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Solubility of monomers for chain polymerization in ionic liquids predicted by conductor-like screening model for real solvents Xiaoqian Zhang, Wenli Guo, Yibo Wu, Wei Li, Shuxin Li, Yuwei Shang, and Jinghan Zhang Ind. Eng. Chem. Res., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.iecr.7b04235 • Publication Date (Web): 15 Nov 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on November 16, 2017
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Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research
Solubility of monomers for chain polymerization in ionic liquids predicted by conductor-like screening model for real solvents
Xiaoqian Zhang1,2,3, Wenli Guo1,3, Yibo Wu1, Wei Li1, Shuxin Li1, Yuwei Shang1, Jinghan Zhang1,3
1. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Beijing Key Lab of Special Elastomer Composite Materials, Beijing Institute of Petrochemical Technology, Beijing 102617, China 2. Department of Environmental Engineering, North China Institute of Science and Technology, Yanjiao, Beijing 101601, P. R. China 3. College of Materials Science and Engineering, Beijing University of Chemical Technology, Beijing 100029, China
ABSTRACT
Ionic liquids have been extensively investigated as clean solvents for chain polymerization reactions, such as radical polymerization, anionic polymerization, and cationic polymerization. However, the low solubility of the monomers in ionic liquids often plagues the efficiency of these reactions. In this study, solubility of two typical vinyl monomers of p-methylstyrene (p-MeSt) and isobutyl vinyl ether (IBVE) were studied in 1750 possible ionic liquids (50 cations and 35 anions) by conductor-like screening model for real solvents. The influences of cation structures, anion structures, and ion chain length on the solubility were systemically studied. The interaction energies and σ-profiles were also employed to explain major factors on solubility. The results revealed that a larger size of the nonpolar region of the cation or anion results in the higher solubility for p-MeSt and IBVE, as well as the longer alkyl chain in cation or anion. In this study, a theoretical method for selecting ionic liquids for chain polymerization was established.
Corresponding author:
[email protected];
[email protected] 1
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1. INTRODUCTION
2
Vinyl monomers are well-known and commercially available materials that can undergo
3
chain-polymerization reactions, such as radical polymerization, anionic polymerization, and
4
cationic polymerization.1-5 The polymerization products of vinyl monomers are widely used in
5
rubber, plastic, and coating manufature.6-9 However, traditional organic solvents for these chain
6
polymerizations often pollute the environment through evaporation or leakage. The use of ionic
7
liquids (ILs) as green solvents are extensively studied because of their attractive properties, such as
8
their negligible vapor pressure, low melting point, good thermal stability, tunability, and chemical
9
inertia.10-12 ILs are regarded as polar but noncoordinating solvents with a high charge density
10
because of their ionic nature, so they do not behave as simple solvents for polymerization. This
11
property of ILs evoked the initial interest of previous researchers.11
12
ILs cause different polymerization mechanisms and characteristics in chain polymerizations. In
13
radical polymerization, ILs is shown to affect the kinetic reactions because of its polarity and high
14
viscosity. An observable increase in the propagation rate constant, kp, and a decrease of the
15
termination rate constant, kt, result to the strong increase in the overall polymerization rate.13-15 In
16
anionic polymerization, imidazolium ionic liquids are not likely to be suitable solvents as they are
17
not entirely stable under basic conditions because of an acidic proton at the 2-position of
18
imidazolium ring.16, 17 For cationic polymerization, ILs that are seen as (weak) Lewis bases can
19
stabilize the propagating carbocationic species and enhance their stability to undergo cationic
20
polymerization, which has been revealed in some papers.11, 18 The number of the ILs that were
21
studied in those polymerizations is very limited compared with the very vast number of ILs (the
22
number of potentials ILs is ~1018).19 One of the important issues is the solubility of the
23
monomer-in-IL, which reduces the efficiency of the polymerizations. Finding ILs with high
24
dissolving capacity for polymerization monomer is necessary.
25
ILs are defined as designer solvents whose physicochemical properties can be fine-tuned by an
26
appropriate choice of cation and anion for specific tasks.20, 21 Further designing and selecting ILs
27
with high solubility and better physiochemical properties is still necessary. The experimental 2
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examination is difficult to operate and will take a lot of time and cost because of the enormous
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number of possible ILs. Therefore, an initial prescreening by computational method is necessary for
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an efficient selection process. Conductor-like screening model for real solvents (COSMO-RS) based
31
on a quantum chemical approach is an effective method for solvent designing and screening.22
32
COSMO-RS is based solely on information concerning the molecular structure; aside from its full
33
predictability, the main advantage lies in its rapid working speed. COSMO-RS integrates dominant
34
interactions among the system, including misfit, H-bonding (HB), and Van der Waals (VdW)
35
interactions. Thus, COSMO-RS can be used for molecular force field analysis to correlate
36
interaction parameters with structural characteristics qualitatively and quantitatively, which is an
37
instruction valuable in designing and selecting ILs for specific tasks.23 COSMO-RS has been widely
38
used to predict the thermodynamic properties of fluids for various systems, especially ILs, such as
39
solubility,24, 25 phase equilibria,26, 27 and activity coefficients.28
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In this paper, we study the solubility of vinyl monomers of chain polymerization in ILs using
41
COSMO-RS calculation. Two typical vinyl monomers of p-methylstyrene (p-MeSt) and isobutyl
42
vinyl ether (IBVE) in 1750 possible ILs, involving 50 cations and 35 anions (their full name and
43
short names with chemical structure are shown in Table S1), are calculated employing COSMO-RS.
44
The influences of ILs structure on the solubility are studied systematically, including cation family,
45
anion identity, cation alkyl chain length, and anion alkyl chain length; thus, the guiding principle of
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the selection for suitable ILs with high dissolving capacity as chain polymerization solvents is
47
obtained. The interaction energies and σ-profiles are employed to analyze the influences of ILs
48
structure on the solubility. This work motivated us in the ILs selection as polymerization solvent.
49
This study will also provide a broad space for future studies on chain polymerization in ILs.
50
2. DETAILS OF COMPUTATION AND EXPERIMENT
51
2.1 Computational Details of COSMO-RS
52
COSMO-RS based on a quantum chemical approach was developed by Klamt and his
53
coworkers.29,30 COSMO-RS combines the electrostatic advantages and the computational efficiency 3
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of the quantum chemical dielectric continum solvation model, COSMO, with a statistical
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thermodynamic approach for local interaction of surfaces, where the local deviations from dielectric
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behavior, as well as HB, is considered.31
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The standard procedure of COSMO-RS calculations consists essentially of two major stages:
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quantum chemical COSMO calculations for the molecular species involved and COSMO-RS
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statistical thermodynamic calculations performed using the COSMOtherm program.32, 33 Results of
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the COSMO calculation are stored in the so-called COSMO files, which are collected in a database.
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In our study, the COSMO input files for most cations and anions were taken from the COSMO
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database. The other input files of ions, p-MeSt, and IBVE, which were not stored in this database
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were obtained via the TURBOMOLE program package,34 using the BP functional35 with TZVP
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basis set.36 In the COSMO calculation, the effect of different conformations was studied beforehand
65
to ensure efficient computation. In our study, all the stable conformations were considered and
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weighted according to the Boltzmann distribution function. On the other hand, COSMO-RS
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calculations were performed using the COSMOtherm (Version C30_1501, COSMOlogic Gmb H
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&Co. KG), which provided an efficient and flexible implementation of COSMO-RS method.32,33
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The BP_TZVP_C30_1501.ctd parameterization was used.
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For a better comparison of solubility of p-MeSt or IBVE in different ILs under same conditions,
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all calculations (regardless of solubility) were performed with a noniterative mode, which means
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that the solubility computed is in a zeroth order approximation.11 In the COSMO calculations, the
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IL was treated as independent ions with equal mole fractions (ncation= nanion= nIL). The calculation
74
was based on a ternary mixture (cation, anion, and solute), which differs from an experimental
75
determination treated as a binary system consisting of IL and solute. To compare with the
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experimental value, we performed transition calculations for the predicted solubility data. Not all
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examined cation-anion combinations lead to ILs; some of them do not exist as liquid at room
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temperature. They are perceived as ILs for the convenience of model processing. Intensive interest
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in the facts mentioned above is not placed on the discussion of the methodology but on the
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preliminary prediction monomer-in-IL solubility for solvent designing and screening.
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2.2 Experimental section
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2.2.1 Materials
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1-Ethyl-3-methylimidazolium trifluoroacetate ([Emim][TA]), 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium
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bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)amide
([Emim][NTf2]),
1-propyl-3-methylimidazolium
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bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)amide
([Prmim][NTf2]),
1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium
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bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)amide
([Bmim][NTf2]),
1-hexyl-3-methylimidazolium
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bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)amide
([Hmim][NTf2]),
1-octyl-3-methylimidazolium
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bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)amide
([Omim][NTf2]),
1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium
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tetrafluoroborate ([Bmim][BF4]), 1-hexy-3-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate ([Hmim][BF4],
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1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate ([Bmim][PF6]), 1-hexy-3-methylimidazolium
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hexafluorophosphate
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([Omim][PF6]), N-butyl-N-methyl-pyrrolidinium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)amide ([P14][NTf2]),
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and 1-butyl-pyridinium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)amide ([Bpy][NTf2]) were purchased from
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Sigma Aldrich, and the purities were more than 99.0%. The ILs were dried and degassed at 70 °C
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for a few days on a vacuum line untill the H2O concentration was reduced to less than 30 ppm
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before use. p-Methylstyrene (p-MeSt, TCI Shanghai) and isobutyl vinyl ether (IBVE, TCI Shanghai)
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were dried by introduction of CaH2 and freshly distilled under reduced pressure before use.
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2.2.2 Solubility measurement
([Hmim][PF6]),
1-octyl-3-methylimidazolium
hexafluorophosphate
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The solubilities were measured by a gravimetric method.37 For each measurement, an excess
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mass of vinyl monomer (p-MeSt or IBVE) was added to a known mass of IL (m1) in a tightly-closed
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test tube with a septum cap. The mass of empty test tube was m0. Then the mixture was heated to a
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constant temperature and at atmospheric pressure with continuous stirring. After at least 2 hour, the
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stirring was stopped. The solution in the sealed test tube was placed to settle and equilibrate for at
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least 48 h in an isolated air bath capable of maintaining the temperature within ±0.01 K between
105
0°C and 50°C. The excess mass of vinyl monomer was in the upper portion. The period of the
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stirring time and equilibrium time proved to be enough to ensure a complete separation of the two
107
phases, as well as their saturation, namely, a complete thermodynamic equilibrium. The upper 5
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portion was withdrawn via a glass syringes maintained dry and kept at the same time temperature of
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the measurements, and then the total mass of the lower portion and the test tube was weighed (m2).
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The monomer concentration of the sample solution in mole fraction, x, is determined from Eqs. (1):
x
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m2 m1 m0 / M m2 m1 m0 / M m1 / M 2 1
(1)
1
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where M1 and M2 are the mole mass of monomer and IL, respectively.
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The mass was determined by a balance (CPA324S, Germany) with a precision of ±0.0001 g. The
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temperature was controlled by an MBraun 150-M glovebox under a dry nitrogen atmosphere ([H2O]
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< 0.5 ppm; [O2] < 10 ppm). Each measurement, at each temperature, was repeated at least 5 times,
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and the results are reported as the average solubility value along with the respective standard
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deviation.
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3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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3.1 Validation of COSMO-RS prediction
120 121
Figure 1. Comparison between the experimental and COSMO-RS calculated solubilities of
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p-MeSt (298.15 K) (a) and IBVE (288.15 K) (b) in different types of ILs
123 124
The feasibility of COSMO-RS method for selecting ILs as the p-MeSt or IBVE chain 6
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polymerization solvent was evaluated by comparing the calculated values with the experimental
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data (Table S3 and Table S4). Figure 1 shows the calculated solubility of p-MeSt and IBVE in
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different ILs along with their experimental data. In this work, the experimental solubility was
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correlated with the calculated values by linear regression (Figure 1); the fitting results were listed in
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Table S5. The equations for correction were shown in Eq. (2) and Eq. (3). The correlation
130
coefficient of solubilityp-MeSt and solubilityIBVE reached 0.986 and 0.920, respectively, indicating the
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ability of COSMO-RS method to qualitatively predict the trend of solubilityp-MeSt and solubilityIBVE
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in a great variety of ILs. For p-MeSt monomer, a systematic deviation between calculated and
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experimental data for the solubility was observed. The prediction errors are probably attributed to
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the weak interaction in p-MeSt-IL systems; however, this does not affect the prediction of the trend.
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COSMO-RS is a suitable tool for ranking ILs qualitatively regarding the solubility of vinyl
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monomers in ILs.38
137 138
So lubility p MeSt, Experimental 1.083 So lubility p MeSt,COSMO 5.470
(2)
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So lubility IBVE , Experimental 0.972 So lubility IBVE ,COSMO 0.835
(3)
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3.2 Solubility of p-MeSt and IBVE in ILs
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The solubility of p-MeSt and IBVE in 1750 types ILs (50 cations 35 anions) was predicted
143
by COSMO-RS, and the contour plot of those 1750 ILs is shown in Figure 2. The short names and
144
chemical structures of all the IL cations and anions investigated in our study are shown in the
145
supporting information. In Figure 2, the vertical axis corresponds to the cationic label order in Table
146
S1, while the horizontal axis corresponds to the anionic label order in Table S2. The solubility of
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monomers is mainly influenced by IL molecular structure, that is, cation nature, anion nature, or the
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cation-anion combination as shown in Figure 2. The cations and anions all control the solubility of
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the p-MeSt and IBVE in ILs. In the following parts, we will discuss the influences of IL molecular
150
structure variations on the monomer solubility in detail. The reaction temperature of styrene and its
151
derivatives is between −25 °C to 60 °C,39, 40 while the reaction temperature of IBVE is 0 °C;41-45 in 7
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our COSMO-RS calculation, the predicted temperature for p-MeSt is 25 °C and for IBVE is 0 °C.
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155 156
157 158
Figure 2. Predicted solubilities of p-MeSt (A), and IBVE (B) in 1750 types (50 cations 35 anions)
159
of ILs.
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Predicted temperature: (A) p-MeSt at 25 °C; (B) IBVE at 0 °C
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3.3 Influence of the cation family
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Most widely used cations contain imidazolium, piperidinium, pyrrolidinium, and pyridinium,
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including aromatic or aliphatic rings. In this study, we analyzed the p-MeSt and IBVE solubility in
164
the following ILs: [C4mim]+, [C4mpip]+, [C4mpyr]+, and [C4mpy]+, which have the same alkyl
165
substituent group but different cation cores (Figure 3). p-MeSt-in-IL solubility roughly increased
166
accordingly to [C4mpip]+≥[C4mpy]+≈[C4mpyr]+>[C4mim]+>[BuMe3N]+>[Ch]+, as shown in Figure
167
3A. The influences of the cation family on p-MeSt-in-IL solubility can be explained based on their
168
σ-profiles (Figure 4) and multiple interaction energies from COSMO-RS computation (Table 1).46-48
169
The peak of the p-MeSt is located in the nonpolar region from σ=−0.0082 e/Å2 to σ=+0.0082 e/Å2,
170
as shown in Figure 4; the peaks of [C4mim]+, [C4mpy]+, [C4mpyr]+, and [C4mpip]+are also located
171
in
172
[C4mpip]+>[C4mpyr]+>[C4mpy]+>[C4mim]+; the peaks of [BuMe3N]+ and [Ch]+ are located in
173
nonpolar region (σ=−0.004 e/Å2 and σ=−0.0003 e/Å2) and also in polar region (σ=−0.009 e/Å2 and
174
σ=−0.009 e/Å2), and the peak area of [Ch]+ is larger than that of [BuMe3N]+. Thus, the size of the
175
nonpolar
176
[C4mpip]+>[C4mpyr]+>[C4mpy]+>[C4mim]+>[BuMe3N]+>[Ch]+, which is roughly in the same order
177
as the p-MeSt-in-IL solubility and implies that larger size of the nonpolar region for cations results
178
in higher solubility. The multiple interaction energies can be computed from COSMO-RS, including
179
misfit energy, HB energy, and, VdW energy. The p-MeSt-in-IL solubility can be theoretically
180
explained through the force field analysis of the COSMO-RS measures. Table 1 shows the predicted
181
solubility of p-MeSt in [BF4]-based ILs and [MeOEtSO4]-based ILs with varying cations and the
182
corresponding solvation interaction energies. Thus, the misfit interactions and VdW interactions
183
between p-MeSt and cations are the determinant for p-MeSt solubility in ILs. Stronger VdW
184
interactions result in higher VdW energies attained; consequently, larger p-MeSt solubility is
185
gained.
the
above
region
nonpolar
of
region,
and
these
their
cations
peak
follows
areas
the
follow
trend
186
The effects of different cation families on the IBVE-in-IL solubility are shown in Figure 3B.
187
The σ-profiles (Figure 4) and multiple interaction energies from COSMO-RS computation (Table
188
S6) also explained the influences of cation families on IBVE-in-IL solubility. The results indicated
189
that
the
IBVE-in-IL
solubility
can
be
ranked
as
[C4mpip]+>[C4mpyr]+≥[C4mpy]+>
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[C4mim]+≥[BuMe3N]+>[Ch]+, which is consistent with the solubility trend. Among the three
191
dominant interactions in the system, VdW energies are strongly negative for all ILs and the larger
192
VdW energies result in higher solubility. Similar to the effect of VdW energies, the greater misfit
193
energies lead to the larger the solubility. Those results also suggest that more nonpolar cations have
194
larger misfit energies and VdW energies and result in higher IBVE-in-IL solubility. The
195
corresponding COSMO volume of cations [C4mpip]+, [C4mpyr]+, [C4mpy]+, [C4mim]+, [BuMe3N]+,
196
and [Ch]+ are 254.71 Å3, 215.21 Å3, 215.83 Å3, 199.90 Å3, 187.07 Å3, and 154.83 Å3, which affects
197
the monomers-in-IL solubility to a certain extent.
198
199 200
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Figure 3. Predicted solubilities of p-MeSt (A) and IBVE (B) in ILs with different cation family
203 204
205 206
Figure 4. σ-Profiles of p-MeSt, IBVE, and six studied cations
207 208 209 210 211 212 11
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Table 1. The solubility, misfit energy, HB energy and VdW energy for p-MeSt in the [BF4]-based
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ILs and [MeOEtSO4]-based ILs combinations Solubility
Emisfit
Ehb
EVdW
(xp-MeSt)
(kcal/mol)
(kcal/mol)
(kcal/mol)
[C4mpip][BF4]
0.2527
6.23993
‒0.66753
‒10.48521
[C4mpy][BF4]
0.2228
5.76258
‒1.11608
‒9.48384
[C4mpyr][BF4]
0.2097
6.14482
‒0.62087
‒8.96890
[C4mim][BF4]
0.1177
5.25298
‒1.38884
‒8.99643
[BuMe3N][BF4]
0.0824
5.30388
‒1.07920
‒7.94879
[Ch][BF4]
0.0063
4.05530
‒4.11320
‒6.10058
[C4mpip][MeOEtSO4]
0.4016
6.46280
‒0.99542
‒10.91492
[C4mpy][MeOEtSO4]
0.3793
5.84817
‒1.72792
‒9.90433
[C4mpyr][MeOEtSO4]
0.3697
6.31430
‒0.88646
‒9.39943
[C4mim][MeOEtSO4]
0.2570
5.35885
‒2.15199
‒9.43415
[BuMe3N][MeOEtSO4]
0.2101
5.43311
‒1.54910
‒8.37567
[Ch][MeOEtSO4]
0.0331
3.98130
‒5.27204
‒6.54537
Ionic liquids
215
216
3.4 Influence of the cation alkyl chain length
217
Among all cations of ILs, the imidazolium ions are well-known to have tunable properties,
218
such as viscosity, miscibility, and melting point; thus, tunable properties can be achieved by their
219
structural variations. Figure 5 shows the effects of alkyl chain length of imidazolium cations on
220
p-MeSt-in-IL solubility and IBVE-in-IL solubility. The p-MeSt-in-IL solubility and IBVE-in-IL
221
solubility
222
[C1mim]+