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Lanthanide elements ionic radii

Scandium is very widely but thinly distributed and its only rich mineral is the rare thortveitite, Sc2Si20v (p. 348), found in Norway, but since scandium has only small-scale commercial use, and can be obtained as a byproduct in the extraction of other materials, this is not a critical problem. Yttrium and lanthanum are invariably associated with lanthanide elements, the former (Y) with the heavier or Yttrium group lanthanides in minerals such as xenotime, M "P04 and gadolinite, M M SijOio (M = Fe, Be), and the latter (La) with the lighter or cerium group lanthanides in minerals such as monazite, M P04 and bastnaesite, M C03F. This association of similar metals is a reflection of their ionic radii. While La is similar in size to the early lanthanides which immediately follow it in the periodic table, Y , because of the steady fall in ionic radius along the lanthanide series (p. 1234), is more akin to the later lanthanides. [Pg.945]

A transition from tris-glycolates->tris-glycolate dihydrate or hydroxyacetate-oxyacetate may be followed by a decrease in van der Waals repulsion, and the decrease is large for elements with small ionic radius. Thus the observations that the lanthanides with smaller ionic radius form the tris-glycolate dihydrates or hydroxyacetate-oxyacetate complexes 150,151) and have lower CN can be rationalized. A decrease in stability due to short oxygen-oxygen contacts is not an unique feature for the anhydrous tris-glycolates, but may be. an important property. [Pg.129]

Symbol Ho atomic number 67 atomic weight 164.93 a lanthanide series rare earth element electron configuration [Xe]4/ii6s2 valence state +3 metallic radius (coordination number 12) 1.767A atomic volume 18.78 cc/mol ionic radius Ho3+ 0.894A one naturally occurring isotope. Ho-165. [Pg.338]

Symbol La atomic number 57 atomic weight 138.91 a rare-earth transition metal, precursor to a series of 14 inner-transition elements known as the lanthanide series electron configuration [XejSdiGs oxidation state -i-3 atomic radius 1.879A ionic radius (LaS+) 1.061A electronegativity 1.17 two natural isotopes are La-139 (99.911%) and La-138 (0.089%). [Pg.443]

Symbol Lu atomic number 71 atomic weight 174.97 a lanthanide series element an /-block inner-transition metal electron configuration [Xe]4/i45di6s2 valence -1-3 atomic radius (coordination number 12) 1.7349A ionic radius (Lu3+) 0.85A two naturally-occurring isotopes Lu-176 (97.1%) and Lu-175(2.59%) Lu-172 is radioactive with a half-life of 4xl0i° years (beta-emission) several artificial isotopes known, that have mass numbers 155, 156, 167—174, 177—180. [Pg.509]

Symbol Nd atomic number 60 atomic weight 144.24 a rare earth lanthanide element a hght rare earth metal of cerium group an inner transition metal characterized by partially filled 4/ subshell electron configuration [Xe]4/35di6s2 most common valence state -i-3 other oxidation state +2 standard electrode potential, Nd + -i- 3e -2.323 V atomic radius 1.821 A (for CN 12) ionic radius, Nd + 0.995A atomic volume 20.60 cc/mol ionization potential 6.31 eV seven stable isotopes Nd-142 (27.13%), Nd-143 (12.20%), Nd-144 (23.87%), Nd-145 (8.29%), Nd-146 (17.18%), Nd-148 (5.72%), Nd-150 (5.60%) twenty-three radioisotopes are known in the mass range 127-141, 147, 149, 151-156. [Pg.597]

Symbol Tm atomic number 69 atomic weight 168.93 a lanthanide series element a rare earth metal electron configuration iXe]4/i36s2 valence +2, -i-3 atomic radius 1.73 A ionic radius, Tm " " 1.09 A for coordination number 7 one stable, natural isotope Tm-169 (100%) thirty radioisotopes in the mass range 146-168, 170-176 ty, 1.92 years. [Pg.932]

The large ionic radius of neodymium as a typical representative of the early lanthanide elements allowed the formation of a homoleptic tris(alkoxysilyl amide) complex [78] ... [Pg.141]

One property of a transition metal ion that is particularly sensitive to crystal field interactions is the ionic radius and its influence on interatomic distances in a crystal structure. Within a row of elements in the periodic table in which cations possess completely filled or efficiently screened inner orbitals, there should be a decrease of interatomic distances with increasing atomic number for cations possessing the same valence. The ionic radii of trivalent cations of the lanthanide series for example, plotted in fig. 6.1, show a relatively smooth contraction from lanthanum to lutecium. Such a trend is determined by the... [Pg.240]

Cations of the first transition series do not conform to the smooth pattern for the lanthanide elements shown in fig. 6.1. This is illustrated in fig. 6.2a by the radii of divalent cations in oxides containing transition metal ions in high-spin states. There is an overall decrease of octahedral ionic radius from Ca2+to Zn2+, but values first decrease to V2+, then rise to Mn2+, decrease to Ni2+, and rise again to Zn2+. The characteristic double-humped curve shown in fig. 6.2a has... [Pg.241]

Filling of the inner 4f electron shell across the lanthanide series results in decreases of ionic radii by as much as 15% from lanthanum to lutetimn, referred to as the lanthanide contraction (28). While atomic radius contraction is not rmique across a series (i.e., the actinides and the first two rows of the d-block), the fact that all lanthanides primarily adopt the tripositive oxidation state means that this particular row of elements exhibits a traceable change in properties in a way that is not observed elsewhere in the periodic table. Lanthanides behave similarly in reactions as long as the mnnber of 4f electrons is conserved (29). Thus, lanthanide substitution can be used as a tool to tune the ionic radius in a lanthanide complex to better elucidate physical properties. [Pg.5]

Lanthanides Element Valence shelP Ionic radius (pm) M3 Actinides Element Valence shell Ionic radius (pm) M3 M" ... [Pg.23]

The van der Waals radius, covalent radius and ionic radius are important parameters for metallic elements and features such as the lanthanide contraction have important chemical consequences. [Pg.37]

One probably can predict some of the crystallographic properties, of the tetrapositive element 104 by extrapolation from those of its homologs zirconium and hafnium. The ionic radii of tetrapositive zirconium (0.74 A) and hafnium (0.75 A) suggest an ionic radius of about 0.78 A for tetrapositive element 104, allowing for the smaller actinide rather than lanthanide contraction. Further one would expect the hydrolytic properties of element 104 and the solubilities of its compounds (such as the fluoride) to be similar to those of hafnium. The sum of... [Pg.114]

Similarities exist between the chemical characteristics of the actinides and those of the lanthanides. The metal ions are generally considered to be relatively hard Lewis acids, susceptible to complexation by hard (i.e., first row donor atom) ligands and to hydrolysis. Both actinide and lanthanide ions are affected by the lanthanide contraction, resulting in a contraction of ionic radius and an increasing reluctance to exhibit higher oxidation states later in the series. Most species are paramagnetic, although the electron spin-nuclear spin relaxation times often permit observation of NMR spectra, and disfavor observation of ESR spectra except at low temperatures. The elements display more than one accessible oxidation state, and one-electron redox chemistry is common. [Pg.191]

Element 39, with 4d 5s2 electron configuration, is also similar to the lanthanides. It occurs with the lanthanides in minerals the best source is xenotime, YPO4. Yttrium has properties approximately midway between those of Sc and La its compounds also resemble those of the heavy earths dysprosium and holmium, the ionic radius (0.90 A) being similar. [Pg.432]


See other pages where Lanthanide elements ionic radii is mentioned: [Pg.214]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.805]    [Pg.593]    [Pg.319]    [Pg.340]    [Pg.1063]    [Pg.1458]    [Pg.299]    [Pg.332]    [Pg.126]    [Pg.202]    [Pg.186]    [Pg.11]    [Pg.186]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.277]    [Pg.214]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.4199]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.73]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.1101]    [Pg.328]    [Pg.401]    [Pg.37]    [Pg.67]    [Pg.1078]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.241 ]




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Elemental ionic

Ionic elements

Ionic radius

Lanthanide elements

Lanthanide radii

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