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To a chemist's eye, uranium has always looked dull. Not anymore.
Natural uranium mostly occurs as an oxide. In water, the oxide readily dissolves in the form of a uranyl iona positively charged molecule made of one uranium and two oxygen atoms. In this respect, uranium behaves similarly to lighter metals such as molybdenum and tungsten.
But while most metal oxides are highly reactive, uranyl is shy, chemically speaking, and extremely stable. It's harder to clean from toxic spills, for example, because it won't react with or bind to much at all.
Polly Arnold and Jason Love of the University of Edinburgh in Scotland and their collaborators have brought out uranyl's more outgoing side. They have coaxed uranyl to become reactive in an organic liquid by "biting" it with a mouth-shaped molecule. The molecule captures the uranyl in its jaw, Arnold explains, with one of the oxygen atoms sticking up toward the palatea sort of Pac-Man with a tongue piercing, she says, referring to the 1980s videogame.
Pressed to the molecule's palate, the oxygen is forced to donate electrons to potassium atoms. This transfer throws off uranyl's balance, allowing its other oxygen endwhich pierces through Pac-Man's jaw and sticks out the other sideto react with silicon-based compounds dissolved in the solution, the authors report in the Jan. 17 Nature.
Directing uranyl's behavior could have other uses. Lighter metal oxides are "famously good" as catalysts, Arnold says. Thanks to uranium's complex structure, new, uranyl-based catalysts might enable novel reactions, such as the cheap conversion of natural gas into liquid fuels that would be easier to transport, Arnold says.
Found in: Chemistry
- Boncella, J. M. 2008. Uranium gets a reaction. Nature 451(Jan. 17):250-252. Abstract available at [Go to].
Cunningham, A. 2007. Lighting up for uranium. Science News 171(March 3):141. Available to subscribers at [Go to].
- Polly Arnold
School of Chemistry
University of Edinburgh
West Mains Road
Edinburgh EH9 3JJ
Scotland

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