Affiliation:
1. Institute of Modern Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lanzhou 730000, China
Abstract
Abstract
Metal carbonyl complexes were used for studying the gas-phase chemical behavior of Mo, Ru, W and Os isotopes with an on-line low
temperature isothermal gas chromatography apparatus. Short-lived Mo and Ru isotopes were produced by a 252Cf spontaneous
fission source. Short-lived nuclides of W and Os were produced using the heavy ion reactions 19F +159Tb and
165Ho, respectively. Short-lived products were thermalized in a recoil chamber filled with a gas mixture of helium and
carbon monoxide. The carbonyls formed were then transported through capillaries to an isothermal chromatography column for study of the
adsorption behavior as a function of temperature. On-line isothermal chromatography (IC) experiments on Teflon (PTFE) and quartz
surfaces showed that short-lived isotopes of the listed elements can form carbonyl complexes which are very volatile and interact most
likely in physical sorption processes. Deduced adsorption enthalpies of Mo and Ru carbonyls were − 38 ± 2 kJ/mol and
− 36 ± 2 kJ/mol, respectively. These values are in good agreement with literature data, partly obtained with different
chromatographic techniques. A validation of the applied Monte Carlo model to deduce adsorption enthalpies with Mo isotopes of different
half-lives proved the validity of the underlying adsorption model. The investigations using a gas-jet system coupled to a heavy ion
accelerator without any preseparator clearly showed the limitations of the approach. The He and CO gas mixture, which was directly
added into the chamber, will result in decomposition of CO gas and produce some aerosol particles. After the experiment of
173W and 179Os in the heavy ion experiments, the Teflon column was covered by a yellowish deposit; the
adsorption enthalpy of W and Os carbonyls could therefore not be properly deduced using Monte Carlo simulations.
Subject
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Cited by
18 articles.
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