Uranium nitride is any of a family of several ceramic materials: uranium mononitride, uranium sesquinitride and uranium dinitride. The word nitride refers to the −3 oxidation state of the nitrogen bound to the uranium. Uranium nitride has been considered as a potential fuel for nuclear reactors. It is said to be safer, stronger, denser, more thermally conductive and having a higher temperature tolerance. Challenges to implementation of the fuel include a complex conversion route from enriched UF6, the need to prevent oxidation during manufacturing and the need to define and license a final disposal route. The necessity to use expensive, highly isotopically enriched 15N is a significant factor to overcome. This is necessary due to the high neutron capture cross-section of the far more common 14N, which reduces the neutron economy and thus efficiency of a reactor.
An additional method of UN synthesis employs fabrication directly from metallic uranium. By exposing metallic uranium to hydrogen gas at temperatures in excess of 280 °C, UH3 can be formed. Furthermore, since UH3 has a higher specific volume than the metallic phase, hybridation can be used to physically decompose otherwise solid uranium. Following hybridation, UH3 can be exposed to a nitrogen atmosphere at temperatures around 500 °C, thereby forming U2N3. By additional heating to temperatures above 1150 °C, the sesquinitride can then be decomposed to UN. Use of the isotope15N is preferable because the predominant isotope, 14N, has a not insignificant neutron absorption cross section which affects neutron economy and, in particular, it undergoes an reaction which produces significant amounts of radioactive 14C which would need to be carefully contained and sequestered during reprocessing or permanent storage.
Decomposition
Each uranium dinitride complex is considered to have three distinct compounds present simultaneously because of decomposing of uranium dinitride into uranium sesquinitride, and the uranium mononitride. Uranium dinitrides decompose to uranium mononitride by the following sequence of reactions: Decomposition of UN2 is the most common method for isolating uranium sesquinitride.
The uranium dinitride compound has a face-centered cubic crystal structure of the calcium fluoride type with a space group of Fm3m. Nitrogen forms triple bonds on each side of uranium forming a linear structure. α- has a body centered cubic crystal structure of the type with a space group of Ia3. UN has a face-centered cubic crystal structure of the NaCl type. The metal component of the bond uses the 5f orbital of the uranium but forms a relatively weak interaction but is important for the crystal structure. The covalent portion of the bonds forms from the overlap between the 6d orbital and 7s orbital on the uranium and the 2p orbitals on the nitrogen. N forms a triple bond with uranium creating a linear structure.
Uranium nitrido derivatives
Recently, there have been many developments in the synthesis of complexes with terminal uranium nitride bonds. In addition to radioactive concerns common to all uranium chemistry, production of uranium nitrido complexes has been slowed by harsh reaction conditions and solubility challenges. Nonetheless, syntheses of such complexes have been reported in the past few years, for example the three shown below among others. Other U≡N compounds have also been synthesized or observed with various structural features, such as bridging nitride ligands in di-/polynuclear species, and various oxidation states.