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Quantum chemistry and simulation help characterize coordination complex of elusive Element 61

Pink diamond shape in a glass jar. There is a cut out showing the chemical makeup of what's inside.
ORNL scientists have discovered hidden features of promethium, opening a pathway for research into other lanthanide elements. Credit: Thomas Dyke, Dmytro Bykov, ORNL/U.S. Dept. of Energy

When element 61, also known as promethium, was first isolated by scientists at the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory in 1945, it completed the series of chemical elements known as lanthanides. However, aspects of the element’s exact chemical nature have remained a mystery until last year, when a team of scientists from ORNL and the National Institute of Standards and Technology used a combination of experimentation and computer simulation to purify the promethium radionuclide and synthesize a coordination complex that was characterized for the first time. The results of their work were recently published in Nature.

Promethium is one of 15 lanthanides, also known as rare earth elements. Despite being called “rare,” many of these elements are extensively used in modern technology, including electric motors, spacecraft batteries and radiation therapy, as well as smart phones and computer monitors. 

Though scientists have known about promethium for nearly 80 years, it was the only remaining lanthanide to be characterized in the bound form — essential for identifying an element’s electronic structure and properties. This was because radioactive promethium is particularly elusive in nature due to its short half-life (the time it takes for one half of the nuclei in a given amount of a radioactive element to decay) of only 2 ½ years.

“This is fundamental research,” said Dmytro Bykov, a theoretical chemist and group leader for Advanced Computing for Chemistry and Materials at ORNL who co-led the computational spectroscopy simulation of the promethium complex with Santanu Roy, also of ORNL. “Since the discovery of the periodic law, we have had a good understanding of all the elements, but that doesn’t change the fact that you need to experiment to confirm that understanding. It was nice to find this final puzzle piece.” 

The experimental investigation of promethium included developing a novel, water-soluble complexing agent and using X-ray absorption spectroscopy to determine the electronic structure of the element. However, there are pieces of the picture that experimentation can’t easily show, so it was combined with theoretical and computational chemistry to paint a fuller image of promethium. The team modeled the element using the IBM AC922 supercomputer Summit, located at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility at ORNL. They were awarded time on the supercomputer through the Director’s Discretionary Program. The OLCF is a Department of Energy Office of Science user facility.

“This is experimental science, so the most important thing is that the team purified and characterized the element in the bound form. But the cherry on top is that we were able to run these simulations for a deeper understanding of the experimental observations,” Bykov said. 

Simulating promethium’s electronic structure presented its own challenges and required solving complex equations to model the element’s electrons. The simplified visualization of atomic structure seen in most textbooks shows a nucleus of protons and neutrons orbited by electrons on fixed paths. In reality, electrons are quantum objects whose behavior is more similar to a wave, and their exact position at any given moment is a matter of probability. The key to simulating promethium’s structure was solving the Schrödinger equation. 

Solving the equation describes the wavefunctions and energies of electrons in an atom or molecule in the same way a simple wave equation describes the vibration of a plucked guitar string. Scientists then use this information and observations from spectroscopy to represent the atom or molecule in 3D. The simulations of the element build a more comprehensive picture than can be created with an or the experiment alone. 

This graph shows the energy versus intensity for core electron transitions. The electrons in the Pm atom transition from low-level states to high-level states in response to X-ray synchrotron radiation. The position and intensity of the transitions of electrons uniquely characterize the Pm ion.
This graph shows the energy versus intensity for core electron transitions. The electrons in the Pm atom transition from low-level states to high-level states in response to X-ray synchrotron radiation. The position and intensity of the transitions of electrons uniquely characterize the Pm ion. Credit: Dmytro Bykov/ORNL, U.S. Dept. of Energy

“Most of the time in an experiment, you can’t measure everything. You have a specific set of conditions, and the experiment is a snapshot. In the computer, we can change the conditions and get a deeper understanding of the element’s properties,” Bykov said.

“We all stand on the shoulders of giants,” Bykov continued. “A lot of knowledge we had already, and there was so much work done at this lab. Summit, this marvelous machine, was built by very smart engineers and technicians. And it all came together to characterize and fully understand this remarkable compound of this very rare element for the first time.”  

This effort was led by ORNL’s Ilja Popovs, Alex Ivanov, and Santa Jansone-Popova of ORNL’s Chemical Sciences Division, with co-authors Darren M. Driscoll, Subhamay Pramanik, Jeffrey Einkauf, and Santanu Roy, also of ORNL’s Chemical Sciences Division; Frankie White, Richard Mayes, Laetitia Delmau, Samantha Cary, Thomas Dyke, April Miller, Matt Silveira, Shelley VanCleve and Sandra Davern of ORNL’s Radioisotope Science and Technology Division; Bruce Ravel of the National Institute of Standards and Technology; and Dmytro Bykov of the National Center for Computational Sciences at ORNL.

We all stand on the shoulders of giants. A lot of knowledge we had already, and there was so much work done at this lab. Summit, this marvelous machine, was built by very smart engineers and technicians. And it all came together to characterize and fully understand this remarkable compound of this very rare element for the first time. — Dmytro Bykov

In addition to the OLCF, the team used ORNL’s High Flux Isotope Reactor and Radiochemical Engineering Development Center, and the National Synchrotron Light Source II at Brookhaven National Laboratory. 

UT-Battelle LLC manages ORNL for the Department of Energy's Office of Science, the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States. The Office of Science is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit https://energy.gov/science. — Betsy Sonewald 

Read more: Promethium bound: Rare earth element’s secrets exposed