2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
Spectroscopic Analysis of the Local Polarity in Gas Expanded Liquids
Authors
Andrew T. Marin - Presenter, Georgia Institute of Technology
Charles A. Eckert, Georgia Institute of Technology
Charles L. Liotta, Georgia Institute of Technology
Christopher Kitchens, Clemson University
Gas Expanded Liquids (GXLs) are ambient temperature organic solvents that undergo volumetric expansion via pressurization with CO2. Much like supercritical fluid solvents, GXLs provide an advantageous reaction media because of the pressure-tunability of the solvent in order to control phase behavior, transport properties, solvent properties, reaction rates, and reaction selectivity. In addition, the environmental benefits of CO2 make GXLs an attractive medium especially for the food and pharmaceutical industries. This investigation examines the effects of CO2 concentration on the Gibb's energy of activation for the isomerization of a probe molecule, 4-(diethylamino) 4'-nitroazobenzene (DENAB). The functionality of DENAB permits the investigation of the cybotactic region, the region immediately surrounding the probe molecule, and enables the distinction between macroscopic and cybotactic region properties. With the addition of CO2, deviation from pure solvent activation energy signifies a change in the polarity of the cybotactic region. The deviation in activation energy also emphasizes the user control over solvent thermodynamic and kinetic properties.