Abstract Generated abstract
This study examines ammonium pyrrolidinedithiocarbamate as an analytical reagent for niobium, focusing on conditions for quantitative precipitation and solvent extraction of the niobium complex. The reagent was synthesized and tested with niobium solutions prepared in tartaric, citric, and oxalic acids, using radioactive niobium to follow recovery and evaluating extraction into organic solvents across different acidities. Niobium pyrrolidinedithiocarbamate was quantitatively precipitated from tartaric and oxalic acid solutions at pH 4 to 5 with excess reagent, and chloroform was found to be the most effective extraction solvent, giving quantitative extraction in weakly acidic medium and in concentrated hydrochloric acid. The reagent showed little reaction with several other metals, suggesting its usefulness for separating niobium by extraction.
Full Text
Chemistry
I. M. Gibalo, Corresponding Member of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR, I. P. Alimarin,
P. Davaadorzh
Extraction of Niobium Pyrrolidinedithiocarbamate
Derivatives of dithiocarbamic acid are valuable analytical reagents for rare elements. Among this group of compounds, sodium diethyldithiocarbamate \((\mathrm{Na}=\mathrm{DDTC})\) has been well studied. As for other derivatives, they have been studied insufficiently. Among the little-studied ones is ammonium pyrrolidinedithiocarbamate \((\mathrm{NH}_4=\mathrm{PDTC})\). This reagent is more stable in aqueous solutions than \(\mathrm{Na}=\mathrm{DDTC}\). It has been used \((^1)\) for the gravimetric determination of niobium and for separating it from tantalum by precipitation. We have for the first time studied the conditions for quantitative precipitation of niobium with \(\mathrm{NH}_4=\mathrm{PDTC}\) and the extraction of the compound formed by various organic solvents immiscible with water.
Experimental part. The reagent was synthesized by us from pyrrolidine \((^2)\); tetrahydrofuran \((^3)\) was used as the starting substance.
\(\mathrm{NH}_4=\mathrm{PDTC}\), recrystallized from alcohol, is a white crystalline substance melting at \(128\text{–}130^\circ\), readily soluble in water and alcohol, and practically insoluble in organic solvents \((\mathrm{CHCl}_3, \mathrm{CCl}_4\), etc.).
Niobium solutions were prepared by fusing niobium pentoxide containing the radioactive isotope \(\mathrm{Nb}\text{–}95\) with a tenfold amount of potassium pyrosulfate and dissolving the melt in 2–3% tartaric, citric, and oxalic acids. The concentration of \(\mathrm{Nb}_2\mathrm{O}_5\) was \(\sim 1\) mg/ml, and the radioactivity was 4500–5500 counts/min/ml.
Fig. 1. Extraction of niobium pyrrolidinedithiocarbamate with chloroform \((2\text{–}5\ \mathrm{mg}\ \mathrm{Nb}_2\mathrm{O}_5)\); 1—tartaric-acid, 2—oxalic-acid, 3—citric-acid solutions.
Experiments with different amounts of \(\mathrm{Nb}_2\mathrm{O}_5\) \((2\text{–}30\ \mathrm{mg})\) showed that niobium pyrrolidinedithiocarbamate \((\mathrm{Nb}=\mathrm{PDTC})\) is precipitated quantitatively only from tartaric-acid and oxalic-acid solutions in the form of a white amorphous precipitate by a 20-fold excess of reagent in the presence of an acetate buffer at pH 4–5.
In concentrated hydrochloric acid, \(\mathrm{NH_4\text{-}PDTK}\) forms an orange-red compound with niobium. We studied the extraction of \(\mathrm{Nb\text{-}PDTK}\) with many organic solvents at various hydrogen-ion concentrations. The best solvent is chloroform. The dependence of extraction with chloroform on the acidity of the solutions is shown in the figure, from which it is evident that \(\mathrm{Nb\text{-}PDTK}\) is quantitatively extracted in a weakly acidic medium (pH 4–5) and in concentrated HCl (8.5–10 M). Citric acid, as well as fluoride and sulfate ions, hinder the extraction of \(\mathrm{Nb\text{-}PDTK}\).
For quantitative recovery of niobium, the extraction must be repeated 2–3 times at 20–30 min after the addition of a 15–20-fold excess of the dry reagent; the shaking time is 2–3 min. \(\mathrm{NH_4\text{-}PDTK}\) does not react with tantalum, titanium, zirconium, tungsten, beryllium, rare earths, and other elements, and can be used for their separation from niobium by the extraction method.
Moscow State University
named after M. V. Lomonosov
Received
22 I 1963
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