2025-02-23T00:48:44-05:00 DEBUG: VuFindSearch\Backend\Solr\Connector: Query fl=%2A&wt=json&json.nl=arrarr&q=id%3A%22irk-123456789-63409%22&qt=morelikethis&rows=5
2025-02-23T00:48:44-05:00 DEBUG: VuFindSearch\Backend\Solr\Connector: => GET http://localhost:8983/solr/biblio/select?fl=%2A&wt=json&json.nl=arrarr&q=id%3A%22irk-123456789-63409%22&qt=morelikethis&rows=5
2025-02-23T00:48:44-05:00 DEBUG: VuFindSearch\Backend\Solr\Connector: <= 200 OK
2025-02-23T00:48:44-05:00 DEBUG: Deserialized SOLR response

Boron: a hunt for superhard polymorphs

Boron is a unique element, being the only element, all known polymorphs1 of which are superhard, and all of its crystal structures are distinct from any other element. The electron-deficient bonding in boron explains its remarkable sensitivity to even small amounts of impurity atoms and allows boron...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Oganov, A.R., Solozhenko, V.L.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Інститут надтвердих матеріалів ім. В.М. Бакуля НАН України 2009
Series:Сверхтвердые материалы
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dspace.nbuv.gov.ua/handle/123456789/63409
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Boron is a unique element, being the only element, all known polymorphs1 of which are superhard, and all of its crystal structures are distinct from any other element. The electron-deficient bonding in boron explains its remarkable sensitivity to even small amounts of impurity atoms and allows boron to form peculiar chemical compounds with very different elements. These complications made the study of boron a great challenge, creating also a unique and instructive chapter in the history of science. Strange though it may sound, the discovery of boron in 1808 was ambiguous, with pure boron polymorphs established only starting from the 1950s— 1970s, and only in 2007 was the stable phase at ambient conditions determined. The history of boron research from its discovery to the latest discoveries pertaining to the phase diagram of this element, the structure and stability of β-boron, and establishment of a new high-pressure polymorph, γ-boron, are reviewed.