| Literature DB >> 28111487 |
Shayan Shahbazi1, S Adam Stratz1, John D Auxier2, Daniel E Hanson1, Matthew L Marsh3, Howard L Hall2.
Abstract
This work reports the thermodynamic characterizations of organometallic species as a vehicle for the rapid separation of volatile nuclear fission products via gas chromatography due to differences in adsorption enthalpy. Because adsorption and sublimation thermodynamics are linearly correlated, there is considerable motivation to determine sublimation enthalpies. A method of isothermal thermogravimetric analysis, TGA-MS and melting point analysis are employed on thirteen lanthanide 1,1,1,5,5,5-hexafluoroacetylacetone complexes to determine sublimation enthalpies. An empirical correlation is used to estimate adsorption enthalpies of lanthanide complexes on a quartz column from the sublimation data. Additionally, four chelates are characterized by SC-XRD, elemental analysis, FTIR and NMR.Entities:
Keywords: Hexafluoroacetylacetone; Lanthanides; Nuclear forensics; Rapid separations; Thermochromatography; Thermogravimetric analysis
Year: 2016 PMID: 28111487 PMCID: PMC5219043 DOI: 10.1007/s10967-016-5005-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Radioanal Nucl Chem ISSN: 0236-5731 Impact factor: 1.371
Fig. 1Sample mass loss curve for La[hfac]4
Fig. 2NH4·Ln[hfac]4, where Ln is La, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb or Lu
Thermodynamic results on Ln[hfac]4 compounds
| Compound | Color |
| Range (°C) | ∆ | ± | ∆ wt% | Pv (150 °C) (atm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| La[hfac]4 | White | 82–89 | 120–150 | 137.52 | 3.79 | 39.98 | 0.00028 |
| Pr[hfac]4 | Green | 172–180 | 115–145 | 159.97 | 5.65 | 44.67 | 0.00062 |
| Nd[hfac]4 | Rreddish blue | 188–197 | 126–150 | 193.81 | 5.84 | 35.94 | 0.00021 |
| Sm[hfac]4 | Yellow white | 180–193 | 110–140 | 99.36 | 3.05 | 20.20 | 0.00026 |
| Eu[hfac]4 | Yellow white | 200–208 | 115–145 | 86.04 | 3.29 | 24.76 | 0.00015 |
| Gd[hfac]4 | White | 217–220 | 125–155 | 103.88 | 3.60 | 35.72 | 0.00011 |
| Tb[hfac]4 | White | 214–218 | 125–155 | 103.91 | 3.64 | 39.15 | 0.00013 |
| Dy[hfac]4 | Yellow white | 196–205 | 115–130 | 150.19 | 10.99 | 15.00 | 0.00051 |
| 140–155 | 56.54 | 7.75 | 52.87 | 0.00010 | |||
| Ho[hfac]4 | Red | 170–180 | 112–136 | 105.81 | 6.07 | 30.66 | 0.00025 |
| Er[hfac]4 | Reddish white | 218–226 | 120–150 | 121.66 | 4.61 | 23.75 | 0.00015 |
| Tm[hfac]4 | Yellow white | 214–217 | 125–155 | 95.12 | 4.27 | 29.41 | 0.00012 |
| Yb[hfac]4 | Yellow white | 212–215 | 120–150 | 114.41 | 4.66 | 42.07 | 0.00023 |
| Lu[hfac]4 | White | 194–198 | 115–145 | 123.42 | 4.62 | 33.29 | 0.00029 |
Fig. 3Isothermal jump TGA–DTG spectrum for Sm[hfac]4
Adsorption enthalpy and decomposition onset
| Compound | −∆ | ± | Decomposition onset (°C) |
|---|---|---|---|
| La[hfac]4 | 104.01 | 6.64 | 237 |
| Pr[hfac]4 | 117.48 | 7.38 | 220 |
| Nd[hfac]4 | 137.79 | 7.92 | 224 |
| Sm[hfac]4 | 81.12 | 6.05 | 200 |
| Eu[hfac]4 | 73.12 | 5.96 | 220 |
| Gd[hfac]4 | 83.83 | 6.20 | 210 |
| Tb[hfac]4 | 83.85 | 6.21 | 205 |
| Dy[hfac]4 | 111.61 | 9.20 | 200 |
| 55.42 | 7.12 | ||
| Ho[hfac]4 | 84.99 | 6.88 | 193 |
| Er[hfac]4 | 94.50 | 6.63 | 205 |
| Tm[hfac]4 | 78.57 | 6.27 | 200 |
| Yb[hfac]4 | 90.15 | 6.56 | 200 |
| Lu[hfac]4 | 95.55 | 6.65 | 195 |
Fig. 4Adsorption enthalpy and sublimation temperature as function of ionic radius
Fig. 5TGA–DTG spectrum for Gd[hfac]4
Fig. 6Crystal structure of NH3 +(Gd[hfac]4−)