Due to a large discrepancy between theory and experiment, the electronic
character of crystalline boron carbide B13C2 has been a controversial
topic in the field of icosahedral boron-rich solids. We demonstrate that this
discrepancy is removed when configurational disorder is accurately considered
in the theoretical calculations. We find that while ordered ground state
B13C2 is metallic, configurationally disordered B13C2,
modeled with a superatom-special quasirandom structure method, goes through a
metal to non-metal transition as the degree of disorder is increased with
increasing temperature. Specifically, one of the chain-end carbon atoms in the
CBC chains substitutes a neighboring equatorial boron atom in a B12
icosahedron bonded to it, giving rise to a B11Ce(BBC) unit. The
atomic configuration of the substitutionally disordered B13C2 thus
tends to be dominated by a mixture between B12(CBC) and
B11Ce(BBC). Due to splitting of valence states in
B11Ce(BBC), the electron deficiency in B12(CBC) is gradually
compensated