Login / Signup

The Role of Alkalis in Orchestrating Uranyl-Peroxide Reactivity Leading to Direct Air Capture of Carbon Dioxide.

Ana ArteagaTrevor ArinoGuy C MooreJenna L BustosMatthew K HortonKristin Aslaug PerssonJun LiWilliam F StickleTsuyoshi A KohlgruberRobert G SurbellaMay Nyman
Published in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2024)
Spectator ions have known and emerging roles in aqueous metal-cation chemistry, respectively directing solubility, speciation, and reactivity. Here, we isolate and structurally characterize the last two metastable members of the alkali uranyl triperoxide series, the Rb + and Cs + salts (Cs-U 1 and Rb-U 1 ). We document their rapid solution polymerization via small-angle X-ray scattering, which is compared to the more stable Li + , Na + and K + analogues. To understand the role of the alkalis, we also quantify alkali-hydroxide promoted peroxide deprotonation and decomposition, which generally exhibits increasing reactivity with increasing alkali size. Cs-U 1 , the most unstable of the uranyl triperoxide monomers, undergoes ambient direct air capture of CO 2 in the solid-state, converting to Cs 4 [U VI O 2 (CO 3 ) 3 ], evidenced by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, and Raman spectroscopy. We have attempted to benchmark the evolution of Cs-U 1 to uranyl tricarbonate, which involves a transient, unstable hygroscopic solid that contains predominantly pentavalent uranium, quantified by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. Powder X-ray diffraction suggests this intermediate state contains a hydrous derivative of CsU V O 3 , where the parent phase has been computationally predicted, but not yet synthesized.
Keyphrases