Conditions Extrêmes et Matériaux : Haute Température et Irradiation
CEMHTI - UPR3079 CNRS

utilisateur non identifié  |   Login

View CEMHTI Publication

Return to publication search...
2023

ACL
doi

Fu Zhang, Jinglin You, Xiaohui Tang, Jian Wang, Xiaoye Gong, Aurélien Canizarès, Liming Lu, Kai Tang, 'Estimation of the proportions of aluminum-fluorine species in NaF-AlF3 mixtures by in situ Raman spectroscopy and theoretical simulations', J. Mol. Liq. 387 (2023) doi:10.1016/j.molliq.2023.122485

The quantitative distribution of different types of clusters in a binary NaF-AlF3 molten salt system with a series of cryolite ratios (CR, NaF/AlF3 molar ratio) was explored by in situ high-temperature Raman spectroscopy in conjunction with quantum chemistry (QC) ab initio calculations. Density functional theory (DFT) was used to simulate the Raman spectra of solid crystalline Na5Al3F14 (CR = 1.67) and Na3AlF6 (CR = 3.00). Aluminum-fluorine molecular model clusters containing species with typical characteristic microstructures were built in a molten NaF-AlF3 system. Deconvolution of the major stretching vibrational bands of Al-F-Al and Al-F bonds was carried out by using the Voigt function. The anionic fractions of different species present in the molten NaF-AlF3 system were quantitatively analyzed by a function of the microstructure dependent on Raman scattering cross sections (RSCS). AlF63-, AlF52-, and AlF4- were the dominant species in the aluminum-fluorine molten salt system. As the NaF in the melt increased, the content of AlF52- reached the maximum concentration when CR = 2.00. Apart from the recognized existence of both AlF4- and AlF63-, the aluminum bridging fluorine species of Al2F7- has been proven to exist in molten systems when CR ≤ 1.00. The relationship between the viscosity and various (n-3)Na+·AlFn(n-3)- species distributions has been investigated. The results showed that the contribution of different (n-3)Na+·AlFn(n-3)- to viscosity was essentially the same, and simply depended on the number of different species.