A new solvent system: Hydrothermal molten salt
Author(s) -
Thomas Voisin,
Arnaud Erriguible,
Cyril Aymonier
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aaz7770
Subject(s) - molten salt , supercritical fluid , hydrothermal circulation , salt (chemistry) , solvent , chemical engineering , chemistry , salt water , phase (matter) , materials science , inorganic chemistry , environmental science , organic chemistry , environmental engineering , engineering
This work proposes a new solvent system composed of a molten salt in pressurized water, so-called hydrothermal molten salt (HyMoS). This system changes the paradigm of the solubility of inorganics in supercritical water. Using as an example NaOH, a low melting temperature salt, we show the possibility to precipitate it at a temperature above its melting one, leading to the instantaneous formation of the HyMoS. The molten salt is then capable of dissolving a large amount of inorganic salt, as exemplified with NaSO. This solvent system opens innovative ways with a potential to impact applications in many fields including materials synthesis, biomass conversion, recycling, green chemistry, catalysis, sustainable manufacturing and others. Beyond the impact on the hydrothermal community, this work also offers previously unexplored opportunities for the molten salt field with access to flow chemistry and insights regarding salt precipitation mechanism.
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