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Selective Separation of Benzene/n-hexane with Ester-Functionalized Ionic Liquids Zhongqi Ren, Mengyao Wang, Yong Li, Zhiyong Zhou, Fan Zhang, and Wei Liu Energy Fuels, Just Accepted Manuscript • Publication Date (Web): 25 May 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 28, 2017
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Energy & Fuels
Selective Separation of Benzene/n-hexane with
1 2
Ester-Functionalized Ionic Liquids
3
Zhongqi Ren, Mengyao Wang, Yong Li, Zhiyong Zhou, Fan Zhang*, Wei Liu*
4
College of Chemical Engineering, Beijing University of Chemical Technology, Beijing, 100029, P.R. China
5
Abstract
6
The designer nature of ionic liquids (ILs) has driven their exploration and application in countless
7
fields because of their unique phisco-chemical properties. In this work, two ester-functionalized ionic
8
liquids (ILs), N-ethylacetate-N-methylimidazole bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide ([Eamim][NTf2])
9
and N-ethylacetate-N-methylimidazole sulfocyanide([Eamim][SCN]), were prepared. Two ternary
10
systems, benzene-hexane-[Eamim][NTf2] and benzene-hexane-[Eamim][SCN], were investigated in
11
terms of both quantum chemical calculation and liquid-liquid extraction experiment. Quantum
12
chemical calculation results showed that the interaction between ILs and benzene was larger than
13
that between ILs with n-hexane. The liquid-liquid extraction results showed that the selectivity
14
reached 29.55 with [Eamim][NTf2], while the selectivity reached 61.44 with [Eamim][SCN] at 25 °C.
15
Vapor permeation process was conducted through supported membrane with ILs. The influences of
16
operating temperature and the feed concentration of benzene were investigated. With the increase of
17
temperature, the selectivity of benzene increased at first and then decreased. When the concentration
18
of benzene was 0.5 and the temperature was 35 °C, the selectivity of benzene reached 16.05, while
19
the flux was 22.14 g·h-1·m-2. The stability of the membrane in the vapor permeation was also tested
20
and could remain steady for 60 hours.
21
Key words: ester-functionalized ionic liquid, liquid-liquid extraction, vapor permeation, membrane
22
separation
23 1
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1. Introduction
2
The separation of aromatic hydrocarbons is one of the most difficult problems in petrochemical
3
refinery process, which will cause a huge energy consumption.1-3 It is extremely important to
4
develop energy efficient technologies to separate aromatics from alkanes. Absorption,
5
crystallization, liquid-liquid extraction and membrane separation have been applied to separate
6
aromatic hydrocarbons. Among them, liquid-liquid extraction process is the most promising one
7
due to its simple operation, high efficiency, and low energy cost. 4-7 The most commonly used
8
solvent in industrial process is sulfolane (UOP/Shell Process). The applications of other solvents,
9
including polyethylene glycols (UDEX Process), tetraethylene glycol (Union Carbide Process),
10
dimethyl sulfoxide, N-methylpyrrolidone (Arosolvan Process), and N-formylmorpholine
11
(Uhde/Formex Process), are also developed. Compared with those volatile organic solvents, ILs
12
were getting more and more attention in aromatic separation process because of their unique
13
physico-chemical properties. Some of them present negligible vapor pressure at room temperature
14
and normal pressure condition. So the regeneration of ILs could be achieved by flash distillation.
15
The properties of ILs also could be designed by selecting different chemical structures of cations
16
and anions.8,9 In recent years, many functional ILs were designed by changing anions or cations.
17
They have been reported in various fields, such as separation10-12, catalysis13, functional materials14
18
and electrochemistry15-17.
19
Many researchers have done a lot of work in the separation of aromatic hydrocarbons with ILs.
20
Requejo et al., investigated the extraction of benzene from octane and decane by using IL
21
tributylmethylammonium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl) imide ([N4441][NTf2]) at atmospheric
22
pressure when the temperature was 25 °C.18 The distribution coefficient and selectivity showed 2
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that this IL could be used as a suitable solvent. The extraction of benzene was greatly affected
2
when both aliphatic hydrocarbons were present in the mixture and especially when the
3
compositions of octane in the initial feed was high. The experimental liquid-liquid extraction (LLE)
4
data were satisfactorily correlated by the nonrandom two-liquid thermodynamic model (NRTL)
5
model. Sandra et al., studied the separation of heptane, cyclohexane and toluene with
6
1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium acetate ([Emim][OAc]) at 25 °C, and the results were correlated with
7
NRTL model.19 Corderi et al., studied the separation performance of heptane and toluene with
8
1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium
9
sulfocyanide([SCN]−), mesylate([CH3SO3]−), and dicyanamide ([DCA]−) anions showed better performance
([Emim])
than
IL.20
The
sulfolane.
results
The
showed
that
selectivities
of
ILs
with
10
separation
toluene
11
with1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium sulfocyanide ([Emim][SCN]) and 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium
12
dicyanamide ([Emim][DCA]) were over four times than that with sulfolane. The ILs with
13
tricyanomethanide ([TCM]−), bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide ([NTf2]−), and dicthylphosphate
14
([DEP]−) anions showed the best distribution coefficient. Mobin et al., studied the separation of
15
heptane and benzene with two pyridinium based IL, and the influence of temperature was also
16
investigated.21 The results showed that the selectivity of benzene with N-butylpyridinium
17
nitrate([BPy][NO3]) was higher than that with N-hexylpyridinium nitrate ([HPy][NO3]), and the
18
separation performance at low temperature was higher than that at high temperature.
19
Both IL cations and anions could be selected among a huge diversity according to the specific
20
system in different applications. As a supplement to the experiment, quantum calculation could be
21
used to select specific IL and investigate the mechanism of dissolution by calculating the optimum
22
structure and interaction between IL and system compounds. Tsuzuki et al., studied the interaction 3
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in benzene and pyridinium cations and the results showed that it should be categorized into a
2
cation-π interaction. This was mainly because the electrostatic and induction interactions greatly
3
contribute to the attraction.22 Rogers et al., studied the solubility of benzene in fifteen ionic liquids
4
and the results showed that benzene interacted with IL cation primarily. The liquid clathrate
5
formation and benzene solubility were controlled by the strength of the cation-anion interactions.
6
23-24
7
Membrane separation is a promising method as it is low energy consumption and could be
8
carried out at mild condition.25 Combined with ILs and membrane could not only reduce the usage
9
amount of ILs but also enhance the stability of membrane process. Yamanouchi et al., studied the
10
separation performance of benzene and cyclohexane with vapor permeation process, and the
11
separation membrane was consisted of triglycol, water and salt solution.26 The effects on
12
separation performance of water and salt solution were investigated at 30 °C, and the results
13
showed that the addition of salt could increase the selectivity obviously. Wang et al., studied the
14
separation of benzene and cyclohexane with supported ionic liquid membrane.27 The results
15
showed that with the increasing of temperature, the selectivity was increased at first and then
16
decreased after 40 °C, and the selectivity ranged from 15 to 25 with different concentrations of
17
benzene. The stability of separation process was also tested and the results showed that the
18
membrane could keep excellent extraction performance for a long time.
19
In this paper, benzene and n-hexane as the representative of aromatic and alkane were selected
20
as the separation system and two ester-functionalized ionic liquids were chosen as extractants. The
21
quantum chemical calculations on the interactions of ILs with aromatic and alkane were also
22
conducted as a complementarity for experimental methods. Liquid-liquid extraction of aromatics 4
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(benzene) from alkane (n-hexane) using two ILs had been studied. For this purpose, liquid-liquid
2
extractions of two ternary systems, benzene-hexane-IL ([Eamim][NTf2] or [Eamim][SCN]), were
3
investigated at 25 °C and atmospheric pressure. The reliability of obtained LLE data had been
4
checked by using Othmer-Tobias correlation. The influence of the concentrations of benzene and
5
operating temperature were studied. The NRTL model was used to correlate the experimental LLE
6
data. Moreover, ILs and vapor permeation were combined to separate benzene from the mixture. In
7
vapor permeation process, the concentration of benzene, operating temperature, and the stability of
8
vapor permeation were investigated.
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2. Experimental section
10
2.1 Materials
11
N-methylimidazole and potassium sulfocyanide were supplied by Energy Chemical, Beijing,
12
China. Ethyl chloroacetate and bis(trifluoromethane)sulfonimide lithium salt were purchased from
13
Aladdin, Shanghai, China. Benzene, hexane, cyclohexane, ethanol and acetone were supplied by
14
Beijing Chemical Plant, Beijing, China. All chemicals were at analytical grade and used without
15
any further purification.
16
2.2 Preparation of ILs
17
In this paper, both ILs were synthesized with two steps and their structures were shown in Figure
18
1.
19
Figure 1
20
The N-ethylacetate-N-methylimidazoium chloride was synthesized by mixing equimolar (0.1 mol)
21
quantities of N-methylimidazole and ethyl chloroacetate in ultrapure water with magnetic stirring
22
for 12 h. The reaction temperature was controlled by an ice-bath. Then 0.1 mol LiNTf2 was added 5
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1
into the mixture and stirred for another 12 h. The aqueous phase containing LiCl was removed and
2
the IL was washed with ultrapure water many times to remove chloride ion. 0.1 mol/L AgNO3
3
solution was used to test the residual halogen and no precipitation was observed. The IL was set in
4
vacuum oven at 80 °C for several days to remove possible traces of solvents and moisture.
5
Due to the hydrophilic of [Eamim][SCN], acetone was used as solvent to replace water when
6
N-ethylacetate-N-methylimidazoium chloride was synthesized. KSCN was added into the mixing
7
solution and stirred for 12 h at room temperature. The precipitated solid KCl was removed by
8
filtration. After that, anhydrous MgSO4 was used to remove water. Finally, the product was
9
obtained after evaporation of acetone under vacuum conditions by rotary evaporator. Both ILs
10
structures were analyzed by 1H-NMR, 13C-NMR and FT-IR.(Figure S1-4) Some other properties of
11
ILs were also measured. All these results were showed in Supporting Information. (Table S1-2)
12
2.3 Liquid-liquid extraction process
13
Liquid-liquid extraction was carried out at 25 °C and atmospheric pressure. Both 10 mL IL and the
14
mixture of benzene/n-hexane were added into a conical flask. The extractions were carried out
15
under vigorously stirring long enough to ensure the extractions were completed. Then the mixtures
16
were settled for 3 hours to get a complete phase split, and the samples of two layers were analyzed
17
by gas chromatography.
18 19 20 21 22
The distribution coefficient (Di) and selectivity (S) of liquid-liquid extraction process were calculated as follows: = /
(1)
/ = /
(2)
where xi is the mole fraction of component i, IL means ionic liquid phase while raf means the 6
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mixture of benzene and n-hexane.
2
2.4 Vapor permeation process
3
The separation membrane used in vapor permeation process were prepared by using infusion
4
method. IL entered into the membrane pore by capillary force. Firstly, the membrane was set in
5
drying oven for 3 hours at 45 °C. Then, the membrane was immersed in IL completely and placed
6
in drying oven at 50 °C for 12 hours. The separation membrane was obtained after another 12
7
hours at 30 °C. The flow diagram of experiment was showed in Figure 2. The prepared membrane
8
was put into membrane module. The vapor in feed phase could through the membrane by pressure
9
difference and was collected by cold trap. The collected samples were analyzed by gas
10
chromatography. Figure 2
11 12 13 14 15
The flux (J) and separation factor (α) were calculated as follows: = /
(3)
= (1 − )/ (1 − )
(4)
where means the mass of samples, s means active area, means time of the process, while
16
and mean the final and initial concentration of benzene respectively.
17
2.5 Analytical methods
18
Gas chromatography (Agilent 7890A with a hydrogen flame ionization detector, 0.25 mm × 30 m
19
DB-FFAP capillary column) with an internal standard method was used to analyze the
20
concentration of benzene and n-hexane. Cyclohexane was added into the samples as internal
21
standard while acetone was added as solvent to dilute the samples. The conditions were as follows:
22
programmed temperature, injection and detector temperature were 230 °C and 250 °C. To ensure 7
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enough accuracy, all experiments were carried out in triplicate.
2
3. Results and discussion
3
3.1 Interactions of ILs with benzene and n-hexane
4
The interaction between IL and the system compounds could be used to select specific cation
5
and anion of IL. In this section, the interaction between both ILs (cation and anion) and
6
aromatic/alkane was calculated by quantum chemistry calculation. The optimized geometries were
7
calculated and performed on isolated benzene, n-hexane, ILs (cation and anion) and their
8
complexes. The initial geometries of all compounds were first constructed and pre-optimized at
9
semiempirical level with the Chem3D Ultra package. Then the obtained geometry with the lowest
10
energy was further optimized with Gaussian 09 software.28 The hybrid density functional theory
11
(DFT), which incorporates Becke’s three-parameter exchange with Lee, Yang, and Parr’s (B3LYP)
12
correlation functional method, was employed together with 6-311++G** basis set 29, 30.
13
The binding energy was calculated as follows:
14
opt opt BE =EIL-system − [ EILopt + Esystem ]
15
opt where BE means binding energy, EILopt , Esystem means the energy of IL and system compound at the
16
opt optimized structure, EIL-system means the energy of IL and system compound at the optimized
17
structure, respectively.
18
Both cation and anion played significant roles in the separation of aromatic compounds from
19
alkanes. For each kind of interaction between IL and aromatic/alkane, more than three different
20
initial geometries of each pair were optimized, which meant aromatics or alkanes were located at
21
different positions around IL. The optimized geometry with the lowest energy was used as global
22
minimum for the subsequent calculation. No imaginary frequency appeared in the calculated
23
vibrational frequencies of the optimized structures, which ensured obtained structures stable. The 8
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optimized geometries between ILs (cation and anion) and benzene/n-hexane were shown in Figure
2
3. The interaction energies between ILs (cation and anion) and benzene/n-hexane were also
3
calculated and summarized in Table 1.
4
Figure 3
5
Table 1
6
The binding energy between [Eamim]+ and benzene was -28.09 kJ/mol, while the value was -13.45
7
kJ/mol between [Eamim]+ and n-hexane. As showed in Figure 3, the interaction between [Eamim]+
8
and benzene should be categorized into a CH-π interaction. The binding energy between [NTf2] and
9
benzene was -18.50 kJ/mol, while the value was -15.02 kJ/mol between [NTf2] and n-hexane. When
10
the anion was [SCN] , the interaction with n-hexane was almost the same, while the value was
11
-20.58 kJ/mol with benzene. The calculated binding energy differences between benzene and
12
n-hexnae was -14.64 kJ/mol, while the values were -14.51 kJ/mol (N-Benzyl-N-methyl imidazoium
13
cation) and -15.38 kJ/mol (N-benzyl-N-vinyl imidazolium) in our previous work.5 Both anion and
14
cation showed stronger interaction with benzene rather than that with n-hexane. So these two ILs
15
could be used as extractants to separate benzene and n-hexane.
16
3.2 Liquid-liquid extraction
17
3.2.1 Experimental LLE Data
18
Most ILs remain liquid at a wide range around room temperature and this makes them can be used as
19
extractants in liquid-liquid extraction process. They are used as novel extractants to replace
20
traditional volatile organic solvents. In this section, experimental compositions of alkane-rich
21
(raffinate) and IL-rich (extract) phases in equilibrium for ternary systems {n-hexane (1) + benzene (2)
-
-
-
9
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+ IL (3)} at 25 °C and atmospheric pressure were investigated and the results were plotted in Figure
2
4. Figure 4
3 4
To verify the reliability of the experimental LLE data, Othmer-Tobias equation was applied:
5
1 − wⅡ 1 − wⅠ1 3 ln = a + bln Ⅰ Ⅱ w1 w3
6
where wⅡ is the mass fraction of ionic liquid in IL-rich phase (lower layer), wⅠ is the mass fraction 3 1
7
of alkane in alkane-rich phase (upper layer), a and b are the fitting parameters of the Othmer-Tobias
8
correlation. The results were very close to unity and showed in Supporting Information (Table S3).
9
To compare with the separation performance of ILs in this work, some other ILs in literatures were
10
listed in Table 2 below.28-29 The synthesized ILs in this work showed good performance in both
11
distribution coefficient and selectivity. When the cation was [Eamim]+, the IL with [NTf2] could
12
dissolve more benzene than that with [SCN] . This should contribute to the increase of the anion size.
13
When the anion was [NTf2] , more benzene was dissolved in the IL with alkyl and benzyl group. The
14
zwitterionic also could be used to enhance the separation performance. At the same time, this also
15
improved the solubility of n-hexane. As a result, the selectivity of IL on benzene decreased. In this
16
research, the group of ethyl acetate was introduced in IL to improve the separation performance. The
17
distribution coefficient of n-hexane was more sensitive when ethyl acetate group was introduced, so
18
the selectivity of ILs maintained high level. The selectivity of two IL synthesized was 29.55
19
([Eamim][NTf2]) and 61.44([Eamim]SCN]) and the distribution coefficient of n-hexane was 0.035
20
and 0.009, respectively.
21
(3)
-
-
-
Table 2 10
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3.2.2 The concentration of benzene
2
In order to study the influence of the content of benzene, a set of extraction experiments were
3
carried out with the content of benzene range from 0.1 to 0.9 at room temperature. The results
4
were plotted in Figure 5 and listed in Table S4.
5
Figure 5
6
The results showed that the selectivity of benzene with two ILs decreased with the increasing of
7
benzene. This was mainly because that the concentration difference was the driving force of the
8
extraction process. With the increasing of mole fraction of benzene, the distribution coefficient of
9
benzene decreased while the distribution coefficient of hexane increased quickly, which would
10
lead to a decrease of the selectivity of benzene. Compared the two ILs, the selectivity of benzene
11
with [Eamim][SCN] was better than that with [Eamim][NTf2], which was due to the concentration
12
of n-hexane in [Eamim][SCN] was lower. The similar trend was observed in quantum calculation
13
result, the difference of binding energy between benzene and n-hexane with the anion [SCN] was
14
bigger than that with [NTf2] . The best selectivity was more than 61 while the distribution
15
coefficient of benzene was over 0.5 when [Eamim][SCN] was used. The selectivity was high at
16
low benzene concentration and this would lead to a greener process. The remove of low
17
concentration of benzene by liquid-liquid extraction process with IL could be done with low
18
energy cost. Both ILs could be regenerated by using vacuum distillation because of their excellent
19
chemical and thermal stability.
20
3.2.3 Operating temperature
21
In thermodynamic equilibrium process, the operating temperature was important to the separation
22
performance. In this section, the separation of benzene/n-hexane with two ILs were carried out at
-
11
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different temperatures (25 °C, 30 °C, 35 °C and 40 °C). The initial mole concentration of benzene
2
was 0.3. The results were showed in Table 3.
3
Table 3
4
When [Eamim][NTf2] was used as extractant, the distribution coefficient of benzene changed from
5
0.824 to 0.921 with the increasing of operating temperature, while the selectivity of benzene
6
decreased from 26.85 to 21.74. When [Eamim][SCN] was used, the distribution coefficient of
7
benzene changed from 0.451 to 0.529 with the increasing of operating temperature, while the
8
selectivity of benzene decreased from 42.20 to 23.78. This was mainly because the solubility of
9
hexane in both ILs was more sensitive to the operating temperature than that of benzene. The
10
distribution coefficient and selectivity of benzene was at high level when the operating temperature
11
was 25 °C. So the separation process with these two ILs would lead to less energy consumption.
12
3.2.4 Benzene-cyclohexane system
13
The system consisted of benzene and cyclohexane was also tested in this research. The experiment
14
was carried out under room temperature and the initial mole fraction of benzene was 0.1. The results
15
were exhibited in Table 4.
16
Table 4
17
The distribution coefficients of both compounds in benzene/cyclohexane system were higher than
18
that in benzene/n-hexane system. In benzene/cyclohexane system, the distribution coefficients of
19
benzene were more than twice the value of benzene in benzene/hexane system. The distribution
20
coefficients of cyclohexane were triple the value of hexane. As a result, the selectivity of benzene in
21
benzene/cyclohexane system was lower than that in benzene/hexane system. This was mainly
22
because the cyclic structure of cyclohexane made it easily to dissolve into ILs, which also could 12
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improve the solubility of benzene in ILs.
2
3.2.5 Thermodynamic correlation
3
A further study of the experimental data was performed by using NRTL model.33 The NRTL model
4
has been successfully implemented for the prediction of the phase behavior of several systems
5
containing ILs by several researchers.34-39 The binary interaction parameters ∆gij and ∆gji were
6
optimized and the third nonrandomness parameter (αij) of the NRTL equation was fixed to 0.30. The
7
parameters were adjusted to minimize the difference between the experimental and the calculated
8
mole fractions defined as:
9
,& '& ,& '& ,& '& & '& O. F. = ∑, − ) − ) ( + #) ( + + ∑, ( + #) ( + -$ "#$ − $ -$ "#$ − $
)
)
)
)
(6)
10
,& '& ,& & ,& &'& ,& '& where $ ,) ,$ ,) are the experimental mole fraction, $ ,) ,$ ,) are
11
the calculated mole fraction, respectively.
12
The fitting parameters associated with the estimation deviations were summarized in Table 5. The
13
root means square deviation of the composition, σx, was defined as the following expression:
14 15
? ? F ∑BCD23 6,789 : 6,; @3 66,789 : 66,; A E 45 45 45 45
∑4 σx = 1001
),G
(7)
where M is the number of connecting lines, N is the number of components, respectively.
16
Table 5
17
The best correlation was found when α was fixed to 0.3. The rmsd value was 0.0829 with
18
[Eamim][NTf2] and 0.0653 with [Eamim][SCN], respectively. The result showed that the NRTL
19
model could correlate the experimental LLE data of these studied ternary systems adequately. The
20
experimental and calculated tie-lines data were plotted in Figure 4 and agreed relatively well.
21
3.3 Vapor permeation
22
In this part, the hydrophobic PVDF membrane was used as supported material when [Eamim][NTf2] 13
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was used as membrane phase. Hydrophilic PAN membrane was selected when [Eamim][SCN] was
2
used as membrane phase.
3
3.3.1 Operating temperature
4
With the increasing of operating temperature, the vapor pressure of benzene and hexane in feed
5
phase increased and the mass transfer driving force in membrane process would increase. The
6
viscosity of ILs decreased with the increasing of operating temperature, which would reduce the
7
mass transfer resistance. In this section, the experiments were carried out from 25 °C to 65 °C. The
8
concentration of benzene was 0.5 and the vacuum degree was 735 mmHg. Figure 6
9 10
In Figure 6, with the increasing of temperature, the flux of benzene decreased at first and then
11
increased, while the selectivity was on the contrary. At 25 °C, the evaporation of benzene and hexane
12
might be not sufficient in feed phase. When the temperature was over 35 °C, the mass transfer
13
driving force increased and mass transfer resistance reduced as the viscosity of ILs decreased, so the
14
flux of benzene was increased. More benzene solved in membrane phase would also promote the
15
dissolution of hexane. So the selectivity of benzene was decreased.
16
3.3.2 The concentration of benzene
17
Different concentrations of benzene would cause the change of mass transfer driving force in
18
membrane process. In this section, the concentration of benzene varied from 0.1 to 0.9. The
19
operating temperature was 35 °C and the vacuum degree was 735 mmHg. The result was showed in
20
Figure 7.
21 22
Figure 7 In Figure 7, with the increasing of benzene, the flux increased while the selectivity declined 14
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gradually. When [Eamim][SCN] was used as membrane phase, the flux of benzene increased from
2
35.30 to 70.67 g·h-1·m-2 while the selectivity changed from 16.42 to 2.85. When [Eamim][NTf2] was
3
used as membrane phase, the flux increased from 16.49 to 36.98 g·h-1·m-2 while the selectivity
4
changed from 24.56 to 6.68. The trend was similar with the selectivity when ILs were used as
5
extraction solvents. The mass transfer driving force of benzene would increase with the increasing of
6
benzene in feed phase. More benzene was solved in membrane phase and transported through the
7
membrane. As a result, more hexane was solved in membrane phase and this would lead to reduce
8
the selectivity of benzene.
9
3.3.3 Long-term experiment
10
The long-term stability of membrane is an important factor in vapor permeation process. In this part,
11
continuous separation of benzene and hexane was carried out to investigate the stability of separation
12
process. The experiments were performed at 35 °C and the vacuum degree was 735 mmHg. The flux
13
and selectivity of benzene were showed in Figure 8. Figure 8
14 15
The selectivity of benzene ranged from 10.07 to 13.60, while the flux changed from 17.7 to 21.2
16
g·h-1·m-2. These two parameters changed in a small scale. This was mainly because the capillary
17
force and molecular interaction between IL and base membrane was strong. The results showed that
18
the ionic liquids separation membrane had excellent stability in separation of benzene and hexane.
19
Ionic liquid was able to maintain in membrane pores for a long time.
20
4. Conclusions
21
Two ester-functionalized ionic liquids(ILs) were synthesized and confirmed by NMR and FT-IR.
22
Quantum chemical calculation, liquid-liquid extraction and vapor permeation with two ionic liquids 15
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1
were studied. Quantum chemical calculations results showed that the interactions between ILs and
2
benzene were larger than that between ILs and hexane. The planar five-member heterocycle of
3
imidazole modified with ester group could attract benzene more strongly. In liquid-liquid extraction
4
process, both ILs showed excellent separation performance to benzene in both distribution
5
coefficient and selectivity. The selectivity was more than 61 while the distribution coefficient of
6
benzene was over 0.5 when [Eamim][SCN] was used. The distribution coefficient and selectivity of
7
benzene were at high level when the operating temperature was 25 °C. The system consisted of
8
benzene and cyclohexane also could be separated by these two ILs. Both Othmer-Tobias equation
9
and NRTL model could correlate the experimental LLE data adequately. In vapor permeation process,
10
PVDF and PAN were used as base membrane. The selectivity could reach 16.05, while the flux
11
reached 22.14 g·h-1·m2 at room temperature. With the increasing of benzene, the flux increased while
12
the selectivity decreased gradually. The selectivity and flux had no valid difference when the
13
membrane were operated for 60 hours continuously.
14
AUTHOR INFORMATION
15
Corresponding Author
16
Tel: +86-10-6442-3628; Fax: +86-10-6442-3628;
17
E-mail:
[email protected],
[email protected].
18
Notes
19
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
20
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
21
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (21276012 and
16
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21576010), National Science and Technology Major Project of the Ministry of Science and
2
Technology of China (2013ZX09202005 and 2014ZX09201001-006-003), Fundamental Research
3
Funds for the Central Universities (BUCTRC-201515), BUCT Fund for Disciplines Construction and
4
Development (XK1508) and Higher Education and High-quality and World-class Universities
5
(PY201607). The authors gratefully acknowledge these grants.
6
Reference
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List of Figures
2
Figure 1. Structure of [Eamim][NTf2] and [Eamim][SCN]
3
Figure 2. Vapor permeable membrane separation flowchart
4
Figure 3. The optimized geometries between IL (both cation and anion) and aromatic/alkanes. (a.
5
[Eamim] and benzene, b. [Eamim] and hexane, c. [NTf2] and benzene, d. [NTf2] and hexane, e.
6
[SCN] and benzene, f. [SCN] and hexane)
7
Figure 4. Tie-lines for the ternary mixtures {hexane + benzene + [Eamim][NTf2]}, {hexane +
8
benzene + [Eamim][SCN]}, at T= 25 °C and atmospheric pressure. Solid lines and full points
9
indicate experimental tie-lines, and dashed lines and empty circles indicate calculated data from the
+
-
-
+
-
-
10
NRTL model.
11
Figure 5. The selectivity of both ILs on benzene in both ternary systems
12
Figure 6. (a) The effect of operating temperature on membrane flux, (b) The effect of operating
13
temperature on membrane selectivity
14
Figure 7. (a) The effect of different benzene concentrations on membrane flux; (b) The effect of
15
different benzene concentrations on membrane selectivity
16
Figure 8. (a) The flux of benzene in long-term stability experiment; (b) The selectivity of benzene in
17
long-term stability experiment.
18
23
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1 2 3
cation
anion
Figure 1. Structure of [Eamim][NTf2] and [Eamim][SCN]
4
24
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Figure 2. Vapor permeable membrane separation flowchart
3
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1
a
2
b
3 4
c
d
5 6
e
f
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Figure 3. The optimized geometries between IL (both cation and anion) and aromatic/alkanes. (a.
8
[Eamim] and benzene, b. [Eamim] and hexane, c. [NTf2] and benzene, d. [NTf2] and hexane, e.
9
[SCN] and benzene, f. [SCN] and hexane)
+
-
+
-
-
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benzene 0.0
1.0
0.1
0.9
0.2
0.8
0.3
0.7
0.4
0.6
0.5
0.5
0.6
0.4
0.7
0.3
0.8
0.2
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hexane
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0.0
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0.4
0.5
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0.7
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benzene 0.0
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0.1
0.9
0.2
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0.3
0.7
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0.5
0.6
0.4
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0.3
0.8
0.2
0.9
hexane
0.1
1.0 0.0
0.0 [Eamim][SCN] 0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
1.0
2 3
Figure 4. Tie-lines for the ternary mixtures {hexane + benzene + [Eamim][NTf2]}, {hexane +
4
benzene + [Eamim][SCN]}, at T= 25 °C and atmospheric pressure. Solid lines and full points
5
indicate experimental tie-lines, and dashed lines and empty circles indicate calculated data from the
6
NRTL model.
7
27
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70 [Eamim][NTf2] [Eamim][SCN]
60 50 40
S
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30 20 10 0 0.0
0.2
0.4
0.8
1.0
x
1 2
0.6
Figure 5.
The selectivity of both ILs on benzene in both ternary systems
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J/(g·m-2·h-1)
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40
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T/°C
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60
70
a
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6
0
20
30
40
50
3
T/°C
4
b
60
70
5
Figure 6. (a) The effect of operating temperature on membrane flux, (b) The effect of operating
6
temperature on membrane selectivity
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0 0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
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1.0
3
x
4
b
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Figure 7. (a) The effect of different concentrations on membrane flux; (b) The effect of different
6
concentrations on membrane selectivity.
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J/(g·cm-2·h-1)
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[Eamim][SCN] [Eamim][NTf2]
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t/h
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[Eamim][SCN] [Eamim][NTf2]
20
S
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Energy & Fuels
15 10 5 0
0
10
20
30
3
t/h
4
b
40
50
60
5
Figure 8. (a) The flux of benzene in long-term stability experiment; (b) The selectivity of benzene in
6
long-term stability experiment.
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1
List of Tables
2
Table 1. Binding energies between ILs and benzene and n-hexane
3
Table 2. The influence of different ionic liquids on separation performance
4
Table 3. Values of the distribution coefficient (D) and selectivity (S) for the ternary system (hexane +
5
benzene + IL ([Eamim][NTf2] or [Eamim][SCN]) when mole fraction was 0.3 at different
6
temperatures
7
Table 4. The influence of different system on separation performance
8
Table 5. Values of NRTL parameters
9
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1
Energy & Fuels
Table 1. Binding energies between ILs and benzene and n-hexane
systems
∆E/kJ/mol
[Eamim]+-benzene
-28.09
[Eamim]+-hexane
-13.45
[NTf2] -benzene
-18.50
[NTf2] -hexane
-15.02
[SCN] -benzene
-20.58
[SCN] -hexane
-14.86
2
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Table 2. The influence of different ionic liquids on separation performance IL
Dhexane
Dbenzene
S
[Eamim][NTf2]
0.035
1.034
29.55
[Eamim][SCN]
0.009
0.523
61.44
[Bmim] [NTf2] [31]
0.104
1.660
15.89
[Omim] [NTf2] [31]
0.258
1.900
7.35
[Bzmim] [NTf2] [5]
0.072
2.226
30.87
[Bzvim] [NTf2] [5]
0.074
1.748
23.64
[Bmim][FeCl4][32]
0.171
2.270
13.26
2
*1. [Bmim][NTf2]: N-buthyl -N-methylimidazolium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide
3
2. [Omim][NTf2]: N-octyl-N-methylimidazolium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide
4
3. [Bzmim] [NTf2]: N-Benzyl-N-methyl imidazoium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide
5
4. [Bzvim] [NTf2]: N-benzyl-N-vinyl imidazolium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide
6
5. [Bmim][FeCl4]: N-butyl-N-methylimidazolium tetrachloroferrate
7 8
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Energy & Fuels
1
Table 3. Values of the distribution coefficient (D) and selectivity (S) for the ternary systems (hexane
2
+ benzene + IL) when the mole fraction of benzene was 0.3 at different temperatures IL
temperature
D benzene
D hexane
S
25 °C
0.824
0.031
26.85
30 °C
0.902
0.039
22.90
35 °C
0.921
0.041
22.47
40 °C
0.91
0.042
21.74
25 °C
0.451
0.011
42.20
30 °C
0.482
0.016
30.81
35 °C
0.529
0.022
24.49
40 °C
0.482
0.02
23.78
[Eamim][NTf2]
[Eamim][SCN]
3
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Table 4. The influence of different system on separation performance IL
Dalkane
system
Dbenzene
S
[Eamim][NTf2]
benzene/cyclohexane
0.105
2.382
22.70
[Eamim][SCN]
benzene/cyclohexane
0.029
1.108
38.26
2
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Energy & Fuels
Table 5. Values of NRTL parameters
1
i-j
∆g J (KLMN :$` )
∆g J (KLMN :$` )
αJ
σx
hexane(1)+benzene(2)+[Eamim][NTf2](3) 1-2
-0.7099
1.7550
1-3
7.1292
3.2048
2-3
5.8090
-0.8313
0.3
0.0829
hexane(1)+benzene(2)+[Eamim][SCN](3) 1-2
-0.2800
2.3423
1-3
4.8270
4.0231
2-3
4.9880
0.3777
2
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0.3
0.0653