Abstract

The nature of the inner coordination sphere of In(3+) present in both the organic and aqueous solutions during the solvent extraction of In(3+) from an aqueous HCl solution with tri-n-octyl amine (TOA) was investigated by In K-edge XAFS. This information was then used to clarify the details of the extraction properties of indium chloride anion complexes with TOA. In aqueous HCl solution (0.1-10 M), In(3+) exists as octahedral anion complexes, [InCln(H2O)6-n](3-n) (n ≥ 4); the [InCl6](3-) complex is dominant at 10 M HCl. The extraction of In(3+) from HCl solution with TOA was performed using two kinds of diluents: nitrobenzene (NB) or n-dodecane (DD), which contained 20 vol% of 2-ethylhexanol as an additive. The stoichiometric composition of the extracted complexes, which is estimated from the distribution ratios of In(3+), is affected by the diluents and the HCl concentration of the aqueous phase; the apparent values of TOA/In(3+) in the extracted complex are 3 for DD-1 M HCl (diluent-aqueous phase) and DD-5 M HCl, 2 for NB-1 M HCl and NB-5 M HCl, and 1 for NB-10 M HCl. The EXAFS analysis of these extracted complexes shows that the In(3+) has ∼4 Cl(-) at ∼2.336 Å and no H2O in the inner coordination sphere; additionally, the shape of the XANES suggests that their coordination geometry is tetrahedral. Therefore, the same tetrahedral [InCl4](-) complex is formed during the extraction in spite of the variation in the stoichiometric composition (TOA/In(3+) = 1-3) of the extracted complexes.

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