb Mo Tc Ru Rh Pd Ag Cd In Sn Sb Te I Xe Cs Ba La Ce Pr Nd Pm Sm Eu Gd Tb Dy Ho Er Tm Yb Lu Hf Ta W Re Os Ir Pt Au Hg Tl Pb Bi Po At Rn Fr Ra Ac Th Pa U Np Pu Am Cm Bk Cf Es Fm Md No Lr Rf Db Sg Bh Hs Mt Ds Rg Cn Uut Uuq Uup Uuh Uus Uuo Uue Ubn Alkali metals Alkaline earth metals Lanthanoids Actinoids Transition metals Other metals Metalloids Other nonmetals Halogens Noble gases![]() Merlin and the Grail: Joseph of Arimathea, Merlin, Perceval: The Trilogy of Arthurian Prose Romances attributed to Robert de Boron (Arthurian Studies) D.S.Brewer Scientific Facts on Boron 2.1 Boron is primarily obtained from boron mines, located in arid regions of Turkey and the USA, and also in Argentina, Chile, Russia, China, and Peru. ... www.greenfacts.org/en/boron/ New Technical Ceramics Data Sheet Available from Aremco Valley Cottage, NY - January 29, 2010 SUMMARY Aremco Products, Inc. has introduced a new Y2010 data sheet describing its complete range of technical ceramics for applications to 3000 oC. Several standard machinable and fully fired compositions are offered including aluminum oxide, aluminum nitride, aluminum silicate, boron nitride, glass ceramic, magnesium oxide, and zirconium oxide and ... Boron, Calcium, Columbium, and Zirconium in Iron and Steel Published for the Engineering Foundation by J Boron When I happened across boron in the course of these efforts, I realized that I had little familiarity with this element and its compounds, could ... mysite.du.edu/~jcalvert/phys/ Ships in Port Port of Beaumont: Pollux, Malta, wheat for Nigeria; Magdalena Green, Netherlands, boron for Europe; Polydefkis P, Greece, potash for Chile; Atlantic Majesty, Panama, wheat for Mexico; Nikator, Marshall Islands, wheat for Nigeria; Bernardo Quintana, Bahamas, inbound with aggregate; Balsa 57, Panama, potash for Colombia. Boron The element is not found free in nature, but occurs as orthoboric acid usually found in certain volcanic spring waters and as borates in boron and colemantie. ... periodic.lanl.gov/elements/ Twelve Kern schools listed among states lowest performing Twelve Kern County schools have been named in a preliminary list of the state's lowest-performing schools, much to the surprise of some local school leaders. It means the schools will need to make dramatic reforms as required by state and federal law. Boron: MedlinePlus Supplements Boron is a trace element that is found throughout the global environment. ... Preliminary studies report that boron may not be helpful for enhancing bodybuilding, ... nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ Why a glass a day WILL keep the doctor away... A study has shown that moderate women drinkers put on less weight than those who stick to soft drinks - and those who drank red wine put on the least weight. It's Elemental - The Element Boron The Element Boron - Basic Physical and Historical Information ... Boron-10, one of the naturally occurring isotopes of boron, is a good absorber of neutrons and is used in the ... education.jlab.org/ U.S. Borax offers some concessions to union U.S. Borax has offered a labor union some concessions aimed at resolving a bitter labor dispute. About 560 members of the International Longshore & Warehouse Union have been locked out of Rio Tinto Minerals' borax mine in the Mojave Desert since Jan. 31, the deadline the company imposed to ratify a new contract. The union contends the lockout is illegal. ![]() Dietary Reference Intakes for Vitamin A, Vitamin K, Arsenic, Boron, Chromium, Copper, Iodine, Iron, Manganese, Molybdenum, Nickel, Silicon, Vanadium, and Zinc National Academies Press Boron There are a lot of reasons to suspect that a boron deficiency is involved in hyperthyroidism. ... You will note that boron both lessens the effects of a low magnesium ... www.ithyroid.com/boron.htm Blue diamond expected to fetch £3.8m at auction A rare 'flawless' blue diamond will be sold at auction next month. constituyendo un auténtico paraíso para escaladores y amantes de lo abrupto y bravío Forma en su totalidad un bello macizo pétreo con hermosas paredes cual si de una gran ciudad de roca se tratara Mallos de San Jorge A la izquierda el canal de subida a la derecha el Borón InteliHealth: There is only limited research in humans specifically using boron to treat osteoporosis. ... It has been proposed that boron affects estrogen levels in post-menopausal women. ... intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/ RiverKings Weekly Update SOUTHAVEN, MS --- Five games remain in the Central Hockey League regular season for the Mississippi RiverKings, beginning with a pair of games at home this Friday and Saturday nights. Rare blue diamond set to fetch £3.8 million A rare internally flawless blue diamond is expected to fetch up to £3.8 million when it is sold at auction next month. Fission Energy Drills Four More Vertical Step-Out Holes That Extend the J-Zone Including Intervals of 1.9m and 1.6m ...
KELOWNA , BRITISH COLUMBIA--(Marketwire - March 8, 2010) - FISSION ENERGY CORP. ("Fission" or the "Company") (TSX VENTURE:FIS) has completed five additional vertical oriented step-out drill holes, WAT10-074, 075, 076A, 077, and 079. The new drill holes have extended the J-Zone's strike length to at least 55m (east-west) and 35m wide (north-south). Four of the five have intersected highly ... | ||