Issue 20, 2026, Issue in Progress

Thermodynamic model for methanesulphonic acid recovery by tri-n-butyl phosphate

Abstract

A unified, semi-empirical thermodynamic model for liquid–liquid equilibria was developed within the OLI Mixed-Solvent Electrolyte (MSE) framework to describe the solvent extraction (SX) of methanesulphonic acid (MSA) by tri-n-butyl phosphate (TBP) in aliphatic diluents, based on experimental data obtained for this study. The model accounts for non-ideality in both phases and captures the key TBP protonation and molecular MSA extraction mechanisms. The model reproduces MSA Gibbs free energy of transfers, extraction efficiencies, organic-phase density, volume change, and water uptake across 0.1–9.9 mol L−1 MSA, 50–100 wt% TBP, and 24–77 °C, and captures exothermic behaviour (standard state enthalpy of transfer is −20.6 ± 0.9 kJ mol−1). Validation with data on MSA extraction from aqueous nickel(II) methanesulphonate solutions demonstrates robustness under realistic conditions. Process simulations of counter-current mixer-settlers predict that an overall MSA recovery of 94% could be achieved from a 1.5 mol L−1 solution of Ni(CH3SO3)2 with 1 mol L−1 excess MSA at realistic process conditions, enabling the recovery and recycling of MSA. This validated model provides a practical, predictive basis for designing and optimising MSA recovery in industrial hydrometallurgical flowsheets. Comparison of the experimental MSA extraction data with literature data on other strong acids reveals the following order of extraction efficiency by TBP: HNO3 > HCl ≈ MSA > H2SO4.

Graphical abstract: Thermodynamic model for methanesulphonic acid recovery by tri-n-butyl phosphate

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
03 Feb 2026
Accepted
27 Mar 2026
First published
07 Apr 2026
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

RSC Adv., 2026,16, 18154-18165

Thermodynamic model for methanesulphonic acid recovery by tri-n-butyl phosphate

R. Lommelen, C. Lempereur and K. Binnemans, RSC Adv., 2026, 16, 18154 DOI: 10.1039/D6RA00938G

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence. You can use material from this article in other publications without requesting further permissions from the RSC, provided that the correct acknowledgement is given.

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