Issue 28, 2024, Issue in Progress

Separation of terbium as a first step towards high purity terbium-161 for medical applications

Abstract

Terbium-161 is a medical radiolanthanide that has a beta decay energy and half-life similar to that of lutetium-177, which makes it a promising alternative for therapeutic purposes. The production route using an enriched gadolinium-160 target necessitates the purification of terbium-161 from the untransmuted target material as well as from its stable decay product, dysprosium-161. The separation of neighbouring lanthanides is challenging due to their similar chemical properties and prominent trivalent oxidation states. In this work, the aim is to change the oxidation state of terbium, resulting in the altering of chemical properties that ease the intragroup separation. To this end, a novel separation method is investigated, involving the electrochemical oxidation of terbium (3+) to terbium (4+) followed by anion exchange chromatography. The electrolysis conditions are set to the highest achievable conversion rate, followed by a dilution step during which the pH and electrolyte concentration are slightly lowered to obtain conditions that are compatible with the separation method. XAS analysis is done to characterize the carbonato complex of both oxidation states and to further elucidate the separation mechanism. The results show that the separation approach of combining electrochemical oxidation with anion exchange chromatography is promising for the purification of 161Tb for medical use.

Graphical abstract: Separation of terbium as a first step towards high purity terbium-161 for medical applications

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Apr 2024
Accepted
05 Jun 2024
First published
20 Jun 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

RSC Adv., 2024,14, 19926-19934

Separation of terbium as a first step towards high purity terbium-161 for medical applications

M. Ö. Arman, A. Mullaliu, B. Geboes, K. Van Hecke, G. Das, G. Aquilanti, K. Binnemans and T. Cardinaels, RSC Adv., 2024, 14, 19926 DOI: 10.1039/D4RA02694B

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