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bo·rane (bôr'ān', bōr'-) ![]() |
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One of a class of binary compounds of boron and hydrogen, often referred to as boron hydrides. The term borane is sometimes used to denote substances which may be considered to be derivatives of the boron-hydrogen compounds, such as boron trichloride (BCl3), and diiododecaborane (B10H12I2).
The simplest borane is diborane (B2H6); other boranes of increasingly higher molecular weight are known, one of the least volatile of which is an apparently polymeric solid of composition (BH)x. Certain boranes, such as BH3, and B3H7, are not known as such, but can be prepared in the form of adducts with electron-donor molecules.
The most spectacular projected large-scale use of the boranes and their derivatives is in the field of high-energy fuels for jet planes and rockets. The thermal decomposition of diborane (6) [B2H6] has been used to produce coatings of pure elementary boron for neutron-detecting devices and for applications requiring hard, corrosion-resistant surfaces. Boranes can also be used as vulcanizing agents for natural and synthetic rubbers, and are especially effective in the preparation of silicone rubbers.
The molecular structures possessed by the boranes are exhibited by no other class of substances. Because of the lack of sufficient electrons for the formation of the requisite number of covalent bonds, normal covalently bonded structures of the hydrocarbon type are not possible. The boranes are sometimes referred to as electron-deficient substances. In no case are the simple chain and ring configurations of carbon chemistry encountered in the more complex boranes. Instead, the boron atoms are situated at the corners of polyhedrons. An example of such a structure is that of pentaborane (9) [B5H9], shown below.

As a class, the boranes are quite reactive substances and are generally decomposed, at times explosively, on contact with air. Their reactivities with air and water decrease with increasing molecular weight. Because boranes react readily with air, laboratory investigations are almost invariably carried out in all-glass vacuum apparatus or in inert-atmosphere dry boxes. With the possible exception of decaborane (14) [B10H14], the known boranes are not indefinitely stable at room temperature. They decompose more or less rapidly to yield elementary hydrogen and boranes richer in boron.
The known derivatives of the boranes (other than BH3) are relatively few in number. Several halo, alkyl, and amino boranes have been reported but, in general, these have not been extensively characterized. See also Boron; Carborane; Metal hydrides.
| Wikipedia: Borane |
In chemistry, a borane is a chemical compound of boron and hydrogen. The boranes comprise a large group of compounds with the generic formulae of BxHy. These compounds do not occur in nature. Many of the boranes readily oxidise on contact with air, some violently. The parent member BH3 is called borane, but it is known only in the gaseous state, and dimerises to form diborane, B2H6. The larger boranes all consist of boron clusters that are polyhedral, some of which exist as isomers. For example, isomers of B20H26 are based on the fusion of two 10-atom clusters.
The most important boranes are diborane B2H6, pentaborane B5H9, and decaborane B10H14.
The development of the chemistry of boron hydrides led to new experimental techniques and theoretical concepts. Boron hydrides have been studied as potential fuels, for rockets and for automotive uses.
Over the past several decades, the scope of boron hydride chemistry has grown to include cages containing atoms other than boron, such as carbon in the carboranes and metals in the metallaboranes, wherein one or more boron atoms are substituted by metal atoms.
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The four series of single-cluster boranes have the following general formulae, where "n" is the number of boron atoms:-
| Type | formula | notes |
|---|---|---|
| closo− | BnHn2− | No neutral BnHn+2 boranes are known |
| nido− | BnHn+4 | |
| arachno− | BnHn+6 | |
| hypho− | BnHn+8 | only adducts established |
There also exists a series of substituted neutral hypercloso-boranes that have the theoretical formulae BnHn. Examples include B12(OCH2Ph)12, which is a stable derivative of hypercloso-B12H12[1].
The naming of neutral boranes is illustrated by the following examples, where the Greek prefix shows the number of boron atoms and the number of hydrogen atoms is in brackets:-
The naming of anions is illustrated by the following, where the hydrogen count is specified first followed by the boron count, and finally the overall charge in brackets:-
Optionally closo− nido− etc (see above) can be added:-
Understandably many of the compounds have abbreviated common names.
It was realised in the early 1970s that the geometry of boron clusters are related and that they approximate to deltahedra or to deltahedra with one or more vertices missing. The deltahedra that are found in borane chemistry are (using the names favoured by most chemists):--
| deltahedron | vertices |
|---|---|
| Trigonal bipyramid | 5 |
| Octahedron | 6 |
| Pentagonal bipyramid | 7 |
| Dodecahedron (see Snub disphenoid) | 8 |
| Tricapped trigonal prism | 9 |
| Bicapped square antiprism | 10 |
| Octadecahedron | 11 |
| Icosahedron | 12 |
One feature of these deltahedra is that boron atoms at the vertices may have different numbers of boron atoms as near neighbours. For example, in the pentagonal bipyramid, 2 borons have 3 neighbors, 3 have 4 neighbours, whereas in the octahedral cluster all vertices are the same, each boron having 4 neighbours. These differences between the boron atoms in different positions are important in determining structure, as they have different chemical shifts in the 11B NMR spectra.
B6H10 is a typical example. Its geometry is, in essence, a 7-boron framework (pentagonal bipyramid), missing a vertex that had the highest number of near neighbours, e.g., a vertex with 5 neighbours. The extra hydrogen atoms bridge around the open face. A notable exception to this general scheme is that of B8H12, which would be expected to have a nido- geometry (based on B9H92− missing 1 vertex), but is similar in geometry to B8H14, which is based on B10H102−.
The names for the series of boranes are derived from this general scheme for the cluster geometries:-
Boranes are electron-deficient and pose a problem for conventional descriptions of covalent bonding that involves shared electron pairs. BH3 is a trigonal planar molecule (D3h molecular symmetry). Diborane has a hydrogen-bridged structure, see the diborane article. The description of the bonding in the larger boranes formulated by William Lipscomb involved:
The styx number was introduced to aid in electron counting where s = count of 3-center B-H-B bonds; t = count of 3-center B-B-B bonds; y = count of 2-center B-B bonds and x = count of BH2 groups.
Lipscomb's methodology has largely been superseded by a molecular orbital approach, although it still affords insights. The results of this have been summarised in a simple but powerful rule, PSEPT, often known as Wade's rules, that can be used to predict the cluster type, closo-, nido-, etc. The power of this rule is its ease of use and general applicability to many different cluster types other than boranes. There are continuing efforts by theoretical chemists to improve the treatment of the bonding in boranes — an example is Stone's tensor surface harmonic treatment of cluster bonding. A recent development is four-center two-electron bond.
Boranes are all colourless and diamagnetic. They are reactive compounds and some are pyrophoric. The majority are highly poisonous and require special handling precautions.
Boranes can react to form hetero-boranes, e.g., carboranes or metalloboranes (clusters that contain boron and metal atoms).
The development of the chemistry of boranes posed two challenges to chemists. First, new laboratory techniques had to be developed to handle these very reactive compounds; second, the structures of the compounds challenged the accepted theories of chemical bonding.
The German chemist Alfred Stock first characterized the series of boron-hydrogen compounds. His group developed the glass vacuum line and techniques for handling the compounds. However, exposure to mercury (used in mercury diffusion pumps and float valves) caused Stock to develop mercury poisoning, which he documented in the first scientific papers on the subject. The chemical bonding of the borane clusters was investigated by Lipscomb and his co-workers. Lipscomb was awarded the Nobel prize in Chemistry in 1976 for this work. PSEPT, (Wades rules) can be used to predict the structures of boranes.
Interest in boranes increased during World War II due to the potential of uranium borohydride for enrichment of the uranium isotopes. In the US, a team led by Schlesinger developed the basic chemistry of the boron hydrides and the related aluminium hydrides. Although uranium borohydride was not utilized for isotopic separations, Schessinger’s work laid the foundation for a host of boron hydride reagents for organic synthesis, most of which were developed by his student Herbert C. Brown. Borane-based reagents are now widely used in organic synthesis. For example, sodium borohydride is the standard reagent for converting aldehydes and ketones to alcohols. Brown was awarded the Nobel prize in Chemistry in 1979 for this work.[2] In the 1950s and early '60s, the US and USSR investigated boron hydrides as high-energy fuels (ethylboranes, for example) for high speed aircraft, such as the XB-70 Valkyrie. The development of advanced surface-to-air missiles made the fast aircraft redundant, and the fuel programs were terminated, although triethylborane (TEB) was later used to ignite the engines of the SR-71 Blackbird.[3]
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