Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 4, 2026

Tungsten borides

Tungsten borides are compounds of tungsten and boron. Their most remarkable property is high hardness. The Vickers hardness of WB or WB2 crystals is ~20 GPa and that of WB4 is ~30 GPa for loads exceeding 3 N.

Last revised
Jun 4, 2026
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≈ 1 min
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312 w
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Source
Structure of hexagonal WB2 source ↗
Structure of orthorhombic β-WB source ↗

Tungsten borides are compounds of tungsten and boron. Their most remarkable property is high hardness. The Vickers hardness of WB or WB2 crystals is ~20 GPa12 and that of WB4 is ~30 GPa for loads exceeding 3 N.3

Synthesis

Single crystals of WB2−x, x = 0.07–0.17 (about 1 cm diameter, 6 cm length) were produced by the floating zone method,1 and WB4 crystals can be grown by arc-melting a mixture of elemental tungsten and boron.3

Structure

WB2 has the same hexagonal structure as most diborides (AlB2, MgB2, etc.).4 WB has several forms, α (tetragonal), β (orthorhombic) and δ (tetragonal).2

Properties

δ-WB and WB2 crystals have metallic resistivities of 0.1 and 0.3 mΩ·cm, respectively. The oxidation of W2B, WB and WB2 is significant at temperatures above 600 °C. The final oxidation products contain WO3 and probably amorphous B2O3 or H3BO3. The melting temperatures of W2B, WB and WB2 are 2670, 2655 and 2365 °C, respectively.2

Properties
Material Vickers hardness (GPa) Bulk Modulus (GPa) Melting point (°C)
W2B 2670
WB ~20 2655
WB2 ~20 2365
WB4 ~30
References

References

  1. Otani, S.; Ishizawa, Y. (1995). "Preparation of WB2−x single crystals by the floating zone method". Journal of Crystal Growth. 154 (1–2): 81–84. Bibcode:1995JCrGr.154...81O. doi:10.1016/0022-0248(95)00155-7.
  2. Okada, S.; Kudou, K.; Lundström, T. (1995). "Preparations and Some Properties of W2B, δ-WB and WB2 Crystals from High-Temperature Metal Solutions". Japanese Journal of Applied Physics. 34 (1): 226–231. Bibcode:1995JaJAP..34..226O. doi:10.1143/JJAP.34.226. S2CID 95651766.
  3. Mohammadi, R.; Lech, A. T.; Xie, M.; Weaver, B. E.; Yeung, M. T.; Tolbert, S. H.; Kaner, R. B. (2011). "Tungsten tetraboride, an inexpensive superhard material". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 108 (27): 10958–62. Bibcode:2011PNAS..10810958M. doi:10.1073/pnas.1102636108. PMC 3131357. PMID 21690363.
  4. Woods, H. P.; Wawner, F. E.; Fox, B. G. (1966). "Tungsten Diboride: Preparation and Structure". Science. 151 (3706): 75. Bibcode:1966Sci...151...75W. doi:10.1126/science.151.3706.75. PMID 17842093. S2CID 7686903.