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Important Trends and Anomalous Properties of Boron

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Estimated time: 6 minutes
CBSE: Class 12

Key Points: Important Trends and Anomalous Properties of Boron

Trends in Physical Properties:

Property Down the Group Exceptions
Atomic/ionic radii Increases Atomic size of Ga < Al
Ionisation enthalpy Decreases IE₁ of Tl > In; IE₁ of Ga = Al
Tendency to show +1 oxidation state Increases (inert pair effect)
Melting point Decreases (Ga to Tl) B has very high melting point
Lewis acid strength Increases
Tendency to form ionic compounds Increases
Tendency to form covalent compounds Decreases

Trends in Chemical Properties:

  • Group 13 elements are less reactive than Group 1 and 2 elements.
  • All Group 13 elements form ionic compounds except boron, which forms covalent compounds.
  • Reaction with oxygen: Boron forms a mixture of oxide (B₂O₃) and nitride (BN) when heated at 700°C in air. Oxygen has no effect on aluminium in normal conditions, but in moist air, a thin protective oxide layer forms on its surface.
  • Reaction with water: Except for boron, Group 13 elements decompose in boiling water to produce hydrogen gas. Example: 2Al + 6H2O → 2Al(OH)3 + 3H2
  • Reaction with halogens: All Group 13 elements react with halogens to form trihalides (MX₃), except thallium (which prefers monohalides due to the inert pair effect).

Anomalous Properties of Boron:

Boron behaves differently from the rest of Group 13 because of:

  • Small size – high polarising power
  • High ionisation energy – does not form B³⁺ ions easily
  • High electronegativity
  • Absence of vacant d-orbitals – cannot expand its coordination number beyond 4
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