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Role of the Hydroxo Group in the Coordination of Citric Acid to Trivalent Americium
Author(s) -
Tamain Christelle,
Bonato Laura,
Aupiais Jean,
Dumas Thomas,
Guillaumont Dominique,
Barkleit Astrid,
Berthon Claude,
Solari Pier L.,
IkedaOhno Atsushi,
Guilbaud Philippe,
Moisy Philippe
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
european journal of inorganic chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.667
H-Index - 136
eISSN - 1099-0682
pISSN - 1434-1948
DOI - 10.1002/ejic.202000124
Subject(s) - deprotonation , americium , citric acid , chemistry , protonation , carboxylate , extended x ray absorption fine structure , coordination complex , inorganic chemistry , metal , capillary electrophoresis , coordination number , group (periodic table) , stereochemistry , organic chemistry , absorption spectroscopy , chromatography , ion , actinide , physics , quantum mechanics
The molecular characterization based on multi‐technique approach has led to major highlights on revealing the coordination of americium with citric acid. The structure of the different complexes at pH 1 and 3 are described. These characterizations are made possible by the comparison of the americium‐citric acid system with the americium‐tricarballylic acid (one analogue of the citric acid without the alpha‐hydroxo group). The structural analyses (Vis spectrophotometry, NMR, EXAFS, TRLFS and capillary electrophoresis) were carried out after the establishment of the speciation distribution diagrams, allowing to take into account the species repartition for structural analysis data treatment. For the 1:1 complex the hydroxo group is counter intuitively deprotonated and coordinated to the Am(III) at pH 1 as well as two carboxylate functions, whereas at pH 3 the hydroxo is not coordinated and stays protonated allowing the three carboxylate functions to coordinate the metallic cation. Therefore, the hydroxo group affects the Am complexation differently depending on the pHs: by inductive effect at pH 3, and by direct coordination at pH 1.