Paul J.
Corbett
a,
Alastair J. S.
McIntosh
a,
Michael
Gee
b and
Jason P.
Hallett
*a
aDepartment of Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London, South Kensington, London, SW7 2AZ, UK. E-mail: j.hallett@imperial.ac.uk
bShell International Limited, 40 Bank Street, Canary Wharf, London, E14 5NR, UK
First published on 6th February 2018
Zinc contaminants have been identified as suspects leading to nozzle deposit formation and copper contaminants quickly reduce the oxidation stability of diesel fuel. Ionic liquids (ILs) are commonly referred to as ‘designer solvents’ due to the great degree of fine-tuning of physical and chemical properties afforded by modification of the constituent cation and anion. The tunable properties of the IL ions allows the ‘design’ to meet the requirements for a particular application, making ILs an ideal potential candidate for the extraction of trace (ppb to ppm) amounts of zinc and copper heavy metals from diesel fuel. We report for the first time that ILs can extract up to 99.3% of zinc at a zinc concentration of just 2 mg kg−1 and copper can be extracted up to 99.7% at copper concentration of just 1 mg kg−1 from a model diesel fuel. Factors affecting the extent of extraction were investigated via correlation with experimental descriptors. 23Na NMR was used in the determination of donor number (DN) and Kamlet–Taft parameters were gathered for each IL providing information of possible hydrogen-bond acidity/basicity (α/β), and dipolarity/polarizability effects (π*). In addition, the non-random two liquid (NRTL) model was applied to determine τ parameters for each of the ILs. We determined that the extraction is controlled strongly by the hydrogen bond basicity of the IL which is directly related to the ability of the anion of the IL to complex Zn2+ and Cu2+ thus removing it from the fuel. DN, τ parameters and β, in addition to density and viscosity values, provide further information on the extraction mechanisms and predict performance, informing chemical design of ILs that are ideal for fuel purification.
Design, System, ApplicationIn this research we utilized solvent characteristics to design ionic liquids for the extraction of trace metal impurities from diesel fuel. Because of the application, we gave preference to innocuous elements in fuels (CHO and minimal N). We also used solvation parameters, including Kamlet–Taft polarity and hydrogen bonding parameters, to estimate extraction with a focus on Gutmann donor number (for donation to the metal center) and indications of chelating ability for divalent metals. We also correlated these parameters with a variety of physical properties to establish engineering design criteria related to performance. While diesel fuel purification at the ppm level is our present target, this has the potential to establish a generic platform for trace metal removals with ionic liquids. |
1. The [N(Tf)2]− and [OTf]− anions were selected due to their wide use; thus there is a vast amount of physical property data available.
2. The [OAc]− anion was selected as it contains only atoms of CHNO which is most appealing for a fuel application.
3. The [Me2PO4]− and [Me2SO4]− anions were selected to provide information on whether a sulfur or phosphorus centre is preferable in the chelation of M2+ ions.
4. The [HSO4]− anion was selected to determine if H-bonding played a major role in chelation.
5. The chloride (Cl−) anion was selected to examine possible formation of a precipitate within the extraction and to determine how this could affect the results.
6. Finally, the dithiocarbamate (DTC) anion [S2CN(C2H5)2]− was selected as it possesses an excellent ability to form metal complexes. DTCs have displayed the ability to form stable complexes with every transition metal in the periodic table13 which originates from the flexible electronic nature of DTCs; the sulfur atoms possess σ-donor, and π-back-donation, characteristics of equal magnitude. Furthermore, the planar delocalised π-orbital system also enables additional π-electron flow from the nitrogen to sulfur.14
In order to gain an insight into the behaviour of ionic liquids with market fuels, synthetic models of diesel were prepared and used in the study of zinc and copper extraction. Hexadecane (99%), zinc neodecanoate (2 mg kg−1) and copper acetylacetonate (1 mg kg−1) were combined respectively to produce the model Zn2+/Cu2+ contaminated diesel fuels following industry standards.3
Inductively coupled plasma spectrometric excitation sources have been in use since the mid-1960s,15 and since then they have evolved dramatically. Inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES) can be used in the determination of most of the elements, the detection limits are very low usually ranging between 1–100 μg L−1.16 The concentration of zinc and copper ions was determined for each sample via ICP-OES after performing a calibration and background check for each of the expected ions. To ensure that the data was reliable five data points were repeated at each IL to fuel volume ratio (1:20, 1:40, 1:60, 1:80 and 1:100). The distribution coefficients of these extractions were then calculated and measurements were repeated three times, and the standard deviation taken to provide error bars (Fig. 2–6). All extractions were run and left overnight in a temperature regulated room at 22 °C.
Fig. 2 ILs with high distribution (H) of Zn2+ into the IL phase; (a) [C4C1im][Me2PO4] (b) [C4C1im] [S2CN(C2H5)2] (c) [C4C1im][OAc]. |
Fig. 3 ILs with intermediate distribution (I) of Zn2+ into the IL phase; (a) [(CH3)2NH2][(CH3)2NCOO] (b) [C8C1im]Cl. |
Fig. 4 ILs with a low distribution (L) of Zn2+ into the IL phase, (a) [C4C1im][MeSO4], (b) [C4C1im][OTf] (c) [C4C1pyrr][OTf], (d) [C8C1im][OTf] and (e) [C4C1im][N(Tf)2] (f) [C4C1pyrr][N(Tf)2]. |
Fig. 6 ILs with a low distribution of Cu2+ into the IL phase, (a) [C4C1im][MePO4], (b) [(CH3)2NH2][(CH3)2NCOO]. |
23Na spectra were acquired at a frequency of 105.82 MHz using a spectral width of 21307 Hz (∼200 ppm centred at 0.0 ppm) and 8192 data points giving an acquisition time of 0.192 s. A deuterium lock was provided via a DMSO-d6 capillary tube insert. The Bruker pulse programme zg (i.e. a 90° pulse) and relaxation delay of 0.1 s were used. The data was processed using 8192 data points and an exponential window function of 50 Hz. Chemical shift calibration was achieved by employing a secondary reference of a saturated NaCl/H2O solution with a DMSO-d6 capillary tube insert (= 0 ppm).
The recorded spectra were evaluated using MestReNova's NMR software and the DN values were assigned to the ILs by using a linear calibration line consisting of values for 16 different organic solvents as used in previous literature, the calibration line had a fit coefficient of around 0.95.17
The ionic liquids (1 mL), in round bottomed flasks, were dried in vacuo overnight at 60 °C prior to each measurement. The appropriate volume of freshly made dye was added the flask before the DCM was removed at 60 °C under vacuum for 1 h. The sample was allowed to cool and the UV-vis spectrum of each sample measured at 25 °C on a Perkin-Elmer Lambda 25 (200–1100 nm). The regression used in the determination of the Kamlet Taft parameters was calculated from a previous publication.18
After analysis of the fuel phase (post-extraction) we found that the ILs used had negligible solubility within the fuel phase to the level of being undetectable via1H NMR or mass spectrometry. Solubility of the fuel in the IL was not investigated due to the IL being used as an extraction medium. To determine the properties of the ILs that are desired (and required) for this application anions were selected to give variety in their possible interactions with the Zn2+ and Cu2+ ions. We postulated that this proceeds via the IL extracting the zinc and copper directly from the fuel phase in a biphasic extraction. The sulfate, phosphate and acetate anions were selected because of being known for strongly interacting with metals through the formation of chelated complexes. It has been identified that sulfur is not suitable as a fuel additive24 and the choice of the ILs with sulfur containing anions was purely for fundamental scientific purposes in order to gain understanding of the underlying chemical interactions controlling the extraction.
The octylimidazolium ILs therefore act as a surfactant lowering surface tension between the phases and this would likely lead to an increased extraction. [C4C1im][OAc] and [C4C1im][MePO4] were also tested in the removal of Cu2+ (Fig. 5 and 6a) from fuel due to their exceptional ability in the extraction of Zn2+ (Fig. 2 and c) and were expected to extract in the same way due to both metal complexes containing M2+ species. [C4C1im][OAc] in a similar fashion to Zn2+, extracts Cu2+ with a high distribution giving a maximum distribution coefficient of 11908 (Fig. 5). The low distribution of Cu2+ at 10:1 fuel:IL ratio would be expected due to the model fuel sample volume being small and thus close to the interface which could contain the metal.
[(CH3)2NH2][(CH3)2NCOO] was also used in addition these two ILs as it is a ready-made and cost effective IL containing only CHNO atoms. [C4C1im][MePO4] and [(CH3)2NH2][(CH3)2NCOO] both, compared to Zn2+, give low distribution coefficients in the removal of Cu2+ (Fig. 6). This could also be due to the composition of the metal complexes in n-hexadecane since the peak distribution coefficient in the extraction of Zn2+ is greater than in Cu2+ for all ILs. The acetylacetone ligand of Cu(acac)2 is known to be a rather strong chelating agent.25 This could affect the ability of the ILs to preferentially chelate to the metals. The same hierarchy system and values that was utilised for Zn2+ was used for Cu2+i.e. high (H), intermediate (I) and low (L).
Ionic liquid | DN [kcal mol−1] (ref.) | 23Na chemical shift [ppm] |
---|---|---|
[C4C1im][N(Tf)2] | 9.9 (10.2)17 | −10.86 |
[C4C1im][OTf] | 19.8 | −6.17 |
[C4C1im][MeSO4] | 19.6 | −6.25 |
[C4C1im][Me2PO4] | 28.6 | −1.98 |
[C4C1im][HSO4] | 13.6 | −9.11 |
[C4C1im][OAc] | 21.3 | −5.43 |
[C4C1im][S2CN(C2H5)2] | 32.2 | −0.28 |
[C4C1pyrr][N(Tf)2] | 7.4 | −12.01 |
[C4C1pyrr][OTf] | 16.4 | −7.74 |
[C8C1im]Cl | 70.0 (69.2)17 | 17.71 |
[C8C1im][OTf] | 18.5 (18.6)17 | −6.75 |
[C8C1im][HSO4] | 19.4 | −6.35 |
Ionic liquid | DN [kcal mol−1] | Extractability ranking (Zn2+) |
---|---|---|
[C4C1im][S2CN(C2H5)2] | 32.2 | H |
[C4C1im][Me2PO4] | 28.6 | H |
[(CH3)2NH2][(CH3)2NCOO] | 24.6 | I |
[C4C1im][OAc] | 21.3 | H |
[C4C1im][OTf] | 19.8 | L |
[C4C1im][MeSO4] | 19.6 | L |
[C8C1im][OTf] | 18.5 | L |
[C4C1pyrr][OTf] | 16.4 | L |
[C4C1im][N(Tf)2] | 9.9 | L |
[C4C1pyrr][N(Tf)2] | 7.4 | L |
Ionic liquid | DN [kcal mol−1] | Extractability ranking (Cu2+) |
---|---|---|
[C4C1im][Me2PO4] | 28.6 | L |
[(CH3)2NH2][(CH3)2NCOO] | 24.6 | L |
[C4C1im][OAc] | 21.3 | H |
This could be explained again by the composition of the metal complex (Cu(acac)2) in n-hexadecane. To further explain the relationship between the extraction of Zn2+/Cu2+ and the ILs, Kamlet–Taft (KT) solvent parameters were determined (Table 4). DN displays the effect of the whole but KT allows comparisons to be drawn between the individual component ions of the IL. Using solvachromatic dyes KT data was gathered for each IL to determine their hydrogen-bond acidity/basicity (α/β) and dipolarity/polarizability (π*) effects which explains the ways that the solvents interact with solutes. Kamlet–Taft solvent descriptors have been used in ILs for a number of applications such as explaining their reactivity with anionic nucleophiles27 and predicting how ILs work in catalysis.28 These are capable of capturing the complexity of interactions that give rise to a solvent's overall polarity. The multi-parameter polarity scales are based upon linear solvation energy relationships (eqn (1)) composed of the complimentary scales.18
(XYZ) = (XYZ)0 + aα + bβ + sπ* | (1) |
π* is the value that most resembles ‘polarity’ in the absence of any hydrogen bonding effects. The values recorded are relatively high in comparison with most non-aqueous molecular solvents but remain steady throughout the ILs used in this study. The α-values are largely determined by the nature of the cation, with a smaller anion effect, and fall between 0.44–0.65. In this study, we were most interested in the β-values as this is related to the anion of the IL and could allow us to correlate the chelating ability of our IL anion towards zinc and copper ions. As is shown in Table 4 this is the value in which the main variation exists.
Ionic liquid | α (ref.) | β (ref.) | π* (ref.) |
---|---|---|---|
[C4C1im][N(Tf)2] | 0.65 (0.62)29 | 0.24 (0.24)29 | 0.92 (0.98)29 |
[C4C1im][OTf] | 0.65 (0.63)29 | 0.50 (0.46)29 | 0.94 (1.01)29 |
[C4C1im][MeSO4] | 0.57 (0.53)18 | 0.67 (0.66)18 | 1.02 (1.06)18 |
[C4C1im][Me2PO4] | 0.48 (0.45)18 | 1.13 (1.13)18 | 0.93 (0.98)18 |
[C4C1im][OAc] | 0.60 (0.57)27 | 1.26 (1.18)27 | 0.93 (0.89)27 |
[C4C1pyrr][N(Tf)2] | 0.45 (0.73)30 | 0.20 (−0.11)30 | 0.90 (0.89)30 |
[C4C1pyrr][OTf] | 0.44 (0.40)31 | 0.47 (0.46)31 | 0.94 (1.02)31 |
[C8C1im]Cl | 0.47 | 1.00 | 0.94 |
[C8C1im][OTf] | 0.65 | 0.53 | 0.91 |
Ethanol | (0.86)32 | (0.75)32 | (0.54)32 |
However, the data gave a large enough span to correlate the ability of the IL extraction towards zinc and copper ions from the hydrocarbon streams. To deliver a more in depth understanding of the extraction mechanism, the density and viscosity of the ILs were compared to the peak distribution coefficient for each IL within the volume ratio range (10:1–100:1) (Table 5). It appears that the extraction of Zn2+ relies on a combination of these factors in addition to DN. In general, the ILs which work best have a high DN, high viscosity and a low density. For example, [C4C1im][OAc] has a high electron donating ability (DN), a relatively low density enabling the Zn2+ ions to cross over into the IL phase, and high viscosity to allow time to chelate Zn2+ within the IL. This appears to be the ideal conditions to support the highest possible distribution into the IL phase but the trend is not so evident to suggest that these are the only factors involved. [C4C1im][S2CN(C2H5)2] gives the highest DN, an exceptionally high viscosity but in the extraction of Zn2+ does not perform as well even though the density is marginally higher than that of [C4C1im][OAc]. The decreased performance could be a result of the high viscosity hindering the crossover of Zn2+ in to IL phase. This is why we have to generalise the trend in terms of ILs which extract more have a high DN and viscosity with a low density.
Ionic liquid | Peak P (Zn2+) | DN [kcal mol−1] | η [Pa s−1] | ρ [g cm−3] |
---|---|---|---|---|
[C4C1im][S2CN(C2H5)2] | 8081 | 32.2 | 2.39 | 1.083 |
[C4C1im][Me2PO4] | 8294 | 28.6 | 0.13 | 1.158 |
[(CH3)2NH2][(CH3)2NCOO] | 1722 | 24.6 | 0.05 | 1.050 |
[C4C1im][OAc] | 13061 | 21.3 | 0.16 | 1.066 |
[C4C1im][OTf] | 43.42 | 19.8 | 0.08 | 1.295 |
[C4C1im][MeSO4] | 180.61 | 19.6 | 0.09 | 1.200 |
[C8C1im][OTf] | 880.2 | 18.5 | 0.18 | 1.201 |
[C4C1pyrr][OTf] | 34.32 | 16.4 | 0.13 | 1.249 |
[C4C1im][N(Tf)2] | 44.70 | 9.9 | 0.04 | 1.431 |
[C4C1pyrr][N(Tf)2] | 50.89 | 7.4 | 0.07 | 1.394 |
This model has been shown to be useful for correlating experimental liquid–liquid equilibrium data of systems containing ILs.33 The results from the extraction were fitted to the NRTL model (eqn (2)) where g is an intermolecular pair energy and α is a non-randomness factor (in this study found to be between 0.1–0.5). The mixture is considered to be an ideal solution (completely random) when the value of α is 0. This non-randomness parameter enables the NRTL model to be applied to various binary and tertiary mixtures due to the additional degree of freedom that it offers.
(2) |
(3) |
The configuration of the NRTL model was processed via mole fraction values calculated from the experimental data obtained from the ICP-OES. To draw a comparison, estimates against experimental mole fractions (Wi) were plotted for Zn2+ in both n-hexadecane and the IL using the [C4C1im][Me2PO4] Zn2+ extraction as an exemplar (see ESI† Fig. E3).
Similarly, all ILs showed a good correlation for Zn2+ and Cu2+. τ values calculated via the model were compared with τ values calculated from the extraction data to ensure that the NRTL model was in line with the experimental data (Fig. 8). [C4C1im][S2CN(C2H5)2] was removed from Fig. 8b and [C4C1im][Me2PO4] was removed from both Fig. 8a and b to provide a clear trend between the τ values (complete table of τ values can be found in the ESI†). A linear regression with DN was used as we trust that this factor provides information on the whole liquid opposed to β which provides data relating to the anion of the ionic liquid. [C8C1im]Cl was removed from the DN work in this section due to having an exceptionally high DN in comparison to other ILs. To carry out the liquid–liquid equilibrium calculation, phase compositions were obtained by solving an isothermal liquid–liquid flash at a given temperature and pressure.
Fig. 8 Comparison of calculated (from experimental DN values) and NRTL model τ parameters (a) Zn2+ in n-hexadecane and (b) Zn2+ in IL. |
The flash calculation consists of the following system of equations.
Equilibrium equation:
xL1iγL1i − xL2iγL2i = 0, i = 1, Nc | (4) |
Equation of summation:
(5) |
For a multicomponent system such as this, the activity coefficient of component i is given by the general expression:
(6) |
With lnGij = −αijτij, αij = αji and τii = 0 where τij and τji are binary interaction parameters, and αij is the non-randomness parameter. The non-randomness parameter enables the NRTL model to be applied to various binary and ternary mixtures because of the additional degree of freedom given by ij.
The correlation between DN and τ values was analysed (Fig. 9) and displays the same trend as reported in our Na study,12 displaying ILs with particular anions grouping into clusters. In this data, the line was used to guide the eye rather than a line of best fit. Generally, as DN increases the τ parameter decreases for Zn2+ in n-hexadecane and increases for Zn2+ in the IL. This provides a general trend showing the anion effect and which phase is preferable for the Zn cations in the extraction system. This analysis demonstrates that the NRTL model could be used to predict the Zn2+ and potentially Cu2+ distribution into various ILs, or at least IL anion families, provided the β values (and DN and therefore τ) are known. As only three ILs were used in the extraction of Cu2+ a model has not yet been attempted and will be included in further research.
The ability of each ionic liquid was determined via distribution coefficients for Zn2+ and Cu2+ into each IL over an increased volume of model fuel (10–100 mL). Factors affecting the extent of extraction were investigated via correlation with experimental solvent descriptors, providing a strong link between the ILs ability to extract zinc and copper with Kamlet–Taft's β values and 23Na donor number. Application of the NRTL model to the experimental data determined τ values for each of the IL showed some correlation to the DN and β values. All the data was taken into consideration when deducing a suitable extraction mechanism for the ILs. However, some of the ILs in this study gave a low distribution of zinc and copper into the IL phase which is thought to be caused by the low affinity of the anion towards zinc and copper in addition to the properties of the ILs themselves – density and viscosity.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: See DOI: 10.1039/c7me00111h |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018 |