Its low weight, high melting point, and large degree of hardness make elemental boron a
technologically interesting material. The large number of allotropes, mostly containing over a hundred atoms
in the unit cell, and their difficult characterization challenge both experimentalists and theoreticians. Even
the ground state of this element is still under discussion. For over 30 years, scientists have attempted to
determine the relative stability of α- and β-rhombohedral boron. We use density functional calculations in
the generalized gradient approximation to study a broad range of possible β-rhombohedral structures
containing interstitial atoms and partially occupied sites within a 105 atoms framework. The two most stable
structures are practically degenerate in energy and semiconducting. One contains the experimental 320
atoms in the hexagonal unit cell, and the other contains 106 atoms in the triclinic unit cell. When populated
with the experimental 320 electrons, the 106 atom structure exhibits a band gap of 1.4 eV and an in-gap
hole trap at 0.35 eV above the valence band, consistent with known experiments. The total energy of
these two structures is 23 meV/B lower than the original 105 atom framework, but it is still 1 meV/B above
the α phase. Adding zero point energies finally makes the β phase the ground state of elemental boron by
3 meV/B. At finite temperatures, the difference becomes even larger