The study of rhenium pentacarbonyl complexes using single-atom chemistry in the gas phase

Phys Chem Chem Phys. 2019 Mar 27;21(13):7147-7154. doi: 10.1039/c8cp07844k.

Abstract

A gas-phase chemical study of rhenium carbonyls was carried out using short-lived radioisotopes produced at a heavy-ion accelerator. The Re isotopes produced in the nuclear reactions of natGd(23Na,xn)172-177Re were pre-separated with a gas-filled recoil ion separator and their carbonyls were synthesized in a mixture of inert gas and carbon monoxide. Using a low temperature isothermal chromatography apparatus, the adsorption enthalpies of Re carbonyls were derived to be ΔHads = -42 ± 2 kJ mol-1 on a Teflon® surface by fitting the external chromatograms with a Monte Carlo simulation program. A chemical yield of 25% relative to that of the transport yield for Re by a He/KCl gas-jet was achieved. The laser-ablation time-of-flight mass-spectrometric technique was employed to identify the species of Re carbonyls produced in the gas phase. The most stable species was deduced to be Re(CO)5 based on the mass-spectrometric analysis as well as quantum chemistry calculations.