The minor actinides Am/Cm show multiple possibilities for coordination, providing great opportunities for their extraction and adsorption separation. Herein, we report complexation in an aqueous medium of AmIII/CmIII in the… Click to show full abstract
The minor actinides Am/Cm show multiple possibilities for coordination, providing great opportunities for their extraction and adsorption separation. Herein, we report complexation in an aqueous medium of AmIII/CmIII in the DOTA (H4DOTA = 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic acid) cavity with axial ligands (OH-, F-, and H2O), based on the energetics and electronic structure properties using density functional theory (DFT). The formation and substitution reactions of OH--capped complexes are more likely to occur due to their enhanced hydration Gibbs free energies, followed by F-, and then H2O. Both the longer An-ODOTA bond lengths and the larger bite angle (∠O-An-O) in the OH--capped complexes reflect the enhanced coordination provided by the axial ligand, slightly less so for F-. Energy decomposition analysis based on the electronic structure supports the preference for OH--capped complexes with a near-perfect balance between attractive and repulsive contributions toward the interaction. Furthermore, molecular orbital analysis revealed that the frontier molecular orbitals of Am and Cm complexes are substantially different; that is, the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) and lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) compositions of the Am complexes are all contributed by 5f, while the HOMO and LUMO compositions of the Cm complexes are derived from 5f and 6d, respectively. Finally, the metal-exchange reactions demonstrate competitive complexation of DOTA toward AmIII over CmIII for the OH--capped system. These results imply the importance of coordination chemistry in actinide chemistry in general and specifically in AmIII/CmIII solution chemistry.
               
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