| Literature DB >> 30662734 |
Yi-Xin Sun1, Ying-Ying Wang1, Bing-Bing Shen1, Bi-Xian Zhang2, Xiao-Mei Hu1.
Abstract
A series of dicationic ionic liquids (ILs) including [C4(MIM)2][PF6]2, [C5(MIM)2][PF6]2, [C6(MIM)2][PF6]2 and [C4(PYR)2][PF6]2 were synthesized. Their thermal stability and melting points were analysed. It was found that dicationic ILs presented important implications in the design of homogeneous and heterogeneous system with water. A homogeneous system of dicationic ILs with water could be formed at a relatively high temperature and then a heterogeneous system was formed when the solution was cooled to a low temperature. The ILs recovered by altering the temperature were obtained in high percentage yields of [C4(MIM)2][PF6]2 (97.6%), [C5(MIM)2][PF6]2 (97.3%), [C6(MIM)2][PF6]2 (98.0%) and [C4(PYR)2][PF6]2 (94.2%). On the other hand, [C4(MIM)2][PF6]2 and [C5(MIM)2][PF6]2 exhibited good solubility in acetonitrile and acetone. A homogeneous system could be achieved with imidazolium-based ILs with a relatively low amount of water and acetonitrile at room temperature. All of the properties of dicationic ILs have a strong correlation with the nature of dications, the linkage chain and the symmetry of dications. Dicationic ILs may provide a new opportunity for some specific applications in order to enable the effective separation and isolation of products.Entities:
Keywords: dicationic ionic liquids; heterogeneous; homogeneous; miscibility
Year: 2018 PMID: 30662734 PMCID: PMC6304111 DOI: 10.1098/rsos.181230
Source DB: PubMed Journal: R Soc Open Sci ISSN: 2054-5703 Impact factor: 2.963
Scheme 1.Synthesis of dicationic ionic liquids.
Melting points and thermal stability of dicationic ionic liquids. Tonset: start of decomposition temperature. Wonset: remaining mass at Tonset.
Figure 1.TGA curves of dicationic ionic liquids.
Solubility of dicationic ILs in common organic solvents. IL1: [C4(MIM)2][PF6]2, IL2: [C5(MIM)2][PF6]2, IL3: [C6(MIM)2][PF6]2, IL4: [C4(PYR)2][PF6]2. ‘+++’: 1 g ionic liquid was easily dissolved in the solvent (less than 1 ml). ‘++’: 1 g ionic liquid was easily dissolved in the solvent (1–10 ml). ‘+’: 1 g ionic liquids was dissolved in the solvent (10–100 ml). ‘−’: 1 g ionic liquid was not dissolved in the solvent (more than 100 ml).
| EtoAc | CH3CN | acetone | CH2Cl2 | MeOH | EtOH | Et2O | DMSO | toluene | PET (60–90°C) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IL1 | − | +++ | ++ | − | − | − | − | +++ | − | − |
| IL2 | − | +++ | +++ | − | − | − | − | +++ | − | − |
| IL3 | − | ++ | ++ | − | − | − | − | ++ | − | − |
| IL4 | − | + | − | − | − | − | − | ++ | − | − |
Figure 2.Miscibility of dicationic ILs and water at different temperatures. (a) [C4(MIM)2][PF6]2, (b) [C5(MIM)2][PF6]2, (c) [C6(MIM)2][PF6]2, (d) [C4(PYR)2][PF6]2.
Figure 3.The recovery of dicationic ILs.