Amorphous uranyl peroxide
Chemical compound
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Amorphous uranium(VI) oxide (am-U2O7) is an orange diuranyl compound, most commonly obtained from the thermal decomposition of uranyl peroxide tetrahydrate at temperatures between 150 and 500 °C (300 and 930 °F). It exists at room temperature as a powder. Am-U2O7 does not comprise a regular, long-range atomic structure, as demonstrated by its characteristic diffuse scattering pattern obtained by X-ray diffraction. As a result, the molecular structure of this material is little understood, although experimental and computational attempts to elucidate a local atomic environment have yielded some success.[2][3]
| Names | |
|---|---|
| IUPAC name
Diuranyl heptoxide | |
| Other names
Amorphous UO3 Amorphous uranyl peroxide | |
| Identifiers | |
3D model (JSmol) |
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| Properties | |
| am-U2O7 | |
| Molar mass | 588 g/mol |
| Appearance | Orange-brown powder |
| Density | 6.8 g/cm3 |
| Partially soluble | |
| Related compounds | |
| Uranyl peroxide Triuranium octoxide | |
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
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Production
Am-U2O7 is produced by the thermal decomposition of uranyl peroxide tetrahydrate at temperatures between 150 and 500 °C (300 and 930 °F), in either an air or nitrogen atmosphere. The resultant powder is tan orange in color. Further heating results in the formation of alpha uranium trioxide (α-UO3).
Structure and reactivity
Because of the amorphous nature of am-U2O7, the long-range atomic structure of this compound has not been determined. However, recent computational investigations, chiefly accomplished using density functional theory (DFT), have helped to predict a local structure.[2][4] Resembling a regular uranate compound, two uranyl (UO2+
2) groups are bridged by a μ2-O atom, where both uranium atoms are bonded to an O-O peroxo unit. In this case, a tetrameric ring would be the most stable conformation of the compound. The presence of a peroxide bond in species obtained in this temperature range is unusual; uranyl peroxide has previously been considered to be the only peroxide bearing uranium compound.[5] Developments on this structure propose a two-site metastudtite and UO3-like bonding environment, including the bond types already mentioned.[4] Few other suggestions for the local atomic structure of am-U2O7 have been made. However, a crystalline form of U2O7, calculated as a two-site 6 and 8-coordinate structure, has been reported.[3] In the same study, it was again found that the U2O7 species contained peroxide bonding. Am-U2O7 is known to undergo hydrolysis in the presence of water, to produce a crystalline metaschoepite powder. In addition to a change in crystallinity, this reaction involves a change in color from orange to bright yellow.
