Chromium(III) boride


Chromium boride, also known as chromium monoboride, is an inorganic compound with the chemical formula CrB. It is one of the six stable binary borides of chromium, which also include Cr2B,Cr5B3, Cr3B4, CrB2, and CrB4. Like many other transition metal borides, it is extremely hard, has high strength, conducts heat and electricity as well as many metallic alloys, and has a high melting point. Unlike pure chromium, CrB is known to be a paramagnetic, with a magnetic susceptibility that is only weakly dependent on temperature. Due to these properties, among others, CrB has been considered as a candidate material for wear resistant coatings and high-temperature diffusion barriers.
It can be synthesized as powders by many methods including direct reaction of the constituent elemental powders, self-propagating high-temperature synthesis, borothermic reduction, and molten salt growth. Slow-cooling of molten aluminum solutions from high-temperatures has been used to grow large single crystals, with a maximum size of 0.6 mm x 0.6 mm x 8.3 mm.
CrB has an orthorhombic crystal structure that was first discovered in 1951, and subsequently confirmed by later work using single crystals. The crystal structure can be visualized as slabs face-sharing BCr6 trigonal prisms, in the ac-plane, that are stacked parallel to the <010> crystallographic direction. Similar to Cr3B4 and Cr2B3, the B atoms in the structure form covalent bonds with each other and are characterized by unidirectional B-B- chains parallel to the <001> crystallographic direction. The transition metal monoborides VB, NbB, TaB, and NiB have the same crystal structure.