Sodium pentaborate
Sodium pentaborate, more properly disodium decaborate, is a chemical compound of sodium, boron, and oxygen; a salt with elemental formula NaB5O8, Na2B10O16, or Na2O·5B2O3. It is a colorless crystalline solid, soluble in water. The compound is often encountered or traded as hydrates NaB5O8·nH2O, Na2B10O16·2nH2O, or Na2O·5B2O3·2nH2O for n = 2,[1] 4,[2][3] 5,[4][5] or other values. This formula is often misleading as some of the water molecules are actually hydroxyl groups covalently attached to boron atoms. The compound is used in agriculture as a boron supplement in fertilizer with various trade names such as Solubor[5] and Aquabor.[3] It has also been tested as an additive to improve plasma electrolytic oxidation of magnesium alloys.[4] It is also used in nuclear reactors as a neutron absorber/poison[6] . The name "sodium pentaborate" has also been used for a distinct compound with formula Na3B5O8·nH2O, better called trisodium pentaborate.[7] Structure and preparationDihydrateSodium pentaborate "dihydrate" has the elemental formula NaH4B5O10, which can be parsed as NaB5O8·2H2O or Na2O·5B3O3·4H2O, however the correct formula seems to be either Na+[B5O6(OH)4]− or Na+[B5O7(OH)2]−·H2O. The latter seems more likely, since under thermogravimetric analysis the material starts to decompose at about 130 °C with partial loss of water. [1] It can be prepared by reacting water solutions of sodium carbonate Na2CO3 and boric acid B(OH)3 in mole ratio 1:10 and evaporating the resulting solution at 40 °C. It belongs to the monoclinic crystal system with symmetry group P21/c (C2h5) and parameters a = 1110.3 pm, b = 1643.7 pm, c = 1356.4 pm, α = 89.960°, β = 112.850° and γ = 89.9°, formulas per cell Z = 4.[1] References
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