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Samples Containing Rare Earth ElementsSample Preparation Guide: Part 8The Rare Earth (RE) elements include Y, La, and the Lanthanides (Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, and Lu). The chemistry of these elements is sufficiently similar that they can be treated as a group rather than individually. RE elements are technically the elements grouped as the 'Lanthanides', which are Ce thru Lu. However, chemists generally think of the Rare Earths as Sc, Y, La and the Lanthanides (Ce thru Lu) while others exclude Sc but include all of the others. Inorganic Ventures has never worked with Promethium (Pm), which is a man-made, radioactive element. Although I have excluded Pm from these discussions, it can be safely assumed that it's chemistry is no different from the naturally occurring Lanthanides. The following table shows the source of the names of the RE elements and is for those of you who, like myself, find the etymology interesting:
The MetalsThe metals for these elements:
The most common oxidation state formed upon acid dissolution is +3. Ce can have a valence of +4 and Eu, Yb, and Sm can have a valence of +2. Oxides, Hydroxides, CarbonatesThe hydroxides are soluble in acids and the oxides are soluble provided they have not been ignited to high temperatures. Therefore, when ashing samples, attempt to keep the ashing temperature at 450 to 500 deg °C. Heating the oxides with 1:1 nitric acid is common with dissolution taking several minutes to hours depending upon sample size and oxide thermal history. The carbonates are insoluble in water and soluble in dilute nitric and HCl. MineralsThe most common minerals are silicates, phosphates, tantalates, and niobates that are summarized as follows: Silicates - Gadonite (contains Fe, Be, Y and Gd thru Lu plus small amounts of Ce); Cerite (silicates of La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm and Eu); Allanite (contains Ca, Fe, Al, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm and Eu). Phosphates - Monazite (contains mainly phosphates of Ce and La, Pr, Nd, Sm and Eu plus small amounts of the other RE as well as Th). Tantalates and Niobates - Fergusonite (contains Ta, Nb, Y, Gd thru Lu, Ce and Tb); Euxenite (contains Nb, Ti, Ce, U, Y, and Gd thru Lu); Samarskite (contains Nb, Ta, Y, Fe, Ca, U, and Tb). Since the RE minerals contain such a wide assortment of other elements, a variety of sample preparation methods exist, including fusions with Na2O2, Na2CO3, Li2CO3 and Li2B4O7, as well as digestions with strong mineral acids such as HF/Perchloric /nitric/hydrochloric acid combinations. Of these fluxes, the use of lithium tetraborate (Li2B4O7) has proven to be a very useful way of opening out minerals associated with the REs. A procedure reported by Knaack, C., Cornelius, S.B. and Hooper, P.R., GeoAnalytical Lab, Washington State University, December, 1994 involves fusion of the sample (2 grams) with an equal amount of the lithium tetraborate flux in a carbon crucible at 1000 °C in a muffle furnace for 30 minutes. The fuseate is then treated with HF, nitric, and then perchloric acids with a repetition of the perchloric acid treatment to dissolve fluorides. The Final solution is made to 60 mL and contains nitric acid, hydrogen peroxide and HF, where In, Re, and Ru are added as internal standards for an ICP-MS measurement. This method is reported to be applicable for the lanthanides (La thru Lu) together with Ba, Rb, Y, Nb, Cs, Hf, Ta, Pb, Th, T, Sr, and Zr. Many analysts prefer acid digestions using mineral acids singularly or in combinations depending upon the mineral involved. For example 1:1 HNO3 can be used to extract the RE from the sample leaving behind silica and other residues. The extraction is typically performed for 2-4 hours using heat. Both glass and Teflon vessels are commonly used. An acid digestion/extraction is particularly useful if silica is absent. The following procedure has been used at Inorganic Ventures for the preparation of silicate mineral samples for ICP-OES and ICP-MS measurement:
The accuracy of the extraction on specific minerals would need to be confirmed by analyzing the same sample (same aliquot that was extracted) using a complete digestion approach after extraction. This approach is considered better than comparison of independent samples prepared by the two methods based upon studies performed at Inorganic Ventures that suggest that sample homogeneity issues complicate extraction studies where recoveries between 60 and 100% have been found on samples thought to be the same. The measurement technique suggested is ICP-MS. CatalystsZeolites and, to a lesser extent, silica gel are common supports for the RE elements. The following procedure may prove useful:
The above procedure is presented only as a guide into the basis theory behind the acid digestion of silica containing catalysts where HF is used to break apart and dissolve the entire zeolites, heating to fumes of HClO4 then rids the sample of excess HF, and very importantly the addition of boric acid and heating to fumes results in the dissolution of any insoluble RE fluorides. Si is lost during the preparation. Organic MatricesSamples can be digested with nitric/perchloric. For more detailed information about acid digestions of organics, please see the following article: Acid Digestions of Organic Samples. It is also very acceptable to dry ash organic samples for RE elemental analysis in a Pt crucible and then bring the resulting RE oxides into solution using a sodium carbonate fusion. Or if the RE element alone is sought, dissolution in dilute nitric or HCl. For more information, see the portion of our Trace Analysis Guide that discusses Ashing. The following is a general guide for carbonate fusions:
Hydrolytic Stability and Preferred Matrices
ICP MeasurementThe RE elements have very complex emission spectra and are difficult to measure in the presence of one another using ICP-OES. For this reason, ICP-MS is the measurement technique of choice by many analysts. Naturally, the RE elements occur in the presence of one another where as a general rule:
The groups are separated in concentration by one or more orders in magnitude, i.e., if Ce is low (1-4) % level, then Dy is hundreds of ppm and Tm is sub ppm. The following table shows the Inorganic Ventures' preferred RE element emission and atomic mass unit lines. If possible, ICP-MS should be the measurement technique used because the mass interferences are far less of a problem than spectral emission interferences:
Detailed Elemental ProfilesChemical compatibility, stability, preparation, and atomic spectroscopic information is available by clicking an element below. For additional elements, visit our Interactive Periodic Table.
Further Reading |