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1.
Dalton Trans ; 52(29): 10023-10037, 2023 Jul 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37408368

RESUMO

Although ZrSiO4 is the most well-known compound in the zircon-structured family (space group I41/amd), the experimental conditions for preparing pure and well-crystallized phases that are doped with a tetravalent element via hydrothermal synthesis have never been clearly discussed in the literature. With the aim to answer this question, the experimental conditions of the preparation of ZrSiO4 and (Zr,Ce)SiO4 were investigated in order to synthesize well-crystallized and pure phases. A multiparametric study has been carried out using soft hydrothermal conditions with variables including reactant concentration, initial pH of the reactive medium, and duration of the hydrothermal treatment. Pure ZrSiO4 was obtained through hydrothermal treatment for 7 days at 250 °C, within a large acidity range (1.0 ≤ pH ≤ 9.0) and starting from CSi ≈ CZr ≥ 0.2 mol L-1. As hydrothermally prepared zircon structured phases can be both hydrated and hydroxylated, its annealed form was also studied after heating to 1000 °C. Based on these results, the synthesis of (Zr,Ce)SiO4 solid solutions was also investigated. The optimal hydrothermal conditions to acquire pure and crystallized phases were as follows: 7 days at 250 °C with initial pH = 1 and concentration of the reactants equal to 0.2 mol L-1. This led to Zr1-xCexSiO4 solid solutions with the incorporated Ce content up to 40 mol%. Samples were characterized using multiple methods, including laboratory and synchrotron PXRD, IR and Raman spectroscopies, SEM, and TGA. Moreover, it was found that these phases were thermally stable in air up to at least 1000 °C.

2.
Inorg Chem ; 60(2): 718-735, 2021 Jan 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33393766

RESUMO

Orthosilicates adopt the zircon structure types (I41/amd), consisting of isolated SiO4 tetrahedra joined by A-site metal cations, such as Ce and U. They are of significant interest in the fields of geochemistry, mineralogy, nuclear waste form development, and material science. Stetindite (CeSiO4) and coffinite (USiO4) can be formed under hydrothermal conditions despite both being thermodynamically metastable. Water has been hypothesized to play a significant role in stabilizing and forming these orthosilicate phases, though little experimental evidence exists. To understand the effects of hydration or hydroxylation on these orthosilicates, in situ high-temperature synchrotron and laboratory-based X-ray diffraction was conducted from 25 to ∼850 °C. Stetindite maintains its I41/amd symmetry with increasing temperature but exhibits a discontinuous expansion along the a-axis during heating, presumably due to the removal of water confined in the [001] channels, which shrink against thermal expansion along the a-axis. Additional in situ high-temperature Raman and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy also confirmed the presence of the confined water. Coffinite was also found to expand nonlinearly up to 600 °C and then thermally decompose into a mixture of UO2 and SiO2. A combination of dehydration and dehydroxylation is proposed for explaining the thermal behavior of coffinite synthesized hydrothermally. Additionally, we investigated high-temperature structures of two coffinite-thorite solid solutions, uranothorite (UxTh1-xSiO4), which displayed complex variations in composition during heating that was attributed to the negative enthalpy of mixing. Lastly, for the first time, the coefficients of thermal expansion of CeSiO4, USiO4, U0.46Th0.54SiO4, and U0.9Th0.1SiO4 were determined to be αV = 14.49 × 10-6, 14.29 × 10-6, 17.21 × 10-6, and 17.23 × 10-6 °C-1, respectively.

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