Publication | Closed Access
Uranyl Coordination Environment in Hydrophobic Ionic Liquids: An in Situ Investigation
206
Citations
15
References
2003
Year
Situ InvestigationEngineeringHydrophobic Ionic LiquidsOrganic ChemistryChemistryInorganic CompoundInterface ChemistryUranyl Nitrate ComplexesBiophysicsSolid-state IonicBiochemistryPhysical ChemistryDeep Eutectic SolventNatural SciencesCoordination ComplexCoordination EnvironmentIonic ConductorInterfacial StudyMolecular ComplexUranyl Coordination Environment
Different inner-sphere coordination environments are observed for the uranyl nitrate complexes formed with octyl-phenyl-N,N-diisobutylcarbamoylmethylphosphine oxide and tributyl phosphate in dodecane and in the hydrophobic ionic liquids (ILs) [C(4)mim][PF(6)] and [C(8)mim][N(SO(2)CF(3))(2)]. Qualitative differences in the coordination environment of the extracted uranyl species are implied by changes in peak intensity patterns and locations for uranyl UV-visible spectral bands when the solvent is changed. EXAFS data for uranyl complexes in dodecane solutions is consistent with hexagonal bipyramidal coordination and the existence of UO(2)(NO(3))(2)(CMPO)(2). In contrast, the complexes formed when uranyl is transferred from aqueous nitric acid solutions into the ILs exhibit an average equatorial coordination number of approximately 4.5. Liquid/liquid extraction results for uranyl in both ILs indicate a net stoichiometry of UO(2)(NO(3))(CMPO)(+). The concentration of the IL cation in the aqueous phase increases in proportion to the amount of UO(2)(NO(3))(CMPO)(+) in the IL phase, supporting a predominantly cation exchange mechanism for partitioning in the IL systems.
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