Estimation of thermodynamic and physicochemical properties of the alkali astatides: On the bond strength of molecular astatine (At2) and the hydration enthalpy of astatide (At)

Author:

Burgers Peter C.1ORCID,Zeneyedpour Lona1,Luider Theo M.1,Holmes John L.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, Laboratory of Neuro‐Oncology Erasmus Medical Center Rotterdam The Netherlands

2. Department of Chemistry and Biological Sciences University of Ottawa Ottawa Canada

Abstract

AbstractThe recent accurate and precise determination of the electron affinity (EA) of the astatine atom At0 warrants a re‐investigation of the estimated thermodynamic properties of At0 and astatine containing molecules as this EA was found to be much lower (by 0.4 eV) than previous estimated values. In this contribution we estimate, from available data sources, the following thermodynamic and physicochemical properties of the alkali astatides (MAt, M = Li, Na, K, Rb, Cs): their solid and gaseous heats of formation, lattice and gas‐phase binding enthalpies, sublimation energies and melting temperatures. Gas‐phase charge‐transfer dissociation energies for the alkali astatides (the energy requirement for M+At ➔ M0 + At0) have been obtained and are compared with those for the other alkali halides. Use of Born‐Haber cycles together with the new AE (At0) value allows the re‐evaluation of ΔHf (At0)g (=56 ± 5 kJ/mol); it is concluded that (At2)g is a weakly bonded species (bond strength <50 kJ/mol), significantly weaker bonded than previously estimated (116 kJ/mol) and much weaker bonded than I2 (148 kJ/mol), but in agreement with the finding from theory that spin‐orbit coupling considerably reduces the bond strength in At2. The hydration enthalpy (ΔHaq) of At is estimated to be −230 ± 2 kJ/mol (using ΔHaq[H+] = −1150.1 kJ/mol), in good agreement with molecular dynamics calculations. Arguments are presented that the largest alkali halide, CsAt, like the smallest, LiF, will be only sparingly soluble in water, following the generalization from hard/soft acid/base principles that “small likes small” and “large likes large.”

Publisher

Wiley

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