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Dive into the research topics where Thomas E. Albrecht-Schmitt is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas E. Albrecht-Schmitt.


Angewandte Chemie | 2010

NDTB‐1: A Supertetrahedral Cationic Framework That Removes TcO4− from Solution

Shuao Wang; Evgeny V. Alekseev; Juan Diwu; William H. Casey; Brian L. Phillips; Wulf Depmeier; Thomas E. Albrecht-Schmitt

A cubic thorium borate possesses a porous supertetrahedral cationic framework with extraframework borate anions. These anions are readily exchanged with a variety of environmental contaminants, especially those from the nuclear industry, including chromate and pertechnetate.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Umbellate distortions of the uranyl coordination environment result in a stable and porous polycatenated framework that can effectively remove cesium from aqueous solutions.

Yanlong Wang; Zhiyong Liu; Yuxiang Li; Zhuanling Bai; Wei Liu; Yaxing Wang; Xiaomei Xu; Chengliang Xiao; Daopeng Sheng; Juan Diwu; Jing Su; Zhifang Chai; Thomas E. Albrecht-Schmitt; Shuao Wang

Searching for new chemically durable and radiation-resistant absorbent materials for actinides and their fission products generated in the nuclear fuel cycle remain highly desirable, for both waste management and contamination remediation. Here we present a rare case of 3D uranyl organic framework material built through polycatenating of three sets of graphene-like layers, which exhibits significant umbellate distortions in the uranyl equatorial planes studied thoroughly by linear transit calculations. This unique structural arrangement leads to high β and γ radiation-resistance and chemical stability in aqueous solutions within a wide pH range from 3 to 12. Being equipped with the highest surface area among all actinide compounds known to date and completely exchangeable [(CH3)2NH2](+) cations in the structure, this material is able to selectively remove cesium from aqueous solutions while retaining the polycatenated framework structure.


Chemical Communications | 2010

Cubic and rhombohedral heterobimetallic networks constructed from uranium, transition metals, and phosphonoacetate: new methods for constructing porous materials

Andrea N. Alsobrook; Brad G. Hauser; Joseph T. Hupp; Evgeny V. Alekseev; Wulf Depmeier; Thomas E. Albrecht-Schmitt

Four heterobimetallic U(vi)/M(ii) (M = Mn, Co, Cd) carboxyphosphonates have been synthesized. M(2)[(UO(2))(6)(PO(3)CH(2)CO(2))(3)O(3)(OH)(H(2)O)(2)]·16H(2)O (M = Mn(ii), Co(ii), and Cd(ii)) adopt cubic three-dimensional network structures with large cavities approximately 16 Å in diameter that are filled with co-crystallized water molecules. [Cd(3)(UO(2))(6)(PO(3)CH(2)CO(2))(6)(H(2)O)(13)]·6H(2)O forms a rhombohedral channel structure with hydrated Cd(ii) within the channels. The cubic compound (Co) displays differential gas absorption with a surface area for CO(2) uptake of 40 m(2) g(-1) at 273 K, and no uptake of N(2) at 77 K.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

Use of bifunctional phosphonates for the preparation of heterobimetallic 5f-3d systems.

Andrea N. Alsobrook; Wei Zhan; Thomas E. Albrecht-Schmitt

The hydrothermal reaction of phosphonoacetic acid (H2PO3CH2C(O)OH, PAA) with UO3 and Cu(C2H3O2)2 .H2O results in the formation of the crystalline heterobimetallic uranium(VI)/copper(II) phosphonates UO2Cu(PO3CH2CO2)(OH)(H2O)2 ( UCuPAA-1), (UO2) 2Cu(PO3CH2CO2)2(H2O)3 (UCuPAA-2), and [H3O][(UO2) 2Cu2(PO3CH2CO2)3(H2O)2 ( UCuPAA-3). The addition of sodium hydroxide to the aforementioned reactions results in the formation of Na[UO2(PO3CH2CO2)].2H2O (NaUPAA-1). These compounds display 1D (UCuPAA-1), 2D (UCuPAA-2, NaUPAA-1), and 3D (UCuPAA-3) architectures wherein the phosphonate portion of the ligand primarily coordinates the uranium(VI) centers; whereas the carboxylate moiety preferentially, but not exclusively, binds to the copper(II) ions. Fluorescence measurements on all four compounds demonstrate that the presence of copper(II) mostly quenches the emission from the uranyl moieties.


Angewandte Chemie | 2010

Differential Ion Exchange in Elliptical Uranyl Diphosphonate Nanotubules

Pius O. Adelani; Thomas E. Albrecht-Schmitt

A simple route to a uranyl diphosphonate with an elliptical nanotubular structure has been developed. The interior of the nanotubules provides a different chemical environment than the exterior with regards to the exchange of Cs{sup +} cations for Ag{sup +} cations, thus demonstrating that uranyl nanotubules are functional materials.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2010

Comparison of Thorium(IV) and Uranium(VI) Carboxyphosphonates

Pius O. Adelani; Thomas E. Albrecht-Schmitt

The hydrothermal reactions of thorium nitrate and uranyl acetate with carboxyphenylphosphonic acid and HF result in the formation of ThF(2)(PO(3)C(6)H(4)CO(2)H) and UO(2)(PO(3)HC(6)H(4)CO(2)H)(2).2H(2)O, respectively. ThF(2)(PO(3)C(6)H(4)CO(2)H) adopts a pillared structure constructed from thorium oxyfluoride layers built from [ThO(4)F(4)] units that are bridged by carboxyphenylphosphonate to yield a three-dimensional network. UO(2)(PO(3)HC(6)H(4)CO(2)H)(2).2H(2)O forms one-dimensional chains of UO(6) tetragonal bipyramids that are bridged by the phosphonate moiety of the ligand. The carboxylate portion of the structure links the chains together into layers via a hydrogen-bonding network. The higher effective charge and more isotropic coordination of the Th(IV) centers versus the uranium centers contained within uranyl cations allow for coordination by the protonated carboxylate portions of the ligands to the thorium cations, which does not occur with uranium in carboxyphosphonates. UO(2)(PO(3)HC(6)H(4)CO(2)H)(2).2H(2)O displays vibronically coupled fluorescence and the potential for energy transfer from the ligand to the charge-transfer bands of the uranyl cations. The main fluorescence by the ligand is quenched in ThF(2)(PO(3)C(6)H(4)CO(2)H).


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Differentiating between trivalent lanthanides and actinides

Matthew J. Polinski; Daniel J. Grant; Shuao A. Wang; Evgeny V. Alekseev; Justin N. Cross; Eric M. Villa; Wulf Depmeier; Laura Gagliardi; Thomas E. Albrecht-Schmitt

The reactions of LnCl(3) with molten boric acid result in the formation of Ln[B(4)O(6)(OH)(2)Cl] (Ln = La-Nd), Ln(4)[B(18)O(25)(OH)(13)Cl(3)] (Ln = Sm, Eu), or Ln[B(6)O(9)(OH)(3)] (Ln = Y, Eu-Lu). The reactions of AnCl(3) (An = Pu, Am, Cm) with molten boric acid under the same conditions yield Pu[B(4)O(6)(OH)(2)Cl] and Pu(2)[B(13)O(19)(OH)(5)Cl(2)(H(2)O)(3)], Am[B(9)O(13)(OH)(4)]·H(2)O, or Cm(2)[B(14)O(20)(OH)(7)(H(2)O)(2)Cl]. These compounds possess three-dimensional network structures where rare earth borate layers are joined together by BO(3) and/or BO(4) groups. There is a shift from 10-coordinate Ln(3+) and An(3+) cations with capped triangular cupola geometries for the early members of both series to 9-coordinate hula-hoop geometries for the later elements. Cm(3+) is anomalous in that it contains both 9- and 10-coordinate metal ions. Despite these materials being synthesized under identical conditions, the two series do not parallel one another. Electronic structure calculations with multireference, CASSCF, and density functional theory (DFT) methods reveal the An 5f orbitals to be localized and predominately uninvolved in bonding. For the Pu(III) borates, a Pu 6p orbital is observed with delocalized electron density on basal oxygen atoms contrasting the Am(III) and Cm(III) borates, where a basal O 2p orbital delocalizes to the An 6d orbital. The electronic structure of the Ce(III) borate is similar to the Pu(III) complexes in that the Ce 4f orbital is localized and noninteracting, but the Ce 5p orbital shows no interaction with the coordinating ligands. Natural bond orbital and natural population analyses at the DFT level illustrate distinctive larger Pu 5f atomic occupancy relative to Am and Cm 5f, as well as unique involvement and occupancy of the An 6d orbitals.


Nature Communications | 2017

Overcoming the crystallization and designability issues in the ultrastable zirconium phosphonate framework system

Tao Zheng; Zaixing Yang; Daxiang Gui; Zhiyong Liu; Xiangxiang Wang; Xing Dai; Shengtang Liu; Linjuan Zhang; Yang Gao; Lanhua Chen; Daopeng Sheng; Yanlong Wang; Juan Diwu; Jianqiang Wang; Ruhong Zhou; Zhifang Chai; Thomas E. Albrecht-Schmitt; Shuao Wang

Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) based on zirconium phosphonates exhibit superior chemical stability suitable for applications under harsh conditions. These compounds mostly exist as poorly crystallized precipitates, and precise structural information has therefore remained elusive. Furthermore, a zero-dimensional zirconium phosphonate cluster acting as secondary building unit has been lacking, leading to poor designability in this system. Herein, we overcome these challenges and obtain single crystals of three zirconium phosphonates that are suitable for structural analysis. These compounds are built by previously unknown isolated zirconium phosphonate clusters and exhibit combined high porosity and ultrastability even in fuming acids. SZ-2 possesses the largest void volume recorded in zirconium phosphonates and SZ-3 represents the most porous crystalline zirconium phosphonate and the only porous MOF material reported to survive in aqua regia. SZ-2 and SZ-3 can effectively remove uranyl ions from aqueous solutions over a wide pH range, and we have elucidated the removal mechanism.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2017

Efficient and Selective Uptake of TcO4– by a Cationic Metal–Organic Framework Material with Open Ag+ Sites

Daopeng Sheng; Lin Zhu; Chao Xu; Chengliang Xiao; Yanlong Wang; Yaxing Wang; Lanhua Chen; Juan Diwu; Jing Chen; Zhifang Chai; Thomas E. Albrecht-Schmitt; Shuao Wang

99Tc is one of the most problematic radioisotopes in used nuclear fuel owing to its combined features of high fission yield, long half-life, and high environmental mobility. There are only a handful of functional materials that can remove TcO4- anion from aqueous solution and identifying for new, stable materials with high anion-exchange capacities, fast kinetics, and good selectivity remains a challenge. We report here an 8-fold interpenetrated three-dimensional cationic metal-organic framework material, SCU-100, which is assembled from a tetradentate neutral nitrogen-donor ligand and two-coordinate Ag+ cations as potential open metal sites. The structure also contains a series of 1D channels filled with unbound nitrate anions. SCU-100 maintains its crystallinity in aqueous solution over a wide pH range from 1 to 13 and exhibits excellent β and γ radiation-resistance. Initial anion exchange studies show that SCU-100 is able to both quantitatively and rapidly remove TcO4- from water within 30 min. The exchange capacity for the surrogate ReO4- reaches up to 541 mg/g and the distribution coefficient Kd is up to 1.9 × 105 mL/g, which are significantly higher than all previously tested inorganic anion sorbent materials. More importantly, SCU-100 can selectively capture TcO4- in the presence of large excess of competitive anions (NO3-, SO42-, CO32-, and PO43-) and remove as much as 87% of TcO4- from the Hanford low-level waste melter off-gas scrubber simulant stream within 2 h. The sorption mechanism is well elucidated by single crystal X-ray diffraction, showing that the sorbed ReO4- anion is able to selectively coordinate to the open Ag+ sites forming Ag-O-Re bonds and a series of hydrogen bonds. This further leads to a single-crystal-to-single-crystal transformation from an 8-fold interpenetrated framework with disordered nitrate anions to a 4-fold interpenetrated framework with fully ordered ReO4- anions. This work represents a practical case of TcO4- removal by a MOF material and demonstrates the promise of using this type of material as a scavenger for treating anionic radioactive contaminants during the nuclear waste partitioning and remediation processes.


Chemical Communications | 2011

Recent progress in actinide borate chemistry

Shuao Wang; Evgeny V. Alekseev; Wulf Depmeier; Thomas E. Albrecht-Schmitt

The use of molten boric acid as a reactive flux for synthesizing actinide borates has been developed in the past two years providing access to a remarkable array of exotic materials with both unusual structures and unprecedented properties. [ThB(5)O(6)(OH)(6)][BO(OH)(2)]·2.5H(2)O possesses a cationic supertetrahedral structure and displays remarkable anion exchange properties with high selectivity for TcO(4)(-). Uranyl borates form noncentrosymmetric structures with extraordinarily rich topological relationships. Neptunium borates are often mixed-valent and yield rare examples of compounds with one metal in three different oxidation states. Plutonium borates display new coordination chemistry for trivalent actinides. Finally, americium borates show a dramatic departure from plutonium borates, and there are scant examples of families of actinides compounds that extend past plutonium to examine the bonding of later actinides. There are several grand challenges that this work addresses. The foremost of these challenges is the development of structure-property relationships in transuranium materials. A deep understanding of the materials chemistry of actinides will likely lead to the development of advanced waste forms for radionuclides present in nuclear waste that prevent their transport in the environment. This work may have also uncovered the solubility-limiting phases of actinides in some repositories, and allows for measurements on the stability of these materials.

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Juan Diwu

Soochow University (Suzhou)

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Richard E. Sykora

University of South Alabama

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Zhifang Chai

Soochow University (Suzhou)

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Eric M. Villa

University of Notre Dame

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Samantha K. Cary

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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