Joe Sperling
banner
jsperling91.bsky.social
Joe Sperling
@jsperling91.bsky.social
Research assistant professor at Colorado School of Mines. Still on X but didn’t wanna miss the science on here. Actinides are neat.
Neptunium (Np3+) has a beautiful alexandrite effect. Left is one lab, center is natural sunlight, and right is a lab under fluorescent lighting. 5f-5f transitions are magical. This is the same solution. Some great pics taken by @jp_brannon #fblockrocks #actinides
June 13, 2025 at 3:01 AM
This is a heavy hitting americium structure great job brian! @teasactinides.bsky.social pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
Insights into the Complexation of Actinides by Diethylenetriaminepentaacetic Acid from Characterization of the Americium(III) Complex
Diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA) is a frequently used chelator in the nuclear and medical industries, especially for the complexation of trivalent actinides. However, structural data on these complexes in the solid-state have long remained elusive. Herein, a detailed structural analysis of the presented crystal structures of [C(NH2)3]4[Nd(DTPA)]2·nH2O and [C(NH2)3]4[Am(DTPA)]2·nH2O, where [C(NH2)3]+ is guanidinium, details the subtle differences in the Lewis acidity between a lanthanide/actinide pair of similar ionic sizes. Contractions in nitrogen–metal bond lengths between neodymium(III) and americium(III) were observed, while the metal–oxygen bonds remained relatively consistent, highlighting the marginal favorability for actinide complexation over the lanthanides with moderately soft N-donors. Spectroscopic analysis shows significant splitting of many transitions and relatively strong electronic interactions with traditionally low-intensity transitions in the americium complex, as is demonstrated in the 7F0→7F5 transitions. Pressure-induced spectroscopic analysis showed surprisingly little effect on the americium complex, with 5f→5f transitions either not shifting or marginally shifting from 2 to 3 nm at 11.93 ± 0.06 GPa─atypical of a soft, N-donor americium complex under pressure. Large voids occupied by water molecules in between the complexes within the crystal structure may be responsible for the lack of pressure response in the 5f→5f transitions.
pubs.acs.org
March 12, 2025 at 10:42 PM
Reposted by Joe Sperling
I am super proud of this paper. It was a massive, multi-year undertaking by three different groups. If you've ever wanted to understand the high-pressure behavior of curium, here it is. @gagliardilaura.bsky.social #fblockrocks #nuclear #chemsky #bluesci #highpressure
pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10....
High-Pressure Effects on an Octa-Hydrated Curium Complex: An Experimental and Theoretical Investigation
An octa-hydrated curium compound [Cm(H2O)8](Hdtp)(dtp)·H2O (Cm1, H2dtp = 2,3-di(tetrazol-5-yl)pyrazine) along with its lanthanide analogues [Ln(H2O)8](Hdtp)(dtp)·H2O (Ln1, Ln3+ = La3+–Nd3+, Sm3+–Lu3+)...
pubs.acs.org
February 4, 2025 at 4:47 PM
Reposted by Joe Sperling
I'm excited to see this one published! Samarium(II) dibenzo-24-crown-8 complexes from solutions of MeCN, THF, and DME.

pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
Coordination Chemistry and Photoluminescence of Sm(II) Dibenzo-24-crown-8 Complexes
Three Sm(II) dibenzo-24-crown-8 (db24c8) complexes were synthesized in anhydrous, air-free conditions via the reaction of SmI2 with db24c8 and tetrabutylammonium tetraphenylborate ([TBA][BPh4]; where ...
pubs.acs.org
January 22, 2025 at 6:39 PM
I love pictures of clean californium. This small quantity has enough gamma radiation to give you your annual background dose in ~30 minutes on contact pictured here is the oxalate #fblockrocks
January 8, 2025 at 12:43 AM
Reposted by Joe Sperling
This article was years in the making. Did you think water could coordinate to Sm(II) without being reduced? Well it can. Congratulations Todd! #Chemsky #Bluesci #samarium #rareearths #fblockrocks

pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/...
Isolation of Inner-Sphere Aquo Complexes of Samarium(II)
The cis-anti-cis and cis-syn-cis isomers of [Sm(dicyclohexano-18-crown-6)(H2O)2]I2 exhibiting trans water molecules bound to the Sm2+ ion have been isolated and characterized. Sm2+ possesses an electrochemical potential sufficient for water reduction, and thus these complexes add to the recent body of evidence that the oxidation of Sm2+ by water can operate by a mechanism that is not straightforward. These complexes are obtained by the direct addition of stoichiometric amounts of water to solutions of the respective Sm(dicyclohexano-18-crown-6)I2 isomers under an inert atmosphere. The parent complex, Sm(dicyclohexano-18-crown-6)I2, lacking coordinating water molecules can be obtained through rigorous exclusion of water. It was determined that the bulky cyclohexano-substituents deter intramolecular interactions between [Sm(dicyclohexano-18-crown-6)(H2O)2]I2 complexes and slow the oxidization of the metal centers. The extent of the stability of these complexes to the presence of water has been further probed through cyclic voltammetry, where it was found that the redox potential of both isomers of [Sm(dicyclohexano-18-crown-6)(H2O)2]I2 maintains quasi-reversible behavior with a 50,000-fold excess of water to Sm2+ in solution with the cis-syn-cis complex being quasi-reversible at even higher concentrations of water. Solution-phase spectroscopy of these complexes in acetonitrile shows a corresponding hypsochromic shift of the Sm2+ 4f → 5d transition typically observed in the visible region from Sm2+ complexes. The crystalline compounds obtained in this study support solid-state spectroscopic trends observed from other Sm2+ crown-ether complexes containing iodide counterions, wherein the proximity of the iodide ions to the metal center determines whether the complex can exhibit 4f → 4f photoluminescence.
pubs.acs.org
January 7, 2025 at 5:19 PM
Reposted by Joe Sperling
Super happy with this article. Ra-226 makes Cf-249 look cold. There's more radium chemistry to come after the holidays. #Chemsky #bluesci #radium #nuclear #fblockrocks
pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10....
Deviation between the Structural Chemistry of Barium and Radium Halides: Synthesis and Characterization of RaX2·H2O and RaX2·2H2O (X– = Cl– and Br–)
To develop the structural chemistry of radium, the halide compounds RaX2·H2O and RaX2·2H2O (X– = Cl– and Br–) have been synthesized and characterized and serve as benchmarks for comparisons with more complex compounds in the future. In contrast with historic reports on the structural chemistry of radium, the Ra2+ chlorides differ from their Ba2+ analogues. For MCl2·H2O (M2+ = Ba2+, Ra2+), the variance between the metal coordination environments manifests as a small, local distortion that becomes more apparent in the extended structure. However, differences between RaCl2·2H2O and BaCl2·2H2O are more pronounced with a 10-coordinate Ra2+ cation being observed instead of a nine-coordinate Ba2+ in BaCl2·2H2O. RaBr2·nH2O (n = 1 or 2) are isomorphous with the Ba2+ analogues. Raman spectroscopy was used as an additional probe of these compounds and reveals substantial shifts and different vibrational modes between RaX2·H2O and RaX2·2H2O compared to BaX2·2H2O.
pubs.acs.org
December 13, 2024 at 5:15 PM
Hi bluesky, meet blueplutonium #fblockrocks
December 3, 2024 at 8:49 PM