From: Chemistry World publication of the Royal Society of Chemistry
By
Kit Chapman
October
13, 2021 -- Uranium forms an unusually strong triple covalent bond with nitrile
groups, confounding predictions about the bond strength of actinides compared
with the remainder of the periodic table.
Elements usually follow a pattern in the
strength of their covalent bonds, with groups 1 and 2 forming more ionic bonds
and covalency increasing as you move across the periodic table. While the bond
strengths of actinides have not been studied in depth, they are likely to sit
between the ionic lanthanides and the more covalent d-block elements.
However, computational analysis had
suggested that uranium, an actinide, forms stronger covalent bonds than the
transition metals – chromium, molybdenum and tungsten– in group 6. A group led
by Stephen Liddle at the University of Manchester, UK, now decided to
investigate the covalency of uranium’s bonds experimentally to see if the predictions
held up.
The team used nitrogen nuclear magnetic
resonance (15N NMR) spectroscopy to probe a terminal uranium(vi)
nitride complex, and found the nitrogen in the U–N triple bond had a very large
chemical shift. The team then used density functional theory calculations,
along with a technique known as NMR shielding tensor analysis, to determine the
bond strength. These indicated it was more covalent than equivalent bonds in
elements in group 4–6.
Liddle describes the results as a ‘turn
up for the books’, highlighting that the investigation ‘redefines the
parameters of 15N NMR spectroscopy’. ‘Even more importantly,
data that suggest the U–N triple bond is more covalent than d-block analogues
rather tips the anticipated ordering [of covalency in the periodic table] on
its head,’ he adds.
The bond strength also confirms a
prediction made more than 100 years ago by Nobel prize winner Fritz Haber, who
observed that uranium was the best catalyst for nitrogen fixation – although
from 1909, iron was used as it is more cost-effective. Today, the Haber
process, used to create ammonia via nitrogen from air for products including
fertilisers, is credited with saving billions of lives from famine.
Thomas
Albrecht-Schönzart, director of the Center for Actinide Science &
Technology at Florida State University, US, praised the work as ‘remarkable’,
with important implications in catalysis. ‘Haber’s historic observation that
uranium was the best catalyst for this reaction continues to bear fruit in
unexpected areas,’ he says.
Jochen
Autschbach, a professor at the State University of New York at Buffalo, US,
who developed the relativistic shielding analysis used by Liddle’s team, says
that ‘this combination of theory and NMR experiments is a very powerful tool’
for determining covalent bonding characteristics. ‘More generally, when there
are claims of extraordinary bonding, it is always good to back this up with as
many theory and experiment comparisons as possible,’ he adds. ‘Likely, systems
with comparably strong covalent bonds involving uranium will continue to be
discovered.’
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