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The Structure of Boron Monoxide.

Frédéric A PerrasHenry ThomasPatrick HeintzRanjan BeheraJiaqi YuGayatri ViswanathanDapeng JingScott A SouthernKirill KovnirLevi M StanleyWenyu Huang
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Boron monoxide (BO), prepared by the thermal condensation of tetrahydroxydiboron, was first reported in 1955; however, its structure could not be determined. With the recent attention on boron-based two-dimensional materials, such as borophene and hexagonal boron nitride, there is renewed interest in BO. A large number of stable BO structures have been computationally identified, but none are supported by experiments. The consensus is that the material likely forms a boroxine-based two-dimensional material. Herein, we apply advanced 11 B NMR experiments to determine the relative orientations of B(B)O 2 centers in BO. We find that the material is composed of D 2 h -symmetric O 2 B-BO 2 units that organize to form larger B 4 O 2 rings. Further, powder diffraction experiments additionally reveal that these units organize to form two-dimensional layers with a random stacking pattern. This observation is in agreement with earlier density functional theory (DFT) studies that showed B 4 O 2 -based structures to be the most stable.
Keyphrases
  • density functional theory
  • high resolution
  • molecular dynamics
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