1 / 9

IONIC LIQUIDS

IONIC LIQUIDS . By Gary W. Earl Augustana College March 2006. What are Ionic Liquids?. Ionic Compounds- charged like NaCl Exhibit properties like high melting points Very water soluble Non-volatile so don’t evaporate easily Very high boiling points, often over 1000 deg C. But Liquids:

paul
Download Presentation

IONIC LIQUIDS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. IONIC LIQUIDS By Gary W. Earl Augustana College March 2006

  2. What are Ionic Liquids? • Ionic Compounds- charged like NaCl • Exhibit properties like high melting points • Very water soluble • Non-volatile so don’t evaporate easily • Very high boiling points, often over 1000 deg C. • But Liquids: • Boiling points below 100 deg C, preferably near room temperature. • Perhaps serve as solvents for other ionic compounds • Therefore possibly green compounds

  3. Green Chemistry • Green Products • Products which do not affect the environment • We are working toward a sustainable world. • Green Processes • We need to make chemicals by processes that do not damage our ecosystem. • We need to use reactants that are biofriendly. • We must find ways to make and use products that are also biofriendly.

  4. Quats: Current Uses • Fabric Softeners – Downy, Snuggle, Bounce, etc. • Hair care conditioners: • Road Asphalt Emulsifiers • Sugar clarifiers in sucrose processing • Ore flotation in phosphate mining, etc. • Many other uses. • Hundreds of millions of pounds used each year in fabric softeners alone.

  5. What’s the chemistry behind the process? • Amines, an ammonia derivative, are basic. Arrhenius bases? No! Bronsted-Lowry bases? (proton acceptors)? Yes! Lewis bases? (electron donors?) Yes! • Bases can also be nucleophiles, ie., they can attack ‘nuclei’. • Thus the area of chemistry, nucleophilic substitution reactions.

  6. Substitution Nucleophilic Second-Order • The nucleophile needs to be a strong one. • The attack occurs on a primary carbon. • The leaving group needs to be a good one. • The solvent assists the reaction if it is polar.

  7. Summer, 2005 research at Augustana • Jessica Paumen and Eric Villa worked on perfecting the synthesis.

  8. 10:10:1 molar ratio of DMC:methanol:amine • Purged atmosphere using N2 • Stirred and heated to the desired temperature • Reaction was run for 24 hours • DMC and MeOH were recovered once the reaction was completed by sparging

  9. The “Birthday Cake” Reactor • 5-gallon insulated kettle, filled with mineral oil • Thermowatch and mechanical stirrer

More Related