Facile Synthesis of Anhydrous Rare-Earth Trichlorides from their Oxides in Chloridoaluminate Ionic Liquids.

Anhydrous chlorides Ionic liquids Rare earths ionothermal synthesis one-pot synthesis

Journal

Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English)
ISSN: 1521-3773
Titre abrégé: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl
Pays: Germany
ID NLM: 0370543

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
07 Dec 2023
Historique:
revised: 06 12 2023
received: 16 11 2023
accepted: 07 12 2023
medline: 7 12 2023
pubmed: 7 12 2023
entrez: 7 12 2023
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Wide applications of anhydrous rare-earth (RE) trichlorides RECl3 in organometallic chemistry, for the synthesis of optical and magnetic materials and as catalysts require a facile approach for their synthesis. The known methods use or produce toxic substances, are complicated and have limited reliability and upscaling. It has been shown that task-specific ionic liquids (ILs) can dissolve many metal oxides without special reaction conditions at moderate temperature, making the metals accessible to downstream chemistry. Using imidazolium chloridoaluminate ILs, pure crystalline anhydrous RECl3 (RE = La-Nd, Sm-Dy) can be synthesized in one step from RE oxides in high yield. The Lewis acidic IL acts as solvent and reaction partner. The by-product [Al4O2Cl10]2-, which was detected spectroscopically, remains in solution. The reacted IL can be removed quantitatively by washing. ILs with various imidazolium cations and AlCl3 content and the effect of temperature and reaction time were tested.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38059405
doi: 10.1002/anie.202317480
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

e202317480

Informations de copyright

© 2023 Wiley-VCH GmbH.

Auteurs

Sameera Shah (S)

TU Dresden, Faculty of Chemistry and Food Chemistry, GERMANY.

Tobias Pietsch (T)

TU Dresden, Faculty of Chemistry and Food Chemistry, GERMANY.

Michael Ruck (M)

TU Dresden: Technische Universitat Dresden, Faculty of Chemistry and Food Chemistry, Helmholtzstr. 10, 01069, Dresden, GERMANY.

Classifications MeSH