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Reverse Aggregates as Adaptive Self‐Assembled Systems for Selective Liquid‐Liquid Cation Extraction
Author(s) -
Zemb Thomas,
Duvail Magali,
Dufrêche JeanFrançois
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
israel journal of chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.908
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1869-5868
pISSN - 0021-2148
DOI - 10.1002/ijch.201200091
Subject(s) - chemistry , hofmeister series , ion , extraction (chemistry) , adsorption , curvature , phase (matter) , solvent , selectivity , separation process , salt (chemistry) , chemical physics , inorganic chemistry , chromatography , organic chemistry , catalysis , geometry , mathematics
Separation of metals in the cationic form is the basis of hydrometallurgy. Ion‐specific separation is achieved via selective transfer between liquid phases that have been emulsified in order to be in “close” contact. We show here how the organization of water‐in‐oil (w/o) “reverse” aggregates in the solvent phase controls the free energy of transfer of cations in the form of neutral salts between phases. Indeed, all known efficient ion separation mechanisms rely on complex fluids in the Winsor II regime, i.e. when a concentrated mixed salt solution is in equilibrium with a solvent phase containing self‐assembled aggregates. Here, we point out that, in the general case of water‐poor complex fluids containing extractant molecules, long‐range interactions linked to w/o interface curvature participate in the selectivity of any multivalent ion extraction process. The free energy related to ion transfer between phases, i.e. the extraction free energy, is different from the complexation free energy. This difference is the key to the selectivity of the separation process. We give here general expressions linking complexation free energy and transfer free energy as derived from known adsorption isotherms, taking into account interfacial curvature, considered as a generalized scalar related to the packing near the interface.