October 21, 2019
Journal Article

Properties of Pertechnic Acid

Abstract

Dilute aqueous pertechnic acid has long been known as a strong monoprotic acid which behaves as simple pertechnetate ion in aqueous solution. As pertechnic acid concentrates by evaporation, it becomes yellow and then dark red, and dark red crystalline material may ultimately be obtained. We show that as pertechnic acid concentrates, at least three compounds are formed – a yellow viscous liquid, a colorless (not red) crystalline solid, and a small amount of an intensely colored red-purple compound. The colorless crystalline compound melts at 118° C and can be melted and recrystallized several times with little decomposition. The red-purple compound is apparently not stable at room temperature and quickly decomposes if it is isolated. UV-Vis spectra show that Beer’s law does not hold as pertechnic acid concentrates by evaporation. We report densities, 99Tc nuclear magnetic resonance spectra, and ultraviolet-visible absorption spectra for highly pure aqueous pertechnic acid (accompanied by the other technetium compounds that form) ranging from 1 to 14 M in technetium concentration.

Revised: April 15, 2020 | Published: October 21, 2019

Citation

Soderquist C.Z., J.L. Weaver, H.M. Cho, B.K. McNamara, S.I. Sinkov, and J.S. McCloy. 2019. Properties of Pertechnic Acid. Inorganic Chemistry 58, no. 20:14015-14023. PNNL-SA-144963. doi:10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b01999