Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.51, No.16, 9017-9028, 2012
Tc-99 and Re Incorporated into Metal Oxide Polyoxometalates: Oxidation State Stability Elucidated by Electrochemistry and Theory
The radioactive element technetium-99 (Tc-99, half-life = 2.1 x 10(5) years, beta(-) of 253 keV), is a major byproduct of U-235 fission in the nuclear fuel cycle. Tc-99 is also found in radioactive waste tanks and in the environment at National Lab sites and fuel reprocessing centers. Separation and storage of the long-lived Tc-99 in an appropriate and stable waste-form is an important issue that needs to be addressed. Considering metal oxide solid-state materials as potential storage matrixes for Tc, we are examining the redox speciation of Tc on the molecular level using polyoxometalates (POMs) as models. In this study we investigate the electrochemistry of Tc complexes of the monovacant Wells-Dawson isomers, alpha(1)-P2W17O6110- (alpha 1) and alpha(2)-P2W17O6110- (alpha 2) to identify features of metal oxide materials that can stabilize the immobile Tc(IV) oxidation state accessed from the synthesized Tc(V)O species and to interrogate other possible oxidation states available to Tc within these materials. The experimental results are consistent with density functional theory (DFT) calculations. Electrochemistry of K7-nHn[(TcO)-O-V(alpha(1)-P2W17O61)] ((TcO)-O-V-alpha 1), K7-nHn[(TcO)-O-V(alpha(2)-P2W17O61)] ((TcO)-O-V-alpha 2) and their rhenium analogues as a function of pH show that the Tc-containing derivatives are always more readily reduced than their Re analogues. Both Tc and Re are reduced more readily in the lacunary alpha 1 site as compared to the alpha 2 site. The DFT calculations elucidate that the highest oxidation state attainable for Re is VII while, under the same electrochemistry conditions, the highest oxidation state for Tc is VI. The M-V -> M-IV reduction processes for (TcO)-O-V-alpha 1 are not pH dependent or only slightly pH dependent suggesting that protonation does not accompany reduction of this species unlike the (MO)-O-V-alpha 2 (M = Tc-99, Re) and (ReO)-O-V-alpha 1 where M-V/IV reduction process must occur hand in hand with protonation of the terminal M=O to make the pi*(M=O) orbitals accessible to the addition of electrons. This result is consistent with previous extended X-ray absorption fine structure (EXAFS) and X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) data that reveal that the Tc-V is "pulled" into the -alpha 1 framework and that may facilitate the reduction of (TcO)-O-V-alpha 1 and stabilize lower Tc oxidation states. This study highlights the inequivalency of the two sites, and their impact on the chemical properties of the Tc substituted in these positions.