A theoretical investigation of the hydrolysis of uranium hexafluoride: the initiation mechanism and vibrational spectroscopy

Depleted uranium hexafluoride (UF 6 ), a stockpiled byproduct of the nuclear fuel cycle, reacts readily with atmospheric humidity, but the mechanism is poorly understood. We compare several potential initiation steps at a consistent level of theory, generating underlying structures and vibrational m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP 2022-04, Vol.24 (16), p.9634-9647
Hauptverfasser: Lutz, Jesse J, Byrd, Jason N, Lotrich, Victor F, Jensen, Daniel S, Zádor, Judit, Hubbard, Joshua A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Depleted uranium hexafluoride (UF 6 ), a stockpiled byproduct of the nuclear fuel cycle, reacts readily with atmospheric humidity, but the mechanism is poorly understood. We compare several potential initiation steps at a consistent level of theory, generating underlying structures and vibrational modes using hybrid density functional theory (DFT) and computing relative energies of stationary points with double-hybrid (DH) DFT. A benchmark comparison is performed to assess the quality of DH-DFT data using reference energy differences obtained using a complete-basis-limit coupled-cluster (CC) composite method. The associated large-basis CC computations were enabled by a new general-purpose pseudopotential capability implemented as part of this work. Dispersion-corrected parameter-free DH-DFT methods, namely PBE0-DH-D3(BJ) and PBE-QIDH-D3(BJ), provided mean unsigned errors within chemical accuracy (1 kcal mol −1 ) for a set of barrier heights corresponding to the most energetically favorable initiation steps. The hydrolysis mechanism is found to proceed via intermolecular hydrogen transfer within van der Waals complexes involving UF 6 , UF 5 OH, and UOF 4 , in agreement with previous studies, followed by the formation of a previously unappreciated dihydroxide intermediate, UF 4 (OH) 2 . The dihydroxide is predicted to form under both kinetic and thermodynamic control, and, unlike the alternate pathway leading to the UO 2 F 2 monomer, its reaction energy is exothermic, in agreement with observation. Finally, harmonic and anharmonic vibrational simulations are performed to reinterpret literature infrared spectroscopy in light of this newly identified species. A mechanistic study of the hydrolysis of UF 6 reveals a dihydroxide intermediate facilitates formation of the observed solid product, UO 2 F 2 . Vibrational simulations show that the intermediate may have been detected decades ago by IR spectroscopy.
ISSN:1463-9076
1463-9084
DOI:10.1039/d1cp05268c