RESUMO
Despite continuing and burgeoning interest in americium (Am) coordination chemistry in recent years, investigations of the electronic structures and bonding chemistry of high oxidation state americium complexes and their implications for minor actinide separation remain relatively less explored to date. Here, we used density functional theory (DFT) to create high oxidation states of americium but experimentally feasible models of Am(V) and Am(VI) complexes of phenanthroline ligand (DAPhen) as [AmO2(L)]1+/2+ and [AmO3(L)]1+ (L = 2,9-bis[(N,N-dimethyl)-carbonyl]-1,10-phenanthroline (oxo-DAPhen, LO) and 2,9-bis[(N,N-dimethyl)-thio-carbonyl]-1,10-phenanthroline (thio-DAPhen, LS)), meanwhile comparing these with [UO2(L)]2+. On the basis of the calculations, the Am(V) and Am(VI) oxidation state are thermodynamically feasible and can be stabilized by DAPhen ligands. From a comparative study, the strength of thio-DAPhen in the separation of high oxidation state Am emerges better than does oxo-DAPhen, which relates to the nature, energy level, and spatial arrangement of their frontier orbitals. This study provides fundamental knowledge toward understanding the transuranic separations processes, which has implications in designing new, more selective extraction processes for the separation of Am from curium (Cm) as well as lanthanide.
RESUMO
Uranium(III) compounds are very reactive and exhibit a broad range of chemical-bonding tendencies owing to the spatially diffused valence orbitals of uranium. A systematic study on the geometries, electronic structures, and chemical bonding of NU-XO (X = C, N, O) is performed using relativistic quantum chemistry approaches. The NU-CO and NU-NO complexes have an end-on structure, that is, (NU) (η1-CO) and (NU) (η1-NO), whereas NU-OO adopts a side-on ((NU) (η2-O2)) structure. The electronic structure analysis shows that UN exhibits efficient activation reactivity to molecules, especially to NO and O2, because of the significant U 7s/5f â XO 2π* electron transfer. Thus, the oxidation state of U is +V with the dianion ligand NO2- and O22- in NU-NO and NU-OO, respectively. Instead, U retains its usual +III oxidation state in NU-CO with a neutral CO ligand. The significant stability of NU-XO (X = C, N, O) is determined by the covalent U-X bonding which contains both X â U σ-, π-donation from the X lone pair and U 5f â XO 2π* back-donation contributions. The significant back-donation to the antibonding X-O 2π* orbital results in the obvious weakening of the X-O bonding.