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Original Articles

A New Class of Solvents for CCC: The Room Temperature Ionic Liquids

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Pages 1493-1508 | Received 21 Oct 2002, Accepted 11 Dec 2002, Published online: 06 Feb 2007
 

Abstract

Room temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) are salts with melting point close or below room temperature. Changing the nature of the anion or the cation produces a new salt that may or may not be a RTIL. The physico chemical properties of RTILs are briefly reviewed. The partitioning of 38 aromatic derivatives with acid, base, or neutral functionalities was studied between the biphasic liquid system 1‐butyl‐3‐methyl imidazolium hexafluorophosphate (BMIM PF6) and water. It was found that the viscosity of pure RTILs is too high for direct use as a liquid phase in countercurrent chromatography (CCC). The addition of a third solvent was needed to decrease viscosity. The ternary phase diagrams of BMIM PF6–water and acetonitrile, methanol, ethanol, 1‐propanol, and 2‐propanol are presented in mass and mole percentages. The organic solvent‐RTIL–water systems form two liquid phases with a viscosity low enough to allow CCC operation which was not done, due to the low amount of RTIL prepared.

Acknowledgments

SCB thanks the European Community for the Marie Curie fellowship HPMF—CT—2000‐00440 that allowed him to stay in Lyon. AB thanks the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique FRE2394 for financial support and Laurence Berthod for preparing the 2‐propanol phase diagram. This work was supported by the EU INTAS research program (Grant No. 00‐00782).

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Samuel Carda‐Broch

On leave from Area de Química Analítica, Universidad Jaume I, 12006 Castellón, Spain.

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