Radiation-induced redox reactions of iodine species in aqueous solution. Formation and characterisation of III, IIV, IVI and IVIII, the stability of hypoiodous acid and the chemistry of the interconversion of iodide and iodate
Abstract
The unstable oxidation states of iodine have been investigated using pulse radiolysis.
IIV is generated by one-electron reduction of IO–3 with e–eq, CO–2 and (CH3)2CO–; in the pH range 3–14 it exists as HIO–3 and IO2–3 with pKa= 13.3. IIV reacts rapidly with itself, (CH3)2ĊOH and CH2(CH3)2COH.
IVI is generated by one-electron oxidation of IO3– or one-electron reduction of IVII. At pH 13 both methods produce species having similar spectra (λmax= 350 nm) where the oxidant is O–. At pH < 9 the spectrum of IVI formed by reduction is little changed, but that produced by oxidation of IO–3 by OH is extremely weak, showing that these species are dissimilar. In the presence of IVII, IVI decays by first-order kinetics at pH 6.3–9 and oxidises IVII to IVIII; at pH 13 it decays by second-order kinetics and does not oxidise IVII. At pH < 9 IVI also decays to form OH in an acid-catalysed reaction. A mechanism is proposed which accounts for these observations.
IVIII results from oxidation of IVII by OH and IVI. Optical data show that the absorbing species is the dinuclear iodine species IVIIIVIII with λmax= 525 nm. The kinetics of formation of IVIII are pseudo-first order but show a complex dependence on [IVII]. A mechanism is presented which describes the data.
The spectrum of IO is obtained by oxidation of IO– with O– at pH 13. It absorbs with λmax= 490 nm and εmax= 2.1 × 103 dm3 mol–1 cm–1; it decays by reaction with itself and I2– at diffusion-controlled rates.
Hypoiodous acid is shown to be a significant product of the radiolysis of unbuffered dilute solutions of I– saturated with N2O. Under these conditions HOI decays slowly by second-order kinetics with k= 5.5 ± 1 dm3 mol–1 s–1. It is much less stable in solutions containing OH– or borate, where k=(5.6±1.2)+ 104[OH–] dm3 mol–1 s–1 and (7.2±3.3)+ 2.2 × 103[borate] dm3 mol–1 s–1, respectively.