Gadolinium(III) iodide explained

Gadolinium(III) iodide is an iodide of gadolinium, with the chemical formula of GdI3. It is a yellow, highly hygroscopic solid with a bismuth(III) iodide-type crystal structure. In air, it quickly absorbs moisture and forms hydrates. The corresponding oxide iodide is also readily formed at elevated temperature.

Preparation

Gadolinium(III) iodide can be obtained by reacting gadolinium with iodine:[1]

2 Gd + 3 I2 → 2 GdI3

It can also be obtained by reacting gadolinium with mercury(II) iodide in a vacuum at 500 °C:

2 Gd + 3 HgI2 → 2 GdI3 + 3 Hg

Gadolinium(III) iodide can be obtained by the reaction between gadolinium(III) oxide and hydroiodic acid, crystallizing into the hydrate form. The hydrate form can be heated with ammonium iodide to form the anhydrous form.[2]

Gd2O3 + 6 HI → 2 GdI3 + 3 H2O

Reactions

Gadolinium(III) iodide reacts with gadolinium and zinc in an argon atmosphere heated to 850 °C to obtain Gd7I12Zn.[3] It reacts with gadolinium, carbon, and gadolinium nitride in a tantalum tube at 897 °C to obtain nitrocarbide Gd4I6CN.[4]

External reading

Notes and References

  1. [Georg Brauer]
  2. Kutscher, J.; Schneider, A. Preparation of anhydrous lanthanide halides, especially iodides. Inorganic and Nuclear Chemistry Letters, 1971. 7 (9): 815-819.
  3. Inorganic Chemistry. 47. 11. en. 0020-1669. 2008-06-02. 4656–4660. 10.1021/ic800024n. Gd 7 I 12 Zn: A Group 12 Atom in the Octahedral Gd 6 Cluster. 2022-07-08. Mar’yana Lukachuk, Lorenz Kienle, Chong Zheng, Hansjürgen Mattausch, Arndt Simon. 18426200 . 2022-04-23. https://web.archive.org/web/20220423085732/https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/ic800024n.
  4. Mattausch, Hansjurgen; Borrmann, Horst; Eger, Roland; Kremer, R. K.; Simon, Arndt. Gd4I6CN: A carbide nitride with chains of Gd6(C2) octahedra and Gd6N2 double tetrahedra. Zeitschrift fuer Anorganische und Allgemeine Chemie (1994), 620 (11): 1889-1897.