Gadolinium(III) chloride, also known as
gadolinium trichloride, is
GdCl3. It is a colorless, hygroscopic, water-soluble solid. The
hexahydrate GdCl
3∙6H
2O is commonly encountered and is sometimes also called gadolinium trichloride. Gd
3+ species are of special interest because the ion has the maximum number of unpaired spins possible, at least for known elements. With seven valence electrons and seven available f-orbitals, all seven electrons are unpaired and symmetrically arranged around the metal. The high magnetism and high symmetry combine to make Gd
3+ a useful component in NMR spectroscopy and MRI.
Preparation
GdCl
3 is usually prepared by the "
ammonium chloride" route, which involves the initial synthesis of (NH
4)
2[GdCl
5]. This material can be prepared from the common starting materials at reaction temperatures of 230 °C from
gadolinium oxide:
- 10 NH4Cl + Gd2O3 → 2 (NH4)2[GdCl5] + 6 NH3 + 3 H2O
from hydrated gadolinium chloride:
- 4 NH4Cl + 2 GdCl3∙6H2O → 2 (NH4)2[GdCl5] + 12 H2O
from gadolinium metal:
- 10 NH4Cl + 2 Gd → 2 (NH4)2[GdCl5] + 6 NH3 + 3 H2
In the second step the pentachloride is decomposed at 300 °C:
- 2 (NH4)2[GdCl5] → {NH4[Gd2Cl7] + 3NH4Cl}
- {NH4[Gd2Cl7] + 3 NH4Cl} → 2 GdCl3 + 4 NH4Cl
The ammonium chloride route is more popular and less expensive than other methods. GdCl3 can, however, also be synthesized by the reaction of solid Gd at 600 °C in a flowing stream of HCl.
- Gd + 3 HCl → GdCl3 + 3/2 H2
Gadolinium(III) chloride also forms a hexahydrate, GdCl3∙6H2O. The hexahydrate is prepared by gadolinium(III) oxide (or chloride) in concentrated HCl followed by evaporation.
Structure
GdCl
3 is
monoclinic with a hexagonal
UCl3 structure, as seen for other 4f trichlorides including those of
La,
Ce,
Pr,
Nd,
Pm,
Sm,
Eu (in contrast
GdCl3 crystallizes in the
PuBr3 motif and the following crystallize in theYCl
3 motif:
DyCl3, HoCl
3,
ErCl3, TmCl
3, YdCl
3, LuCl
3, YCl
3). The UCl
3 motif features 9-coordinate metal with a tricapped trigonal prismatic
coordination sphere. In the hexahydrate of gadolinium(III) chloride and other smaller 4f trichlorides and tribromides, six H
2O
molecules and 2 Cl
- ions coordinate to the
cations resulting in a coordination group of 8.
Properties, with applications to MRI
Gadolinium salts are of primary interest for relaxation agents in magnetic resonance imaging (
MRI). This technique exploits the fact that Gd
3+ has an electronic configuration of f
7. Seven is the largest number of unpaired electron spins possible for an atom, so Gd
3+ is a key component in the design of highly paramagnetic complexes.
To generate the relaxation agents, Gd
3+ sources such as GdCl
3∙6H
2O are converted to
coordination complexes. GdCl
3∙6H
2O can not be used as an
MRI contrasting agent due to its low solubility in water at the body's near neutral pH. "Free" gadolinium(III), e.g. GdCl
2(H
2O)
6]
+, is
toxic, so chelating agents are essential for biomedical applications. Simple
monodentate or even
bidentate ligands will not suffice because they do not remain bound to Gd
3+ in solution. Ligands with higher coordination numbers therefore are required. The obvious candidate is
EDTA4-, ethylenediaminetetraacetate, which is a commonly employed hexadentate ligand used to complex to transition metals. In lanthanides, however, exhibit coordination numbers greater than six, so still larger aminocarboxylates are employed.
One representative chelating agent is H5DTPA, diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid. Chelation to the conjugate base of this ligand increases the solubility of the Gd3+ at the body's neutral pH and still allows for the paramagnetic effect required for an MRI contrast agent. The DTPA5- ligand binds to Gd through five oxygen atoms of the carboxylates and three nitrogen atoms of the amines. A 9th binding site remains, which is occupied by a water molecule. The rapid exchange of this water ligand with bulk water is a major reason for the signal enhancing properties of the chelate. The structure of Gd(DTPA)(H2O)]2- is a distorted tricapped trigonal prism.
The following is the reaction for the formation of Gd-DTPA:
References
- Aime, S. (1993). "Synthesis and Characterization of a Novel DPTA-like Gadolinium(III) Complex: A Potential Reagent for the Determination of Glycated Proteins by Water Proton NMR Relaxation Measurements". Inorganic Chemistry 32 2068–2071.
- Corbett, John D. (1983). "Trichlorides of the Rare Earth Elements, Yttrium, and Scandium". Inorganic Syntheses 22 39–42.
- Meyer, G. (1989). "The Ammonium Chloride Route to Anhydrous Rare Earth Chlorides-The Example of YCl3". Inorganic Syntheses 25 146–150.
- Raduchel, B.; Weinmann, H. & Muhler, A. (1996). "Gadolinium Chelates: Chemistry, Safety, & Behavior". Encyclopedia of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance 4 2166–2172.
- Quill, L. L. (1967). "Preparation of Lanthanide Chloride Methanolates Using 2,2-Dimethoxypropane". Inorganic Chemistry 7 1433–1435.
- Patnaik, P. (2003). Handbook of Inorganic Chemicals. New York: McGraw Hill.
- Wells, A.F. (1984). Structural Inorganic Chemistry. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- Gadolinium. Magnetic Resonance TIP-MRI Database. Retrieved on February 22., 2006.
- Gadolinium. Webelements. Retrieved on February 22., 2006.
External links