Stability of neat hydrophobic Room-Temperature Ionic Liquids (RTIL) [BuMeIm]X, where [BuMeIm]+ is 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium and X- is PF6-, and (CF3SO2)2N-, was studied under gamma radiolysis (137Cs) in an argon atmosphere and in air. It was found that the density, surface tension, and refraction index of RTILs are unchanged even by an absorbed dose of approximately 600 kGy. Studied RTILs exhibit considerable darkening when subjected to gamma irradiation. The light absorbance of ionic liquids increases linearly with the irradiation dose. Water has no influence on radiolytic darkening. A comparative study of [BuMeIm]X and [Bu4N][Tf2N] leads to the conclusion that the formation of colored products is related to gamma radiolysis of the [BuMeIm]+ cation. The radiolytic darkening kinetics of RTILs is influenced by the anions as follows: Cl- < (CF3SO2)2N- < PF6-. Electrospray ionization mass spectrometry and NMR analysis reveal the presence of nonvolatile radiolysis products at concentrations below 1 mol% for an absorbed dose exceeding 1200 kGy. Initial step of BuMeIm+ cation radiolysis is the loss of the Bu* group, the H* atom from the 2 position on the imidazolium ring, and the H* atom from the butyl chain. Radiolysis of ionic liquid anions yields F* and CF3* from PF6- and [Tf2N]-, respectively. Recombinations of these primary products of radiolysis lead to various polymeric and acidic species.
There is still an evident need for selective and stable ligands able to separate actinide(III) from lanthanide(III) metal ions in view of the treatment of the accumulated radioactive waste and of the recycling of minor actinides. We have herein demonstrated that hydrophilic 2,6-bis-triazolyl-pyridines are able to strip all actinides in all the different oxidation states from a diglycolamide-containing kerosene solution into an acidic aqueous phase. The ascertained high actinide selectivity, efficiency, extraction kinetics, and chemical/radiolytic stability spotlight this hydrophilic class of ligands as exceptional candidates for advanced separation processes fundamental for closing the nuclear fuel cycle and solving the environmental issues related to the management of existing nuclear waste.
ESI mass spectrometry was used to investigate the europium complexation by tridentate ligands L identical with 2,6-bis(5,6-dialkyl-1,2,4-triazin-3-yl)-pyridines (DATP) that have shown unique separation properties of actinides(III) from lanthanides(III) in nitric acid solutions. Complexes of three ligands, namely methyl (DMTP), n-propyl (DnPTP), and iso-propyl (DiPTP), have been investigated in acidic solutions to check the aqueous-phase stability of Eu(L)(3)(3+) ions identified previously in the solid state. The data obtained show, first, the presence of stable Eu(L)(3)(3+) ions with DnPTP (log beta(3)(app) = 12.0 +/- 0.5) and DiPTP (log beta(3)(app) = 14.0 +/- 0.6) in methanol/water (1:1 v/v) solutions under pH range 2.8-4.6 and, second, a mechanism whereby alkyl moieties contribute to a self-assembling process leading to the formation of Eu(L)(3)(3+) ions. Other complexes such as Eu(L)(2)(3+) ions are only observed for DnPTP (log beta(2)(app) = 6.7 +/- 0.5) and DMTP (log beta(2)(app) = 6.3 +/- 0.1) and Eu(L)(3+) only for DMTP (log beta(1)(app) = 2.9 +/- 0.2). The log beta(n)(app) values for the Eu(L)(n)(3+) (n = 1-3) complexes were determined at pH 2.8. Better insight was given in this study concerning the role of the hydrophobic exterior of the ligands for the design of a new range of extracting agents.
Combining experiment with theory reveals the role of self-assembly and complexation in metal-ion transfer through the water-oil interface. The coordinating metal salt Eu(NO3)3 was extracted from water into oil by a lipophilic neutral amphiphile. Molecular dynamics simulations were coupled to experimental spectroscopic and X-ray scattering techniques to investigate how local coordination interactions between the metal ion and ligands in the organic phase combine with long-range interactions to produce spontaneous changes in the solvent microstructure. Extraction of the Eu(3+)-3(NO3(-)) ion pairs involves incorporation of the "hard" metal complex into the core of "soft" aggregates. This seeds the formation of reverse micelles that draw the water and "free" amphiphile into nanoscale hydrophilic domains. The reverse micelles interact through attractive van der Waals interactions and coalesce into rod-shaped polynuclear Eu(III) -containing aggregates with metal centers bridged by nitrate. These preorganized hydrophilic domains, containing high densities of O-donor ligands and anions, provide improved Eu(III) solvation environments that help drive interfacial transfer, as is reflected by the increasing Eu(III) partitioning ratios (oil/aqueous) despite the organic phase approaching saturation. For the first time, this multiscale approach links metal-ion coordination with nanoscale structure to reveal the free-energy balance that drives the phase transfer of neutral metal salts.
The 2,6-bis(5,6-dialkyl-1,2,4-triazin-3-yl)pyridines (DATPs) belong to a new family of extracting agents recently developed in the framework of nuclear fuel reprocessing. These molecules exhibit exceptional properties to separate actinides(III) from lanthanides(III) in nitric acid solutions. A previous work showed that electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) is a reliable technique to provide solution data such as stoichiometries and conditional stability constants of various DATP complexes with europium and evidenced the unusual capability of DiPTP [bis(di-iso-propyltriazinyl)pyridine] ligand to form 1:3 complexes in nitric acid solution. This latter result is further investigated by considering DiPTP complexation features with the complete lanthanide family. As a starting point of the experimental procedure used for stability constant evaluation, the intensity distribution of ions detected by ESI-MS is studied for solutions containing Ln(NO(3))(3) in water/methanol (1:1 v/v) with the pH value set at 2.8 and 4.6 by HNO(3) additions. At pH 2.8, the nitrate anions are found to prevent lanthanides from processes occurring within the ion source: redox phenomena or gas-phase reactions with methanol which give species such as [Ln(MeO)(2)](+). Thus, the total intensity of MS signals from [Ln(NO(3))(2)(H(2)O)(p)(MeOH)(n)](+) ions is found proportional to the metal ion concentration. At pH 4.6, with lower nitrate concentration, the nature of the species identified on mass spectra depends on the electronic properties of the lanthanide elements. It is shown that Ln(III) complexation with DiPTP leads to the exclusive formation of 1:3 complexes with the whole lanthanide series which may be due not only to the hydrophobic exterior of the ligand but also to the unusual electronic density distribution in DATP ligands as compared with other aza-aromatic ligands. The conditional stability constants of the 1:3 lanthanide(III) complexes with DiPTP have been determined at pH 2.8 and are found to increase almost regularly from La (log beta(3)(app) = 11.7 +/- 0.1) to Lu (log beta(3)(app) = 16.7 +/- 0.8). Moreover, the kinetic stability of the gas-phase 1:3 complexes obtained by electrospray has been investigated by energy-resolved collision-induced dissociation and provides useful information on the bonding and structure.
The 2,6-bis(5,6-dialkyl-1,2,4-triazin-3-yl)pyridines (DATPs) belong to a new family of extracting agents recently developed in the framework of nuclear fuel reprocessing. These molecules exhibit exceptional properties to separate actinides(III) from lanthanides(III) in nitric acid solutions. In a previous work, the use of electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) provided data such as stoichiometries and conditional stability constants of various DATP complexes with europium and evidenced the unusual capability of DiPTP [bis(di-iso-propyltriazinyl)pyridine] ligand to form 1:3 complexes in nitric acid solution. This latter result has then been further investigated by considering DiPTP complexation features with the complete lanthanide family. Moreover, a complementary study of equilibria in solution with a non intrusive technique such as time-resolved laser-induced luminescence (TRLIL) seemed quite promising to determine thermochemical data such as enthalpy and entropy variations associated with the complexation reaction between Eu(III) and DiPTP. Furthermore, this TRLIL study may also allow ensuring that the observations made on mass spectra actually reflected the equilibrium in solution and not an intermediate state between liquid phase and gaseous phase. The investigation of europium(III) complexation with DiPTP by TRLIL described in this paper first led to highlight the exclusive formation of a 1:3 complex between europium(III) and the DiPTP ligand, specificity already pointed out by ESI-MS. Two different calculation methods, using either luminescence spectra and luminescence decay curves, have then been used to measure the conditional stability constant of the [Eu(DiPTP)(3)](3+) complex. Both methods gave similar results (log beta3(app)= 14.3 +/- 0.6 at pH 2.8) in good agreement with the one previously reported in ESI-MS studies (log beta3(app)= 14.0 +/- 0.6 at pH 2.8). Moreover, while considering the influence of temperature on the value of the stability constant, it was possible to estimate the enthalpy (DeltaH(beta3) = -29 +/- 3 kJ mol(-1) at pH 2.8) and entropy variations (DeltaS(beta3) = 173 +/- 10 J K(-1) mol(-1) at pH 2.8) associated with the [Eu(DiPTP)(3)](3+) complex formation.
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