4.7 Article

Dehydration of the Uranyl Peroxide Studtite, [UO2(eta(2)-O-2)(H2O)(2)]center dot 2H(2)O, Affords a Drastic Change in the Electronic Structure: A Combined X-ray Spectroscopic and Theoretical Analysis

Journal

INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 57, Issue 4, Pages 1735-1743

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.7b02326

Keywords

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Funding

  1. TALISMAN [TAL_C03_02]
  2. Irish Research Council
  3. Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres [VH-NG-734]
  4. JARA-HPC initiative
  5. U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Biological and Environmental Research (BER)

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The minerals studtite, [UO2(eta(2)-O-2)(H2O)2]center dot 2H(2)O, and metastudtite, [UO2(eta(2)-O-2)(H2O)(2)], are uranyl peroxide minerals that are major oxidative alteration phases of UO2 under conditions of geological storage. The dehydration of studtite has been studied using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and Xray absorption spectroscopy. XPS of the U 4f region shows small but significant differences between studtite and metastudtite, with the 4f binding energy of studtite being the highest reported for a uranyl mineral studied by this technique. Further information about the changes in the electronic structure was elucidated using U M4- edge high-energy resolution X-ray absorption near-edge structure (HR-XANES) spectroscopy, which directly probes f orbital states. The transition from the 3d to 5f sigma* orbital is sensitive to variations in the U=O-axial bond length and to changes in the bond covalency. We report evidence that the covalence in the uranyl fragment decreases upon dehydration. Photoluminescence spectroscopy at near-liquid helium temperatures reveals significant spectral differences between the two materials, correlating with the X-ray spectroscopy results. A theoretical investigation has been conducted on the structures of both studtite and metastudtite and benchmarked to the HR-XANES spectra. These illustrate the sensitivity of the 3d to 5f sigma* transition toward U=O-axial bond variation. Small structural changes upon dehydration have been shown to have an important electronic effect on the uranyl fragment.

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