Issue 28, 2010

The solvation of nitroxide radicals in ionic liquids studied by high-field EPR spectroscopy

Abstract

Ionic liquids (ILs) feature a variety of properties that make them a unique class of solvents. To gain a better understanding of how ILs solvate compounds of different chemical structure, we used pulsed high-field electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy at W-band (∼94 GHz) and continuous wave EPR at X-band (∼9.4 GHz) on three TEMPO-based spin probes with different substitutions at the 4-position: 4-R-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl, with R = N(CH3)3+, Cat-1, R = COO, TEMPO-4-carboxylate, and R = OH, TEMPOL. The spin probes are dissolved in imidazolium based ILs with different alkyl chain lengths (–C2H5, –C4H9, –C6H13) and anions (BF4, PF6) and also in molecular solvents (methanol, waterglycerol). X-Band EPR at RT shows that the reorientational motion of the charged spin probes in ILs is about fivefold slower than that of the TEMPOL. Moreover, anion variation from BF4 to PF6 in ILs most strongly slows down the rotational motion (as measured by the rotational correlation time τr) of Cat-1, followed by TEMPOL, while τr of TEMPO-4-carboxylate is least affected. The EPR parameters gxx and Azz (tensor elements of the g- and hyperfine tensor) are sensitive to environmental effects and are only fully resolved at the high field used in this study. Changes of gxx and Azz values of the Cat-1 in ILs and methanol are very small especially compared to that of TEMPO-4-carboxylate, indicating that Cat-1 is located in a polar region of the ILs resembling the situation in methanol. On the other hand, the gxx value of TEMPO-4-carboxylate is sensitive to the length of alkyl group which shows that TEMPO-4-carboxylate is close to the nonpolar region of ILs. The small differences in the chemical substitution of the spin probes used here are sufficient for the molecules to reside in different domains of different dielectric properties in ILs. Our combined results are in good agreement with a picture of a nanophase separation, in which the charged cations and anions form polar regions and the hydrophobic alkyl chains of the IL cations form non-polar regions.

Graphical abstract: The solvation of nitroxide radicals in ionic liquids studied by high-field EPR spectroscopy

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Jan 2010
Accepted
24 Mar 2010
First published
26 May 2010

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2010,12, 7874-7882

The solvation of nitroxide radicals in ionic liquids studied by high-field EPR spectroscopy

Y. Akdogan, J. Heller, H. Zimmermann and D. Hinderberger, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2010, 12, 7874 DOI: 10.1039/C001602K

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