Lanthanum(III) bromide

Lanthanum(III) bromide
Names
IUPAC names
Lanthanum(III) bromide
Lanthanum tribromide
Identifiers
CAS Number
  • 13536-79-3 checkY
3D model (JSmol)
  • Interactive image
ChemSpider
  • 75393 checkY
ECHA InfoCard 100.033.527 Edit this at Wikidata
EC Number
  • 236-896-7
PubChem CID
  • 83563
CompTox Dashboard (EPA)
  • DTXSID9065526 Edit this at Wikidata
InChI
  • InChI=1S/3BrH.La/h3*1H;/q;;;+3/p-3 checkY
    Key: XKUYOJZZLGFZTC-UHFFFAOYSA-K checkY
  • InChI=1/3BrH.La/h3*1H;/q;;;+3/p-3
    Key: XKUYOJZZLGFZTC-DFZHHIFOAJ
  • Br[La](Br)Br
Properties
Chemical formula
LaBr3
Molar mass 378.62 g/mol (anhydrous)
Appearance white solid, hygroscopic
Density 5.06 g/cm3, solid
Melting point 783 °C (1,441 °F; 1,056 K)
Boiling point 1,577 °C (2,871 °F; 1,850 K)
Solubility in water
Very soluble
Structure
Crystal structure
hexagonal (UCl3 type), hP8
Space group
P63/m, No. 176
Coordination geometry
Tricapped trigonal prismatic
(nine-coordinate)
Hazards
GHS labelling:[1]
GHS07: Exclamation mark
Warning
H315, H319, H335
P261, P264, P271, P280, P302+P352, P304+P340, P305+P351+P338, P312, P321, P332+P313, P337+P313, P362, P403+P233, P405, P501
Flash point not flammable
Related compounds
Other anions
Lanthanum(III) fluoride
Lanthanum(III) chloride
Lanthanum(III) iodide
Other cations
Cerium(III) bromide
Praseodymium(III) bromide
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
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Infobox references
Chemical compound

Lanthanum(III) bromide (LaBr3) is an inorganic halide salt of lanthanum. When pure, it is a colorless white powder. The single crystals of LaBr3 are hexagonal crystals with melting point of 783 °C. It is highly hygroscopic and water-soluble. There are several hydrates, La3Br·x H2O, of the salt also known. It is often used as a source of lanthanum in chemical synthesis and as a scintillation material in certain applications.

Lanthanum bromide scintillation detector

The scintillator material cerium activated lanthanum bromide (LaBr3:Ce) was first produced in 2001.[2] LaBr3:Ce-based radiation detectors offer improved energy resolution, fast emission and excellent temperature and linearity characteristics. Typical energy resolution at 662 keV is 3% as compared to sodium iodide detectors at 7%.[3] The improved resolution is due to a photoelectron yield that is 160% greater than is achieved with sodium iodide. Another advantage of LaBr3:Ce is the nearly flat photo emission over a 70 °C temperature range (~1% change in light output).[citation needed]

Today LaBr3 detectors are offered with bialkali photomultiplier tubes (PMT) that can be two inches in diameter and 10 or more inches long.[citation needed] However, miniature packaging can be obtained by the use of a silicon drift detector (SDD) or a Silicon Photomultiplier (SiPM).[4] These UV enhanced diodes provide excellent wavelength matching to the 380 nm emission of LaBr3. The SDD is not as sensitive to temperature and bias drift as PMT. The reported spectroscopy performance of the SDD configuration resulted in a 2.8% energy resolution at 662 keV for the detector sizes considered.

LaBr3 introduces an enhanced set of capabilities to a range of gamma spectroscopy radioisotope detection and identification systems used in the homeland security market. Isotope identification utilizes several techniques (known as algorithms) which rely on the detector's ability to discriminate peaks. The improvements in resolution allow more accurate peak discrimination in ranges where isotopes often have many overlapping peaks. This leads to better isotope classification. Screening of all types (pedestrians, cargo, conveyor belts, shipping containers, vehicles, etc.) often requires accurate isotopic identification to differentiate concerning materials from non-concerning materials (medical isotopes in patients, naturally occurring radioactive materials, etc.) Heavy R&D and deployment of instruments utilizing LaBr3 is expected in the upcoming years.

References

  1. ^ GHS: PubChem
  2. ^ Van Loef, E. V. D; Dorenbos, P; Van Eijk, C. W. E; Krämer, K; Güdel, H. U (2001). "High-energy-resolution scintillator: Ce3+ activated LaBr3". Applied Physics Letters. 79 (10): 1573–1575. Bibcode:2001ApPhL..79.1573V. doi:10.1063/1.1385342.
  3. ^ Knoll, Glenn F., Radiation Detection and Measurement 3rd ed. (Wiley, New York, 2000).
  4. ^ A. Dawood Butt et al., "Comparison of SiPM and SDD based readouts of 1″ LaBr3:Ce scintillator for nuclear physics applications," 2015 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference (NSS/MIC), San Diego, CA, 2015, pp. 1-4. doi: 10.1109/NSSMIC.2015.7581734
  • v
  • t
  • e
Lanthanum compounds
  • La(CH
    3
    COO)
    3
  • La(C5H7O2)3
  • LaAlO3
  • LaB6
  • LBCO
  • LaBr3
  • LaC2
  • LaCl3
  • La2(CO3)3
  • LaCoO3
  • C
    36
    H
    72
    LaO
    6
  • LaF3
  • LaH10
  • La2Hf2O7
  • La(IO3)3
  • LaI3
  • LaN
  • LaMnO3
  • LaNix (LaNi5)
  • La(NO3)3
  • La
    2
    (C
    2
    O
    4
    )
    3
  • La2O3
  • LaOF
  • La
    2
    O
    2
    S
  • La(OH)3
  • LaP
  • La2Te3
  • LaYbO3
  • LLZO
  • LSAT
  • LSCF
  • LSM
  • C
    54
    H
    105
    LaO
    6
  • v
  • t
  • e
Salts and covalent derivatives of the bromide ion
HBr He
LiBr BeBr2 BBr3
+BO3
CBr4
+C
NBr3
BrN3
NH4Br
NOBr
+N
Br2O
BrO2
Br2O3
Br2O5
BrF
BrF3
BrF5
Ne
NaBr MgBr2 AlBr
AlBr3
SiBr4 PBr3
PBr5
PBr7
+P
S2Br2
SBr2
BrCl Ar
KBr CaBr2
ScBr3 TiBr2
TiBr3
TiBr4
VBr2
VBr3
CrBr2
CrBr3
MnBr2 FeBr2
FeBr3
CoBr2 NiBr2
NiBr42−
CuBr
CuBr2
ZnBr2 GaBr3 GeBr2
GeBr4
AsBr3
+As
+AsO3
SeBr2
SeBr4
Br2 Kr
RbBr SrBr2 YBr3 ZrBr3
ZrBr4
NbBr5 MoBr2
MoBr3
MoBr4
TcBr4 RuBr3 RhBr3 PdBr2 AgBr CdBr2 InBr
InBr3
SnBr2
SnBr4
SbBr3
+Sb
-Sb
Te2Br
TeBr4
+Te
IBr
IBr3
XeBr2
CsBr BaBr2 * LuBr3 HfBr4 TaBr5 WBr5
WBr6
ReBr3 OsBr3
OsBr4
IrBr3
IrBr
4
PtBr2
PtBr4
AuBr
AuBr3
Hg2Br2
HgBr2
TlBr PbBr2 BiBr3 PoBr2
PoBr4
AtBr Rn
FrBr RaBr2 ** Lr Rf Db Sg Bh Hs Mt Ds Rg Cn Nh Fl Mc Lv Ts Og
 
* LaBr3 CeBr3 PrBr3 NdBr2
NdBr3
PmBr3 SmBr2
SmBr3
EuBr2
EuBr3
GdBr3 TbBr3 DyBr3 HoBr3 ErBr3 TmBr2
TmBr3
YbBr2
YbBr3
** AcBr3 ThBr4 PaBr4
PaBr5
UBr4
UBr5
NpBr3
NpBr4
PuBr3 AmBr2
AmBr3
CmBr3 BkBr3 CfBr3 EsBr2
EsBr3
Fm Md No
  • v
  • t
  • e
La Ce Pr Nd Pm Sm Eu Gd Tb Dy Ho Er Tm Yb Lu
+4 CeF4 PrF4 NdF4 TbF4 DyF4
+3 LaF3
LaCl3
LaBr3
LaI3
CeF3
CeCl3
CeBr3
CeI3
PrF3
PrCl3
PrBr3
PrI3
NdF3
NdCl3
NdBr3
NdI3
PmF3
PmCl3
PmBr3
PmI3
SmF3
SmCl3
SmBr3
SmI3
EuF3
EuCl3
EuBr3
EuI3
GdF3
GdCl3
GdBr3
GdI3
TbF3
TbCl3
TbBr3
TbI3
DyF3
DyCl3
DyBr3
DyI3
HoF3
HoCl3
HoBr3
HoI3
ErF3
ErCl3
ErBr3
ErI3
TmF3
TmCl3
TmBr3
TmI3
YbF3
YbCl3
YbBr3
YbI3
LuF3
LuCl3
LuBr3
LuI3
+2 LaI2 CeI2 PrI2 NdF2
NdCl2
NdBr2
NdI2
SmF2
SmCl2
SmBr2
SmI2
EuF2
EuCl2
EuBr2
EuI2
GdI2 DyF2
DyCl2
DyBr2
DyI2
TmF2
TmCl2
TmBr2
TmI2
YbF2
YbCl2
YbBr2
YbI2