Solutions of ionic liquids with diverse aliphatic and aromatic solutes - Phase behavior and potentials for applications: A review article
Authors
Višak, Zoran P.
Calado, Marta S.
Vuksanović, Jelena
Ivaniš, Gorica

Branco, Adriana S. H.
Grozdanić, Nikola

Kijevčanin, Mirjana

Šerbanović, Slobodan P.
Article (Published version)
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This article principally reviews our research related to liquid-liquid and solid-liquid phase behavior of imidazolium- and phosphonium-based ionic liquids, mainly having bistriflamide ([NTf2](-)) or triflate ([OTf](-)) anions, with several aliphatic and aromatic solutes (target molecules). The latter include: (i) diols and triols: 1,2-propanediol, 1,3-propanediol and glycerol; (ii) polymer poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG): average molecular mass 200, 400 and 2050 - PEG200 (liquid), PEG400 (liquid) and PEG2050 (solid), respectively; (iii) polar aromatic compounds: nicotine, aniline, phenolic acids (vanillic, ferulic and caffeic acid,), thymol and caffeine and (iv) non-polar aromatic compounds (benzene, toluene, p-xylene). In these studies, the effects of the cation and anion, cation alkyl chain and PEG chain lengths on the observed phase behaviors were scrutinized. Thus, one of the major observations is that the anion - bistriflamide/triflate - selection usually had strong, sometimes really ...remarkable effects on the solvent abilities of the studied ionic liquids. Namely, in the case of the hydrogen-bonding solutes, the ionic liquids with the triflate anion generally exhibited substantially higher solubility than those having the bistriflamide anion. Nevertheless, with the aromatic compounds the situation was the opposite - in most of the cases it was the bistriflamide anion that favoured solubility. Moreover, our other studies confirmed the ability of PEG to dissolve both polar and non-polar aromatic compounds. Therefore, two general possibilities of application of alternative, environmentally acceptable, solvents of tuneable solvent properties appeared. One is to use homogeneous mixtures of two ionic liquids having [NTf2](-) and [OTf](-) anions as mixed solvents. The other, however, envisages the application of homogeneous and heterogeneous (PEG + ionic liquid) solutions as tuneable solvents for aromatic solutes. Such mixed solvents have potential applications in separation of the aforesaid target molecules from their aqueous solutions or in extraction from original matrices. From the fundamental point of view the phase equilibrium studies reviewed herein and the diversity of the pure compounds - ionic liquids and target molecules - represent a good base for the discussion of interactions between the molecules that exist in the studied solutions.
Keywords:
Ionic liquids / Sustainable solvents / Phase equilibria / Poly(ethylene glycol) / High-value compoundsSource:
Arabian Journal of Chemistry, 2019, 12, 7, 1628-1640Publisher:
- Elsevier, Amsterdam
Funding / projects:
- Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (FCT), PortugalPortuguese Foundation for Science and Technology [PEst-OE/QUI/UIO100/2013, PTDC/EQUEPR/103505/2008]
- New industrial and environmental application of chemical thermodynamics to the development of the chemical processes with multiphase and multicomponent systems (RS-172063)
DOI: 10.1016/j.arabjc.2014.10.003
ISSN: 1878-5352
WoS: 000494954400077
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85045459917
Institution/Community
Tehnološko-metalurški fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Višak, Zoran P. AU - Calado, Marta S. AU - Vuksanović, Jelena AU - Ivaniš, Gorica AU - Branco, Adriana S. H. AU - Grozdanić, Nikola AU - Kijevčanin, Mirjana AU - Šerbanović, Slobodan P. PY - 2019 UR - http://TechnoRep.tmf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4133 AB - This article principally reviews our research related to liquid-liquid and solid-liquid phase behavior of imidazolium- and phosphonium-based ionic liquids, mainly having bistriflamide ([NTf2](-)) or triflate ([OTf](-)) anions, with several aliphatic and aromatic solutes (target molecules). The latter include: (i) diols and triols: 1,2-propanediol, 1,3-propanediol and glycerol; (ii) polymer poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG): average molecular mass 200, 400 and 2050 - PEG200 (liquid), PEG400 (liquid) and PEG2050 (solid), respectively; (iii) polar aromatic compounds: nicotine, aniline, phenolic acids (vanillic, ferulic and caffeic acid,), thymol and caffeine and (iv) non-polar aromatic compounds (benzene, toluene, p-xylene). In these studies, the effects of the cation and anion, cation alkyl chain and PEG chain lengths on the observed phase behaviors were scrutinized. Thus, one of the major observations is that the anion - bistriflamide/triflate - selection usually had strong, sometimes really remarkable effects on the solvent abilities of the studied ionic liquids. Namely, in the case of the hydrogen-bonding solutes, the ionic liquids with the triflate anion generally exhibited substantially higher solubility than those having the bistriflamide anion. Nevertheless, with the aromatic compounds the situation was the opposite - in most of the cases it was the bistriflamide anion that favoured solubility. Moreover, our other studies confirmed the ability of PEG to dissolve both polar and non-polar aromatic compounds. Therefore, two general possibilities of application of alternative, environmentally acceptable, solvents of tuneable solvent properties appeared. One is to use homogeneous mixtures of two ionic liquids having [NTf2](-) and [OTf](-) anions as mixed solvents. The other, however, envisages the application of homogeneous and heterogeneous (PEG + ionic liquid) solutions as tuneable solvents for aromatic solutes. Such mixed solvents have potential applications in separation of the aforesaid target molecules from their aqueous solutions or in extraction from original matrices. From the fundamental point of view the phase equilibrium studies reviewed herein and the diversity of the pure compounds - ionic liquids and target molecules - represent a good base for the discussion of interactions between the molecules that exist in the studied solutions. PB - Elsevier, Amsterdam T2 - Arabian Journal of Chemistry T1 - Solutions of ionic liquids with diverse aliphatic and aromatic solutes - Phase behavior and potentials for applications: A review article EP - 1640 IS - 7 SP - 1628 VL - 12 DO - 10.1016/j.arabjc.2014.10.003 ER -
@article{ author = "Višak, Zoran P. and Calado, Marta S. and Vuksanović, Jelena and Ivaniš, Gorica and Branco, Adriana S. H. and Grozdanić, Nikola and Kijevčanin, Mirjana and Šerbanović, Slobodan P.", year = "2019", abstract = "This article principally reviews our research related to liquid-liquid and solid-liquid phase behavior of imidazolium- and phosphonium-based ionic liquids, mainly having bistriflamide ([NTf2](-)) or triflate ([OTf](-)) anions, with several aliphatic and aromatic solutes (target molecules). The latter include: (i) diols and triols: 1,2-propanediol, 1,3-propanediol and glycerol; (ii) polymer poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG): average molecular mass 200, 400 and 2050 - PEG200 (liquid), PEG400 (liquid) and PEG2050 (solid), respectively; (iii) polar aromatic compounds: nicotine, aniline, phenolic acids (vanillic, ferulic and caffeic acid,), thymol and caffeine and (iv) non-polar aromatic compounds (benzene, toluene, p-xylene). In these studies, the effects of the cation and anion, cation alkyl chain and PEG chain lengths on the observed phase behaviors were scrutinized. Thus, one of the major observations is that the anion - bistriflamide/triflate - selection usually had strong, sometimes really remarkable effects on the solvent abilities of the studied ionic liquids. Namely, in the case of the hydrogen-bonding solutes, the ionic liquids with the triflate anion generally exhibited substantially higher solubility than those having the bistriflamide anion. Nevertheless, with the aromatic compounds the situation was the opposite - in most of the cases it was the bistriflamide anion that favoured solubility. Moreover, our other studies confirmed the ability of PEG to dissolve both polar and non-polar aromatic compounds. Therefore, two general possibilities of application of alternative, environmentally acceptable, solvents of tuneable solvent properties appeared. One is to use homogeneous mixtures of two ionic liquids having [NTf2](-) and [OTf](-) anions as mixed solvents. The other, however, envisages the application of homogeneous and heterogeneous (PEG + ionic liquid) solutions as tuneable solvents for aromatic solutes. Such mixed solvents have potential applications in separation of the aforesaid target molecules from their aqueous solutions or in extraction from original matrices. From the fundamental point of view the phase equilibrium studies reviewed herein and the diversity of the pure compounds - ionic liquids and target molecules - represent a good base for the discussion of interactions between the molecules that exist in the studied solutions.", publisher = "Elsevier, Amsterdam", journal = "Arabian Journal of Chemistry", title = "Solutions of ionic liquids with diverse aliphatic and aromatic solutes - Phase behavior and potentials for applications: A review article", pages = "1640-1628", number = "7", volume = "12", doi = "10.1016/j.arabjc.2014.10.003" }
Višak, Z. P., Calado, M. S., Vuksanović, J., Ivaniš, G., Branco, A. S. H., Grozdanić, N., Kijevčanin, M.,& Šerbanović, S. P.. (2019). Solutions of ionic liquids with diverse aliphatic and aromatic solutes - Phase behavior and potentials for applications: A review article. in Arabian Journal of Chemistry Elsevier, Amsterdam., 12(7), 1628-1640. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.arabjc.2014.10.003
Višak ZP, Calado MS, Vuksanović J, Ivaniš G, Branco ASH, Grozdanić N, Kijevčanin M, Šerbanović SP. Solutions of ionic liquids with diverse aliphatic and aromatic solutes - Phase behavior and potentials for applications: A review article. in Arabian Journal of Chemistry. 2019;12(7):1628-1640. doi:10.1016/j.arabjc.2014.10.003 .
Višak, Zoran P., Calado, Marta S., Vuksanović, Jelena, Ivaniš, Gorica, Branco, Adriana S. H., Grozdanić, Nikola, Kijevčanin, Mirjana, Šerbanović, Slobodan P., "Solutions of ionic liquids with diverse aliphatic and aromatic solutes - Phase behavior and potentials for applications: A review article" in Arabian Journal of Chemistry, 12, no. 7 (2019):1628-1640, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.arabjc.2014.10.003 . .