Samarium(III) chloride
Samarium chloride, also known as samarium trichloride, is an inorganic compound of samarium and chloride. It is a pale yellow salt that rapidly absorbs water to form a hexahydrate, SmCl3.6H2O. The compound has few practical applications but is used in laboratories for research on new compounds of samarium.
Structure
Like several related chlorides of the lanthanides and actinides, SmCl3 crystallises in the UCl3 motif. The Sm3+ centres are nine-coordinate, occupying trigonal prismatic sites with additional chloride ligands occupying the three square faces.Preparation and reactions
SmCl3 is prepared by the "ammonium chloride" route, which involves the initial synthesis of 2. This material can be prepared from the common starting materials at reaction temperatures of 230 °C from samarium oxide:The pentachloride is then heated to 350-400 °C resulting in evolution of ammonium chloride and leaving a residue of the anhydrous trichloride:
It can also be prepared from samarium metal and hydrochloric acid.
Aqueous solutions of samarium chloride can be prepared by dissolving metallic samarium or samarium carbonate in hydrochloric acid.
Samarium chloride is a moderately strong Lewis acid, which ranks as "hard" according to the HSAB concept. Aqueous solutions of samarium chloride can be used to prepare samarium trifluoride: