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Featured researches published by Berend Wassink.


Hydrometallurgy | 2000

Solvent extraction separation of zinc and cadmium from nickel and cobalt using Aliquat 336, a strong base anion exchanger, in the chloride and thiocyanate forms

Berend Wassink; David Dreisinger; Jane Howard

Abstract Zinc and cadmium solvent extraction separation from cobalt and nickel was studied using 30% Aliquat 336 in either the chloride (R4NCl) or thiocyanate (R4NSCN) forms, and in a mixed aromatic-aliphatic diluent. With NaCl solutions good separation was achieved using R4NCl. Separation improved with decreasing NaCl concentration, but was still effective with 200 g/L NaCl. Zinc and cadmium loaded principally as [MCl4]2− complexes. The maximum loading was 18 g/L for zinc and 28 g/L for cadmium. There was a small selectivity for cadmium over zinc. The mole ratio of organic reagent to metal (R4N:M) was about 2. Separation with R4NSCN was studied with NaCl, NaNO3 and Na2SO4 solutions. Zinc extraction was favored over cadmium in each case and cadmium extraction decreased markedly in the order NaCl>NaNO3>Na2SO4. Maximum zinc loadings were, respectively, 20 g/L, 9 g/L and 6 g/L. The selectivity for zinc over cadmium was rationalized on the basis of the different types of thiocyanate complexes formed by zinc and cadmium. From chloride solution the loaded complexes contained chloride and thiocyanate. The R4N:M ratio was about 2. From nitrate solution, [M(SCN)4]2− species loaded. With chloride or nitrate medium, separation of zinc from cobalt and nickel was good, but separation of cadmium from cobalt was only moderate at best. Thiocyanate losses from the organic phase in these two systems were generally low with zinc loading (


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1987

Mechanisms of the hydrometalation (insertion) and stoichiometric hydrogenation reactions of conjugated dienes effected by manganese pentacarbonyl hydride: processes involving the radical pair mechanism

Berend Wassink; Marian J. Thomas; Steven C. Wright; Daniel J. Gillis; Michael C. Baird


Organometallics | 1988

Mechanism of carbonyl "insertion" reactions of the compounds cis-MMeX(CO)2(PMe3)2 (M = iron, ruthenium; x = iodo, cyano). Stereochemistry at the metal centers

G. Cardaci; G. Reichenbach; G. Bellachioma; Berend Wassink; Michael C. Baird


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1989

Organometallic nitrosyl chemistry. Part 38. Insertions of electrophiles into metal-carbon bonds: formation of new carbon-nitrogen linkages mediated by the (.eta.5-cyclopentadienyl)dinitrosylchromium group

Peter Legzdins; George B. Richter-Addo; Berend Wassink; Frederick W. B. Einstein; Richard H. Jones; Anthony C. Willis


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1986

Organometallic nitrosyl chemistry. 28. Insertion of the nitrosonium ion into a chromium-methyl bond

Peter Legzdins; Berend Wassink; Frederick W. B. Einstein; Anthony C. Willis


Organometallics | 1983

Organometallic nitrosyl chemistry. 19. Protonation vs. oxidative cleavage of the isoelectronic complexes [(.eta.5-C5H4R)M(LO)2]2 (M = Cr, Mn, or Fe; L = C or N; R = H or Me) by HBF4

Peter Legzdins; David T. Martin; Charles R. Nurse; Berend Wassink


Hydrometallurgy | 2013

Kinetics study of selenium removal from copper sulfate–sulfuric acid solution

Mohammad Mokmeli; Berend Wassink; David Dreisinger


Organometallics | 1988

Organometallic nitrosyl chemistry. 36. Syntheses and properties of anionic and neutral radical complexes containing CpM(NO)2 Groups (M = Cr, Mo, or W)

Peter Legzdins; Berend Wassink


Organometallics | 1984

Organometallic nitrosyl chemistry. 21. Redox properties of bis[(.eta.5-cyclopentadienyl)dinitrosylchromium] and related complexes

Peter Legzdins; Berend Wassink


Hydrometallurgy | 2014

Thermodynamics and kinetics study of tellurium removal with cuprous ion

Mohammad Mokmeli; David Dreisinger; Berend Wassink

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Peter Legzdins

University of British Columbia

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David Dreisinger

University of British Columbia

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Mohammad Mokmeli

University of British Columbia

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Anthony C. Willis

Australian National University

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Bryce Difley

University of British Columbia

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David T. Martin

University of British Columbia

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