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Advancing understanding of actinide(iii) (Ac, Am, Cm) aqueous complexation chemistry.

Authors :
Jones, Zachary R
Jones, Zachary R
Livshits, Maksim Y
White, Frankie D
Dalodière, Elodie
Ferrier, Maryline G
Lilley, Laura M
Knope, Karah E
Kozimor, Stosh A
Mocko, Veronika
Scott, Brian L
Stein, Benjamin W
Wacker, Jennifer N
Woen, David H
Jones, Zachary R
Jones, Zachary R
Livshits, Maksim Y
White, Frankie D
Dalodière, Elodie
Ferrier, Maryline G
Lilley, Laura M
Knope, Karah E
Kozimor, Stosh A
Mocko, Veronika
Scott, Brian L
Stein, Benjamin W
Wacker, Jennifer N
Woen, David H
Source :
Chemical science; vol 12, iss 15, 5638-5654; 2041-6520
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The positive impact of having access to well-defined starting materials for applied actinide technologies - and for technologies based on other elements - cannot be overstated. Of numerous relevant 5f-element starting materials, those in complexing aqueous media find widespread use. Consider acetic acid/acetate buffered solutions as an example. These solutions provide entry into diverse technologies, from small-scale production of actinide metal to preparing radiolabeled chelates for medical applications. However, like so many aqueous solutions that contain actinides and complexing agents, 5f-element speciation in acetic acid/acetate cocktails is poorly defined. Herein, we address this problem and characterize Ac3+ and Cm3+ speciation as a function of increasing acetic acid/acetate concentrations (0.1 to 15 M, pH = 5.5). Results obtained via X-ray absorption and optical spectroscopy show the aquo ion dominated in dilute acetic acid/acetate solutions (0.1 M). Increasing acetic acid/acetate concentrations to 15 M increased complexation and revealed divergent reactivity between early and late actinides. A neutral Ac(H2O)6 (1)(O2CMe)3 (1) compound was the major species in solution for the large Ac3+. In contrast, smaller Cm3+ preferred forming an anion. There were approximately four bound O2CMe1- ligands and one to two inner sphere H2O ligands. The conclusion that increasing acetic acid/acetate concentrations increased acetate complexation was corroborated by characterizing (NH4)2M(O2CMe)5 (M = Eu3+, Am3+ and Cm3+) using single crystal X-ray diffraction and optical spectroscopy (absorption, emission, excitation, and excited state lifetime measurements).

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Chemical science; vol 12, iss 15, 5638-5654; 2041-6520
Notes :
application/pdf, Chemical science vol 12, iss 15, 5638-5654 2041-6520
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367393964
Document Type :
Electronic Resource