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Choline chloride-formic acid mixture as a medium for the reduction of pertechnetates - electrochemical and spectroscopic studies.

Damian PołomskiNicole A DiBlasiKathy DardenneXavier GaonaKenneth CzerwinskiMaciej Chotkowski
Published in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2023)
The physicochemical properties of a choline chloride (ChCl) and formic acid (FA) mixture (1 : 2 molar ratio) have been studied over a broad range of temperatures (-140 to 60 °C). Differential scanning calorimetry has shown that the examined system remains in the liquid state at very low temperatures - a glass transition is observed in the range of -125 °C to -90 °C. The kinematic viscosity, ionic conductivity and the width of the electrochemical window determined for this system revealed its beneficial electrochemical properties. This indicates the suitability of ChCl : FA electrolytes in electrochemical measurements. In this non-aqueous electrolyte, electrochemical reduction of Tc(VII) ions has been studied for the first time. Cyclic voltammetry and chronopotentiometry experiments revealed that the electroreduction of pertechnetates is a multi-path process which leads to the formation of a Tc(IV) ionic form. X-Ray absorption spectroscopy of the latter revealed its structure as a TcCl 6 2- complex.
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