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Boron Suboxide Sample

Caption:

A vial containing the result of a typical run in the high-pressure anvil at the Arizona State University (ASU) Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC). The vial contains half a gram of fine red dust in water. Inside the high-pressure anvil, interlocking steel jaws compress a small crucible containing experimental mixtures. Scientists recover a small silica pellet the size of three aspirin tablets after each run. They break apart the pellet to wash out particles of material altered by extreme pressure and temperature. Scientists at the ASU MRSEC used the anvil to synthesize boron suboxide, which ranks as the third-hardest substance in the world.

(Note: The ASU MRSEC was supported by the National Science Foundation at the time this research was performed.) [See related images: Herb Hubert and High Pressure Anvil, Lawrence Garvie – Boron Suboxide Researcher, and Grain of Boron Suboxide.]

More about this Image In 1998, teams of scientists at Arizona State University (ASU) worked together to create and classify strange, new substances. Research conducted at ASU’s Materials Research Science & Engineering Center (MRSEC) (supported by NSF at the time) focused toward the creation of super hard variations on the diamond. Their final result involved synthesizing a low-density compound of boron suboxide (B6O), creating the third hardest material in the world.

The research began when Herve´ Hubert, a postdoctoral researcher at the center, began mixing boron and boron oxide and heating them at high pressure—up to 1,700 degrees Celsius and at 40,000 times the atmospheric pressure at sea level. During the heating and pressurization, orange-red particles formed.

Hubert consulted with electron microscopist Laurence Garvie, who had been refining a technique used by scientists to analyze low weight atoms--such as boron and oxygen--called electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS). Using his knowledge of EELS, Garvie was able to provided detailed chemical analyses of the materials synthesized by Hubert.

A few weeks later during an electron microscope examination, Hubert and Garvie discovered that the orange-red “crystals” were not a single crystal but in fact had a perfect icosahedral shape—a particle, with 20 triangular faces and 12 corners, displaying five-fold symmetry. A crystal, which contains atoms packed in a regular repeating pattern, cannot have five-fold symmetry. Icosahedral particles in nature are rare. Some viruses pack in this way, but they are much smaller in size.

After taking electron micrographs of the material, Garvie consulted with Professor Michael O’Keeffe, an expert in crystallography (the study of crystal form and structure). O’Keeffe confirmed that the material was not a single crystal, but multiple-twinned particles. Twenty tetrahedra, a solid with four faces—each a perfect crystal—came together at a point to form a radiating pattern away from the center. This substance displayed a new way of packing atoms together to make a solid.

The boron suboxide material ranks as the third-hardest substance in the world. Only diamonds and cubic boron nitride are harder than boron suboxide, which appears to have promising potential.

Since it is extremely hard, it could lead to a new class of hardfacing and wear materials, or could potentially be used as an abrasive or cutting or polishing tool. Because of its mechanical characteristics and low chemical reactivity, it could possibly replace tungsten carbide in high-wear applications. Boron suboxide may even possess special semiconductor applications.

Boron Suboxide Sample
(Preview Only)

Credit: John C. Phillips photo/ASU Research Magazine
Year of Image: 1999

Categories:

MATERIALS RESEARCH / General
MATERIALS RESEARCH / MRSECs

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No additional restrictions--beyond NSF's general restrictions--have been placed on this image. For a list of general restrictions that apply to this and all images in the NSF Image Library, see the section "Conditions".

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Last Modified: Mar 29, 2001