Though the oxygen ligands of the uranyl group are often treated as inert, this is not entirely the case.
Complexes The uranyl ion behaves as a
hard acceptor and forms weaker complexes with nitrogen-donor ligands than with fluoride and oxygen donor ligands, such as hydroxide,
carbonate,
nitrate,
sulfate and
carboxylate. There may be 4, 5 or 6 donor atoms in the equatorial plane. In uranyl nitrate, [UO2(NO3)2]·2H2O, for example, there are six donor atoms in the equatorial plane, four from
bidentate nitrato ligands and two from water molecules. The structure is described as
hexagonal bipyramidal. Other oxygen-donor ligands include
phosphine oxides and
phosphate esters. 2(NO3)2·2
(C2H5O)3PO -->As discovered by
Christian Friedrich Bucholz already in 1805, uranyl nitrate, UO2(NO3)2, can be
extracted from relatively concentrated aqueous solutions into
diethyl ether. The complex that is extracted has two nitrato ligands bound to the uranyl ion, making a complex with no electrical charge and also the water molecules are replaced by ether molecules, giving the whole complex notable
hydrophobic character. Electroneutrality is the most important factor in making the complex soluble in organic solvents. The nitrate ion forms much stronger complexes with the uranyl ion than it does with
transition metal and
lanthanide ions. For this reason only uranyl and other actinyl ions, including the
plutonyl ion, , can be extracted from mixtures containing other ions. Replacing the water molecules that are bound to the uranyl ion in aqueous solution by a second, hydrophobic, ligand increases the solubility of the neutral complex in the organic solvent. This has been called a synergic effect. The complexes formed by the uranyl ion in aqueous solution are of major importance both in the extraction of uranium from its ores and in nuclear fuel reprocessing. In industrial processes, uranyl nitrate is extracted with
tributyl phosphate (TBP, (CH3CH2CH2CH2O)3PO) as the preferred second ligand and kerosene the preferred organic solvent. Later in the process, uranium is stripped from the organic solvent by treating it with strong nitric acid, which forms complexes such as [UO2(NO3)4]2− which are more soluble in the aqueous phase. Uranyl nitrate is recovered by evaporating the solution. == Minerals ==