Glutarimidedioxime Complexation: Extraction of Uranium vs. Interference of Vanadium and Molybdenum in Seawater

Abstract

The cyclic imide dioxime ligand, glutarimidedioxime (H3A), has emerged as a paradigm-shifting archetype in chemistry of coordination and separation. Its prominence is driven by the formidable challenge of extracting ultra trace uranium from seawater, a critical endeavor for sustainable nuclear energy. This review provides a comprehensive and critical synthesis of research that positions H3A as the definitive active motif in advanced amidoxime-based sorbents. We first delineate its structural elucidation, optimal synthesis, and its distinctive acid-base properties. A higher temperature (80~90 °C) promotes intramolecular cyclization of two adjacent nitrile groups and favors the synthesis of H3A, while avoiding excess hydroxylamine to prevent formation of glutarimidoxioxime. The core analysis presents a comparative examination of its coordination chemistry, governed by a hierarchy of ionic potential. H3A contains a conjugated system that forms very stable complexes with the uranyl ion. In the complex, H3A coordinates with the uranyl ion through a tridentate chelation pocket. This strong coordination enables it to compete with carbonate for the uranyl ion even at ultra-low concentrations. A central focus is the ligand’s exceptional ability to displace oxo ligands from vanadate, forming an ultra-stable, rare non-oxido V(V) complex [V(A)2]⁻, which defines the severe vanadium interference problem. Furthermore, we critically examine the previously overlooked but critical interaction with molybdenum, which catalyzes the hydrolytic degradation of the H3A motif and poses a fundamental threat to long-term sorbent viability. By integrating molecular-scale insights with macroscopic application performance, this review clarifies the intricate structure-property relationships responsible for both the promise and limitations of H3A-based technology. Finally, we chart a course for future research, emphasizing ligand design strategies to decouple uranyl from vanadium affinity and to mitigate degradation pathways, thereby guiding the development of next-generation functional materials for resource recovery and separations science.

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
04 Mar 2026
Accepted
05 May 2026
First published
07 May 2026

Inorg. Chem. Front., 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Glutarimidedioxime Complexation: Extraction of Uranium vs. Interference of Vanadium and Molybdenum in Seawater

R. L. Li, W. Ding, B. Liu and X. Li, Inorg. Chem. Front., 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6QI00428H

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