2008 Annual Meeting
(104b) Liquid-Liquid Extraction of Alcohols from Water Using Ionic Liquids
Authors
The second component of our work is to optimize ionic liquids for various liquid-liquid separations. The general feasibility of separating water and alcohols using ionic liquids has been shown previously.[2-4] Ternary diagrams are necessary in order to design liquid-liquid separations. With the binary data as starting points, ternary diagrams of systems with water and alcohols for various ionic liquids were developed, measuring all three components of each phase. We also test the ability of excess Gibbs energy models to predict these ternary data over the entire composition range, using only parameters determined from binary and pure component data. Further the Hunter-Nash method was used to determine the number of stages that would be required in order to separate water and alcohols using a liquid-liquid extractor.[5]
Replacing distillation with liquid-liquid extraction could reduce energy consumption and make the production of alcohols cheaper and more environmentally sound. To that end, this study also measured enthalpies of mixing for mixtures of ionic liquids and alcohols. With this data we use a thermodynamic cycle to calculate the energy required to evaporate the alcohol from the ionic liquid and compare this to energy requirements for conventional distillation.
References
[1] A. Chapeaux, L. D. Simoni, M. A. Stadtherr and J. F. Brennecke, J. Chem. Eng. Data, 2007, 52, 2462-2467.
[2] M. M. M. Fadeev A. G., Chem. Comm., 2001, 295-296.
[3] X. S. Hu, J. Yu and H. Z. Liu, J. Chem. Eng. Data, 2006, 51, 691-695.
[4] V. Najdanovic-Visak, L. P. N. Rebelo and M. N. da Ponte, Green Chem., 2005, 7, 443-450.
[5] A. Chapeaux, L. D. Simoni, M. A. Stadtherr and J. F. Brennecke, Green Chem., 2008, Submitted.