There are several good ways to make boron nitride. I tried a couple of them out. The reaction of urea with boron trioxide I found to be by far the most reliable, so this is the one I decided to present in this post.
The first step is to convert boric acid to the required boron trioxide.
To a metal can, I added 16g of boric acid. I then strongly heated the can over a camping stove. The boric acid began to melt and give off steam. The mixture became a glassy bubbling syrup as the boric acid was converted to boron trioxide. After about 15 minutes, the bubbling had almost completely stopped and I allowed the mixture to cool. Upon cooling, the boron trioxide solidified into a brittle glass-like substance. I scraped the product out of the can and was left with 8.6g of boron trioxide.
With boron trioxide prepared, I moved on to making the boron nitride.
I ground up the 8.6g of boron trioxide (made above) with 20g of urea. I then poured this mixture into a metal can, which I heated over a camping stove for 30 minutes with gradually increasing heat and fairly constant stirring. The mixture formed a bubbling melt, which diminished after a few minutes to a solid mixture. If the heat is increased too rapidly, a significant amount of boron trioxide can fail to react. I made this mistake, so after the 30 minutes of heating, I added an additional 10g of urea and continued heating for 10 minutes. This probably wouldn't have been necessary had I not started heating so strongly at the beginning.
Anyway after this, I allowed the mixture to cool to room temperature. I then crushed the mixture up and added it to a 150ml beaker containing 75ml of dilute hydrochloric acid. I left this to soak overnight. The next morning most of the white boron nitride had settled to the bottom of the beaker. Above it there was a thin layer of brown material. I stirred the mixture up, waited until the most of the boron nitride had settled, then carefully decanted and discarded as much of the supernatant liquid-brown material suspension as I could. I then washed the residual boron nitride with 100ml of cold water. I filtered off the boron nitride, washed it on the filter with 20ml of ethanol, then dried it. I was left with 2.15g of white boron nitride which is a 35% yield.
2 B(OH)3 ==> B2O3 + 3 H2O / B2O3 + (NH2)2CO ==> 2 BN + 2 H2O + CO2
B2O3 + 3 C2H5OH ==> (C2H5)3BO3 + B(OH)3
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