P - Block Elements
P - Block Elements
P - Block Elements
— the insoluble calcium carbonate settles down and borax is crystallized from
the mother liquor
❖ iron oxide and titanium oxide unaffected and are filtered off
the mpt of Al2O3 is too high (2015 oC) and its electrical
conductivity too low to make direct electrolysis commercially viable
Al2O3 is mixed with cryolite (Na3AlF6, containing about 10% CaF2) to
reduce its mpt to about 1000 oC
Extraction of aluminium: The Bayer Process
Extraction of aluminium: Hall-Héroult Process
developed by two 22-year-old scientists independently
— Charles Hall: American Chemist
— Paul Heroult: French Metallurgist
❖ other products formed at the anode are O2, F2 and carbon compounds of
fluorine ( these erode the anode)
Extraction of aluminium: Hall-Héroult Process
Extraction of aluminium: Hall-Héroult Process
the key to the Hall-Héroult Process is
— the use of molten cryolite as a solvent: melts at accessible temperatures;
dissolves Al2O3; and is available in the necessary purity
— the choice of graphite as the anode: provides easy oxidation process which
produces a gas
1. pyroborates
— two triangular units join by sharing one corner e.g. Mg2[B2O5] and CoII[B2O5]
❖ cf with pyrophosphates
Compounds of Boron and Oxygen: Metaborates
2. ring structures
— three triangular units share corners to form a ring
e.g. Na3[B3O6] and K3[B3O6
3. polymeric structures
— many triangular units polymerise to an infinite chain
e.g. [Ca(BO2)2]n
Compounds of Boron and Oxygen: Metaborates
— in water borax forms [B(OH)4]- and B(OH)3 but only the former reacts with
HCl
1. [B4O5(OH)42- + 5 H2O 2B(OH)3 + 2 [B(OH)4]-
2. 2[B(OH)4]- +2H3O+ → 2B(OH)3 + 54H2O
Metaborates: Sodium peroxoborate
❖ blue saphires are a mixed oxide containing traces of Fe2+, Fe3+ and Ti4+
Other Group 13 Oxides
❖ synthetic rubies are made by strongly heating mixture of Al2O3 and Cr2O3 in an
oxy-hydrogen flame
❖ rubies are very hard and hence used for jewellery and to make bearings in
watches and instruments
Trihalides
the fluorides of Al, Ga, In and Tl are ionic and have high mpts
— the other halides are largely covalent when anhydrous
Trihalides
for each bridge , 1 sp3 orbital from each of the B atoms combines with
the 1s orbital of the bridging H atom to form 3 new molecular orbitals
— (MOs) – n atomic orbitals (AO) form n Mos
— 1 B atom gives its remaining valence e to one bridge, and the other B atom gives to
the other
Boron hydrides – structure of diborane
— each bridge, , has 2 electrons, which fill our new MO scheme starting with the lowest
energy bonding MO other
Boron hydrides – structure of diborane
Nomenclature
— in neutral boranes the number of boron atoms is given by a prefix and the number of
H atoms is given in parentheses behind the name
❖ B5H11 = pentaborane(11)
❖ B4H10 = tetraborane(10)
— for ions first the number of H atoms and then the number of B atoms is given, behind
the name; the charge is given in parentheses
❖ [B6H6]2− = hexahydrohexaborate(2-)
Wades rule: Structures of boranes
Closo boranes
— closed deltahedra without B-H-B 3c,2e bonds
— thermally stable and moderately reactive
— example: [B5H5]2−: the ion builds up a trigonal bipyramidal polyhedron
Nido boranes
— closo borane with one corner less and addition of two hydrogen-atoms instead
— B-H-B-bonds and B-B-bonds are possible
— thermally stability lies between closo- and arachno-boranes
— example: B5H9
— its structure can be assumed as the octahedral deltahedron of [B6H6]2− without one
corner tetragonal pyramid
Wades rule: Structures of boranes
Arachno boranes
— closo borane deltahedron but with two BH-units removed and two H-atoms added.
— it has to have B-H-B 3c, 2e-bonds
— thermally unstable at room temperature and highly reactive
— example: B4H10 the structure can be derived from [B6H6]2−
— deltahedron with two corners less
❖ there are also other structures like the hypho boranes, but they are less important
Wades rule: Structures of boranes
Synthesis of diborane
Synthesis of higher boranes
Properties of diborane
Properties of diborane
— diadducts can also be obtained when bidentate bases are used e.g. en
analogous to alkenes
—B is trigonal and the three substituents at B are planar
— two resonance forms of aminoboranes