Issue 39, 2024

Quantum tunnelling effect in the cistrans isomerization of uranyl tetrahydroxide

Abstract

The role of quantum tunnelling (QT) in the proton transfer kinetics of the uranyl tetrahydroxide (UTH, [UO2(OH)4]2−) cis to trans isomerization was computationally studied under three possible reaction pathways. The first pathway involved a direct proton transfer from the hydroxide ligand to the oxo atom. In the other two pathways, one or two water molecules were added to the second sphere. The first H2O, bound by hydrogen bonds to the ligands, acts as a bridge enabling a proton shuttling, a concerted hopping of a proton from the hydroxide to the oxo atom similar to the Grotthuss mechanism. In the third pathway, the second water molecule does not participate in the H-transfer chain, but works as an anchor for the first water molecule, limiting its movement and therefore enhancing the QT. Since experimentally the reaction occurs in water, the first two pathways (no water or one H2O) serve only as models of the gas phase behaviour, while the third pathway will always be thermodynamically and kinetically preferred. The effects were investigated in the gas phase as well as in a continuum aqueous model, including the H/D Kinetic Isotope Effect (KIE). The results indicate that at very low temperatures, QT is the only mechanism that permits the reaction kinetics, consistent with the large computed KIE. At higher temperatures, thermally activated tunnelling competes with the classical crossing over the potential barrier.

Graphical abstract: Quantum tunnelling effect in the cis–trans isomerization of uranyl tetrahydroxide

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 Jul 2024
Accepted
10 Sep 2024
First published
11 Sep 2024

Dalton Trans., 2024,53, 16271-16279

Quantum tunnelling effect in the cistrans isomerization of uranyl tetrahydroxide

Y. Ben-Eliyahu and S. Kozuch, Dalton Trans., 2024, 53, 16271 DOI: 10.1039/D4DT02071E

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