1 / 8

HYDROTHERMAL METAL SOLUBILITY AND SPECIATION

HYDROTHERMAL METAL SOLUBILITY AND SPECIATION. THE WATER MOLECULE. Oxygen. Hydrogen. Hydrogen. Electrons from hydrogen.

ledford
Télécharger la présentation

HYDROTHERMAL METAL SOLUBILITY AND SPECIATION

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HYDROTHERMAL METAL SOLUBILITY AND SPECIATION

  2. THE WATER MOLECULE Oxygen Hydrogen Hydrogen Electrons from hydrogen Water is a polar molecule, which explains why it is such an excellent solvent, It can form positively directed shells around anions and negatively directed shells around cations.

  3. SIMPLE SOLVATION Simple ion solvation (hydration)

  4. SOLVATION AND THE HYDROGEN BOND - - + + + + + - - + + - - - + Ice crystals + + H-bond- - - - - + - + Hydrogen bonds impart structure to water and ice. + + +

  5. THE DIELECTRIC CONSTANT A measure of the capacity of a solvent to solvate ions - high values equal high solvation capacity. External field (capacitor) - + Internal field (dipoles) - + δ- - + δ- δ+ - + δ+ - + - + - + - + Charged, oriented dipoles Uncharged, disoriented dipoles Determined by creating an electrical field between two capacitor plates and measuring the voltage. The oriented dipoles create an internal field that opposes the external field. The dielectric constant is the ratio of the voltage required to align the dipoles in a vacuum over that in water.

  6. DIELECTRIC CONSTANT () OF WATER The dielectric constant of water decreases with increasing temperature and decreasing pressure, leading to a corresponding decrease in its power to solvate ions 4 90 70 50 Kbar 30 20 2 10 5 Cp L+V 200 400 600 T OC Eugster (1986)

  7. H H H H H H H H H H H H COMPLEXATION As the dielectric constant of water decreases, the water molecule shells around metal ions and anions break down facilitating the formation of complex molecules involving these species, e.g., CuCl42-. These complexes will be surrounded by weaker solvation (hydration) shells. O O Complex molecule solvation (hydration) O 2- O O O

  8. Pearson’s HSAB Principles and Aqueous Metal Complexes Hard acids (large Z/r) bond with hard bases (ionic bonding) and soft acids (small Z/r) with soft bases (covalent bonding). Borderline Soft Hard Acids H+, Na+>K+ Al3+>Ga3+ Y3+,REE3+ (Lu>La) Mo+6, W+6, U+6 Zr4+,Nb5+ Fe2+,Mn2+,Cu2+ Zn2+>Pb2+,Sn2+, As3+>Sb3+=Bi3+ Au+>Ag+>Cu+ Hg2+>Cd2+ Pt2+>Pd2+ Bases F-,OH-,CO32- >HCO3- SO42- >HSO4- PO43- Cl- HS->H2S CN-,I->Br- Pearson (1963)

More Related