In aqueous solution there are some differences in hydrolysis behaviour, not only in the log β* values (definition of β*) but in nature of the polymeric species that can be formed. In the table below, 1,2 stoichiometry means a species with one actinyl ion and two hydroxide ions, etc. This is one of the few instances of notable differences between plutonyl and uranyl.
+log β* hydrolysis constant values
!Stoichiometry!!uranyl IUPAC SC-Database Values shown are averages from various determinations!!plutonyl
|
−5.76 |
−11.69 |
−7.79 |
−19.3 |
Another significant difference is that plutonyl is a much stronger oxidizing agent than uranyl. The standard reduction potentials for aqueous solutions are shown in the next table.
+Standard reduction potentials /V !Couple!!uranyl!!plutonyl |
1.04 |
1.01 |
The plutonyl ion is always associated with other ligands. The most common arrangement is for the so-called equatorial ligands to lie in a plane perpendicular to the O–Pu–O line and passing through the plutonium atom. With four ligands, as in PuO2Cl42− the plutonium has a distorted octahedral environment, with a square of ligand atoms in the equatorial plane. In plutonyl nitrate, PuO2(NO3)22H2O, as in uranyl nitrate there is a hexagon of six ligand atoms in the equatorial plane, four oxygen atoms from bidentate nitrate ions and two oxygens from the water molecules. Plutonyl nitrate, like uranyl nitrate, is soluble in diethyl ether. The complex that is extracted has no electrical charge. This is the most important factor in making the complex soluble in organic solvents. Also the water molecules are replaced by ether molecules. Replacing the water molecules that are bound to the plutonyl ion in aqueous solution by a second, hydrophobic, ligand increases the solubility of the neutral complex in the organic solvent. This has been called a synergic effect.
The solubility of plutonyl nitrate in organic solvents is utilized in the PUREX process. Plutonyl nitrate is extracted with tributyl phosphate, (CH3CH2CH2CH2O)3PO, TBP, as the preferred second ligand, and kerosene the preferred organic solvent. It is recovered by treatment with aqueous ferrous sulfamic acid which selectively reduces the plutonium to the +3 oxidation state in the aqueous solution, leaving the uranium in the organic phase. Plutonyl complex chemistry is an active research area, for dealing with environmental contamination.
|
|