Diborane(6), commonly known as diborane, is the chemical compound with the formula . It is a highly toxic, colorless, and pyrophoric gas with a repulsively sweet odor. Given its simple formula, borane is a fundamental boron compound. It has attracted wide attention for its electronic structure. Several of its derivatives are useful Reagent.
The model determined by molecular orbital theory describes the bonds between boron and the terminal hydrogen atoms as conventional 2-center 2-electron . The bonding between the boron atoms and the bridging hydrogen atoms is, however, different from that in molecules such as hydrocarbons. Each boron uses two electrons in bonding to the terminal hydrogen atoms and has one valence electron remaining for additional bonding. The bridging hydrogen atoms provide one electron each. The ring is held together by four electrons forming two 3-center 2-electron bonds. This type of bond is sometimes called a "banana bond".
is [[isoelectronic]] with , which would arise from the [[diprotonation|protonation]] of the planar molecule [[ethylene]]. Diborane is one of many compounds with such unusual bonding.
Of the other elements in the boron group, gallium is known to form a similar compound digallane, . Aluminium forms a polymeric hydride, (; although unstable, has been isolated in solid hydrogen and is isostructural with diborane.
Lithium hydride used for this purpose must be very finely powdered to avoid the formation of a passivating lithium tetrafluoroborate layer on the reactant. Alternatively, a small amount of diborane product can be added to form lithium borohydride, which will react with the BF3 to produce more diborane, making the reaction autocatalytic. Excerpted in 2 parts and archived at the WayBack Machine: [1], [2]
Two laboratory methods start from boron trichloride with lithium aluminium hydride or from boron trifluoride ether solution with sodium borohydride. Both methods result in as much as 30% yield:
When heated with , tin(II) chloride is reduced to elemental tin, forming diborane in the process:
Older methods entail the direct reaction of borohydride salts with a Oxidizing acid, such as phosphoric acid or dilute sulfuric acid:
Similarly, oxidation of borohydride salts has been demonstrated and remains convenient for small-scale preparations. For example, using iodine as an oxidizer:
Another small-scale synthesis uses potassium borohydride and phosphoric acid as starting materials.
Diborane reacts violently with water to form hydrogen and boric acid:
Diborane also reacts with alcohols similarly. For example, the reaction with methanol gives hydrogen and trimethylborate:
Treating diborane with sodium amalgam gives and When diborane is treated with lithium hydride in diethyl ether, lithium borohydride is formed:
Because of a personal communication with Linus Pauling (who supported the ethane-like structure), H. I. Schlessinger and A. B. Burg did not specifically discuss 3-center 2-electron bonding in their then classic review in the early 1940s. The review does, however, discuss the bridged D2h structure in some depth: "It is to be recognized that this formulation easily accounts for many of the chemical properties of diborane..."
In 1943, H. Christopher Longuet-Higgins, while still an undergraduate at Oxford, was the first to explain the structure and bonding of the boron hydrides. The article reporting the work, written with his tutor R. P. Bell, also reviews the history of the subject beginning with the work of Dilthey. Shortly afterwards, the theoretical work of Longuet-Higgins was confirmed in an infrared study of diborane by Price. The structure was re-confirmed by electron-diffraction measurement in 1951 by K. Hedberg and V. Schomaker, with the confirmation of the structure shown in the schemes on this page.
William Nunn Lipscomb Jr. further confirmed the molecular structure of boranes using X-ray crystallography in the 1950s and developed theories to explain their bonding. Later, he applied the same methods to related problems, including the structure of carboranes, on which he directed the research of future 1981 Nobel Prize winner Roald Hoffmann. The 1976 Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to Lipscomb "for his studies on the structure of boranes illuminating problems of chemical bonding".
Traditionally, diborane has often been described as electron-deficient, because the 12 valence electrons can only form 6 conventional 2-centre 2-electron bonds, which are insufficient to join all 8 atoms. However, the more correct description using 3-centre bonds shows that diborane is really electron-precise, since there are just enough valence electrons to fill the 6 bonding molecular orbitals. Nevertheless, some leading textbooks still use the term "electron-deficient".
Diborane has been investigated as a precursor to metal boride films and for the p-doping of silicon semiconductors.
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