Back home   |   Bookmark   |   Start page   |   Site map    
Services
News
Channels
Home & Family
Leisure
Technology
Business
Science
Site Search
Free email




Secret lives of two elements uncovered by sandia researchers

TheAllINeed.com
(NC&T/SNL) Sandia researcher May Nyman and colleagues reported on the new-found disparities in a cover story of the Oct. 28 Dalton Transactions, an international inorganic chemistry journal published by the Royal Society of Chemistry, the British equivalent of the American Chemical Society. The research paper also received the distinction of being picked among "the hottest science" by referees of that journal on its web page.

Sandia is a National Nuclear Security Administration laboratory.

Tantalum oxides are used in medical implants, hypoallergenic surgical tools, and ceramics that hold nuclear waste because of their inertness in liquid media, says Nyman. They resist destruction by radioactivity and do not poison the body by deteriorating in its tissues, but are hard to work with because they precipitate out of solution in an uncontrolled and undesirable way.

Niobium is easier to work with, but less inert for reasons formerly not well understood.

"Tantalum and niobium are in the same column on the periodic table," says Nyman. "Their electronic configurations are related and their ions are virtually identical in size. Generally, the prevailing belief has been that their characteristics are very similar. They are described that way in chemistry textbooks. But we found that tantalum oxides are considerably more inert and less soluble than niobium oxides, and we wanted to understand why."

The cluster above is an ideal structural and reactivity model for niobate and tantalate surfaces, such as those used for metal surgical implants (Photo: Sandia Labs)
The unexpected difference, as well as a new "soft chemistry" method of forming compounds containing them, means that new materials with tailored properties may be formed more simply. The old method, called "the volcano method," involved melting oxides together at very high temperatures. The "soft" method was published by Nyman and others this past summer and involves chemical finesse rather than brute force.

To explore differences between the two elements, Nyman's group used the soluble Lindqvist "cluster" ions.

The ion is composed of tantalum and oxygen or niobium and oxygen, and contains only 25 atoms each. The predictable and repetitive structure of these collections of ions lends itself to study more than do tantalum or niobium oxide surfaces, which are formed of a disordered collection of oxygen and tantalum or niobium atoms. Therefore the ion was a possible model to study the surface — if they behaved the same way. "Much to our surprise, the Lindqvist ions proved to be ideal models for both the structural features and the chemical reactivity of the tantalum and niobium oxide surfaces," notes postdoc colleague and first author Travis Anderson.

"We did one of the few studies of both oxide surfaces and cluster ions where both behave the same way," Nyman said, "and the study revealed unprecedented differences in the behavior of niobium and tantalum oxides."

The difference was in the way that water exchanges with oxygen atoms in both the clusters and at the surfaces of these materials. In the tantalum materials it exchanges in a way that makes it unstable. Precipitating itself onto a surface is one way it stabilizes. In niobium materials, the reaction with water results in stable species that can stay in solution more easily.

Understanding how these oxides behave in aqueous media should lead to the production of new and better tantalum and niobium oxide materials.


About the Author
©2006 All rights reserved

More articles
New plastic transparent
Nanotubes to repair aircraft wings
Quantum dots blink
CO2 emissions
Mit gel changes color on demand
Two elements uncovered
Chemical constituents
Nanotech to make robocops
Development of olfactory system
Make water
Chicken droppings
Hydrogen molecule
Photosynthesis
Optical possibilities
Citrus juice, vitamin c
First life on Earth
Chemical world record
Water lubricates proteins
Thermoelectric materials
Super water repellent
Quotes
Heres tae the fool on the hill and his pals that are down in the valley.- Wolfstone, Glass and the Can

He thought the formula for water was H-I-J-K-L-M-N-O (H-to-O).

He uses statistics as a drunken man uses lampposts — for support rather than illumination. — Andrew Lang.


Writers
If you are a writer and want to see your article published at Theallineed.com, just click here to submit.

Info
Today...
In the news...
UN atomic watchdog chief circulates latest report on Iran
The new report covers developments since International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Mohamed ElBaradei issued his last report on 22 February 2008.
Do you think that Judge should be nominated for the United States Supreme Court?
Yes, the President picked him and the Senate should just confirm him
Yes, he will help put a stop to activist rulings
No, he will royally srcew up the country
No, silent nominations never turn out well
 
Things to ponder
One nice thing about egotists: they don't talk about other people.

Did you know...
Deborah Winger did the voice of E.T.

Quote of the day
The last time somebody said, 'I find I can write much better with a word processor.', I replied, 'They used to say the same thing about drugs.'
Roy Blount Jr.

Featured article
Implementing New Technology
Quite often, in the eager anticipation to install the latest and greatest engine, the other parts of the car were forgotten or overlooked. Sure you have a powerful new engine, but your steering wheel is gone.

 
© 2002 - 2007 Lexur