CO2-Switchable Solvents as Entrainer in Fluid Separations
Author(s) -
Boelo Schuur,
Mart Nijland,
Marek Blahušiak,
Alberto Juan
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
acs sustainable chemistry and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.878
H-Index - 109
ISSN - 2168-0485
DOI - 10.1021/acssuschemeng.8b01771
Subject(s) - ionic liquid , decarboxylation , chemistry , toluene , solvent , extractive distillation , methylamine , distillation , extraction (chemistry) , heptane , organic chemistry , catalysis
CO 2 -switchable solvents, typically neutral solvents that switch with CO 2 into ionic species, were investigated for use as entrainer in fluid separations such as extractive distillation. Their switchable nature was investigated, which may facilitate liquid-liquid extraction or extractive distillation as ionic liquid (IL), whereas during regeneration their decarboxylation into the amine form prevents temperature shoot-up. Studied elements included a property screening and detailed mechanistic and kinetic studies on the switching of 2-ethylhexylamine and N , N- benzyl methylamine. Decarboxylation of a 50 vol % switchable solvent, 25 vol % heptane, and 25 vol % toluene mixture at 1.00 × 10 4 Pa showed a 40% CO 2 release before reaching the operational pressure, and total decarboxylation took over 2 h. An effective increase of the relative volatility of heptane/toluene was found, showing that, indeed, CO 2 -switchable solvents can be applied for extractive distillation. However, low pressure in combination with elevated temperature will lead to quick decarboxylation, limiting the operational window of this class of solvents. Their use in low temperature application such as C 4 -distillations or liquid-liquid extraction appears more suited.
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