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1.
ACS Omega ; 5(46): 30189-30200, 2020 Nov 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33251453

ABSTRACT

The goal of this article is to test the potential application of lignosulfonates (LSs) in crude oil production and processing. Three LS samples of varying hydrophobicity and average molecular weight were considered. First, the interfacial tension between brine and xylene and interfacial dilational rheology properties of LS samples were measured. It was found that the most surface-active LS sample has the lowest molecular weight in agreement with the results from the literature. In the presence of asphaltenes, all three LS samples were able to compete with asphaltenes, the most polar crude oil component, at the interface and form mixed LS-asphaltene interfaces. However, only the most surface-active LS sample among the three tested could fully desorb asphaltenes at the highest tested LS concentration (500 ppm). Second, three possible applications were screened. LSs were tested to prevent the formation of w/o crude oil emulsions or to break these. However, the opposite effect was observed, that is, stabilization of water-in-crude oil emulsions. The potential application of LS in produced water (PW) clarification was furthermore considered. The kinetics of PW clarification was found unaffected by the presence of LS, even at very high concentrations (1000 ppm). Finally, the potential of LS for enhanced oil recovery was assessed. The LS flood changed the surface wettability toward water wetness for one of the samples, yet LS injection did not recover additional oil beyond brine recovery. It was concluded that LS has interesting properties, such as the potential to compete with crude oil indigenous components at the oil/water interface. The stabilization action of LS was dominant over any destabilization effect, which led to the conclusion that LSs are more efficient for stabilizing emulsions rather than destabilizing.

2.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 54(72): 10048-10051, 2018 Sep 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30124224

ABSTRACT

We report a novel di(imino)guanidinium anion extractant with unparalleled selectivity for sulfate in a liquid-liquid separation system. In addition to a 4.4 order-of-magnitude enhancement in affinity compared to a standard benchmark, our alkylated di(imino)guanidinium receptor is economically synthesized and features good compatibility with application-relevant aliphatic solvents. Small-angle X-ray scattering results reveal the formation of reverse-micelles, which together with the significant organic-phase water content challenge traditional notions of selectivity in extraction of superhydrophilic anions.

3.
ACS Cent Sci ; 4(6): 739-747, 2018 Jun 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29974069

ABSTRACT

Fundamental understanding of the selective recognition and separation of f-block metal ions by chelating agents is of crucial importance for advancing sustainable energy systems. Current investigations in this area are mostly focused on the study of inner-sphere interactions between metal ions and donor groups of ligands, while the effects on the selectivity resulting from molecular interactions in the outer-sphere region have been largely overlooked. Herein, we explore the fundamental origins of the selectivity of the solvating extractant N,N,N',N'-tetraoctyl diglycolamide (TODGA) for adjacent lanthanides in a liquid-liquid extraction system, which is of relevance to nuclear fuel reprocessing and rare-earth refining technologies. Complementary investigations integrating distribution studies, quantum mechanical calculations, and classical molecular dynamics simulations establish a relationship between coextracted water and lanthanide extraction by TODGA across the series, pointing to the importance of the hydrogen-bonding interactions between outer-sphere nitrate ions and water clusters in a nonpolar environment. Our findings have significant implications for the design of novel efficient separation systems and processes, emphasizing the importance of tuning both inner- and outer-sphere interactions to obtain total control over selectivity in the biphasic extraction of lanthanides.

4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 20(18): 12908-12915, 2018 May 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29700533

ABSTRACT

Noncovalent interactions determine the structure-property relationship of materials. Self-assembly originating from weak noncovalent interactions represents a broad variety of solution-based transformations spanning micellization and crystallization, which, nevertheless, conforms to neither colloid nor solution sciences. Here, we investigate the weak self-assembly in water-amphiphile-oil solutions to understand the connection between the amphiphilic molecular structure and water solubilization in oil. X-ray and neutron scattering, converged with large-scale atomistic molecular dynamics simulations, support the fact that the amphiphiles assemble into liquid worm-like micelles and loose inverted proto-micelles. The inverted proto-micelles are energetically ready to accommodate a higher amount of water. These structures arise from a balance of intermolecular interactions controlled by the amphiphile tail-group structures. Thus, by linking the aggregate morphology to the molecular structure, this work provides insights on the molecular design for control of water solubility and dispersion in oil.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(48): 17350-17358, 2017 12 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29083173

ABSTRACT

Outer-sphere ion clusters are inferred in many important natural and technological processes, but their mechanisms of assembly and solution structures are difficult to define. Here, we characterize trefoil-shaped outer-sphere lanthanide chloride and nitrate ion clusters in hydrocarbon solutions formed during liquid-liquid extraction with diglycolamide ligands. These are assembled through steric and electrostatic forces, where the anions reside in equidistant "clefts" between coordinating diglycolamide ligands in positions that satisfy both repulsive and attractive ion-ion interactions. Our study shows how sterically directed electrostatic interactions may assemble stable outer-sphere ion clusters in organic solutions, elucidating new strategies for controlling ion cluster assembly and extraction.

6.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 19(32): 21304-21316, 2017 Aug 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28678296

ABSTRACT

X-ray and electrochemical studies of organic phases obtained by the extraction of tetravalent cerium, Ce(iv), from aqueous nitric acid (3 M) with tri-n-butyl phosphate (TBP) in n-dodecane reveal a tetranuclear Ce(iv) structural motif. This finding is consistent with the results of previous liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) studies that implicate the aggregation of (Ce-O-Ce)6+ dimers into multinuclear Ce(iv)·TBP solvates. The organic solution structures elaborated here for the Ce(iv)-HNO3-20% TBP-n-C12H26 system are correlated with multiscale phenomena-from the atomic level of the cerium coordination environment to the supramolecular scale of solute aggregates-in the organic phases, which are of relevance to the PUREX (Plutonium Uranium Reduction EXtraction) process. The combination of XANES, EXAFS, and SAXS results indicate the presence of tetranuclear cerium(iv)-oxo core structures in each of the organic phases investigated. In addition to the use of X-ray spectroscopy and scattering for direct metrical details about the organic phase solute speciation, three-phase-electrode differential pulse voltammetry (DPV) of the third phase reveals a wave attributable to Ce(iv) reduction. The electrode potential is consistent with values for the reduction of Ce(iv) in (Ce-O-Ce)6+ dimers in aqueous electrolytes. The Ce(iv) coordination chemistry of the organic solvates is independent of the bulk phenomenon of phase splitting, namely third phase formation. The local, molecular environment of Ce in the organic phase before splitting is identical to those in the two organic phases (the dense third phase and the light phase) after splitting. SAXS data are consistent with the formation of small spherical reverse micelles with core diameters (approx. 6 Å) that can accommodate a tetranuclear Ce(iv) oxo-cluster solvate of TBP. Sticky sphere modeling of the SAXS data for the organic phases with low cerium concentrations (<0.14 M) is consistent with the presence of randomly- and homogenously-dispersed micelles in combination with short-range percolated, associated micelles. At high cerium concentrations (approx. 1.5 M) in the third phase, the SAXS modeling is consistent with correlated, long-range percolated micellar aggregates. The presence of strong inter-micellar interactions (-3 to -5kBT) in all organic phases of the Ce(iv)-HNO3-TBP-n-C12H26 LLE system suggests that the phenomena of phase splitting and third phase inversion are due to liquid precipitation that is dependent solely on the concentration of the tetranuclear Ce solvate.

7.
Langmuir ; 33(24): 6135-6142, 2017 06 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28558243

ABSTRACT

Interfacial liquid-liquid ion transport is of crucial importance to biotechnology and industrial separation processes including nuclear elements and rare earths. A water-in-oil microemulsion is formulated here with density and dimensions amenable to atomistic molecular dynamics simulation, facilitating convergent theoretical and experimental approaches to elucidate interfacial ion transport mechanisms. Lutetium(III) cations are transported from the 5 nm diameter water pools into the surrounding oil using an extractant (a lipophilic ligand). Changes in ion coordination sphere and interactions between the interfacial components are studied using a combination of synchrotron X-ray scattering, spectroscopy, and atomistic molecular dynamics simulations. Contrary to existing hypotheses, our model system shows no evidence of interfacial extractant monolayers, but rather ions are exchanged through water channels that penetrate the surfactant monolayer and connect to the oil-based extractant. Our results highlight the dynamic nature of the oil-water interface and show that lipophilic ion shuttles need not form flat monolayer structures to facilitate ion transport across the liquid-liquid interface.

8.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 53(41): 5610-5613, 2017 May 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28484775

ABSTRACT

The role of solvent in molecular recognition systems is under-researched and often ignored, especially when the solvent is considered "non-interacting". This study concerns the role of toluene solvent in cesium(i) recognition by calix[4]pyrrole. We show that π-donor interactions bind toluene molecules onto the open face of the cation-receptor complex, thus "capping the calix." By characterizing this unusual aromatically-saturated complex, we show how "non-interacting" aromatic solvents can directly coordinate receptor-bound cations and thus influence recognition.

9.
Langmuir ; 33(15): 3776-3786, 2017 04 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28375007

ABSTRACT

Organic phase aggregation behavior of 1-octanol and its structural isomer, 2-ethylhexanol, in a biphasic n-dodecane-water system is studied with a combination of physical measurement, small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), and atomistic molecular dynamic simulations. Physical properties of the organic phases are probed following their mixing and equilibration with immiscible water phases. Studies reveal that the interfacial tension decreases as a function of increasing alcohol concentration over the solubility range of the alcohol with no evidence for a critical aggregate concentration (cac). An uptake of water into the organic phases is quantified, as a function of alcohol content, by Karl Fischer titrations. The extraction of water into dodecane was further assessed as a function of alcohol concentration via the slope-analysis method sometimes employed in chemical separations. This method provides a qualitative understanding of solute (water/alcohol) aggregation in the organic phase. The physical results are supported by analyses of SAXS data that reveals an emergence of aggregates in n-dodecane at elevated alcohol concentrations. The observed aggregate structure is dependent on the alcohol tail group geometry, consistent with surfactant packing parameter. The formation of these aggregates is discussed at a molecular level, where alcohol-alcohol and alcohol-water H-bonding interactions likely dominate the occurrence and morphology of the aggregates.

10.
Inorg Chem ; 56(3): 1152-1160, 2017 Feb 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28161941

ABSTRACT

The subtle energetic differences underpinning adjacent lanthanide discrimination are explored with diglycolamide ligands. Our approach converges liquid-liquid extraction experiments with solution-phase X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) and density functional theory (DFT) simulations, spanning the lanthanide series. The homoleptic [(DGA)3Ln]3+ complex was confirmed in the organic extractive solution by XAS, and this was modeled using DFT. An interplay between steric strain and coordination energies apparently gives rise to a nonlinear trend in discriminatory lanthanide ion complexation across the series. Our results highlight the importance of optimizing chelate molecular geometry to account for both coordination interactions and strain energies when designing new ligands for efficient adjacent lanthanide separation for rare-earth refining.

11.
Chemistry ; 23(2): 427-436, 2017 01 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27758053

ABSTRACT

We address the structures and energetics of ion solvation in aqueous and organic solutions to understand liquid-liquid ion transport. Atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with polarizable force field are performed to study the coordination transformations driving lanthanide (LnIII ) and nitrate ion transport between aqueous and an alkylamide-oil solution. An enhancement of the coordination behavior in the organic phase is achieved in contrast with the aqueous solution. In particular, the coordination number of Ce3+ increases from 8.9 in the aqueous to 9.9 in the organic solutions (from 8 in the aqueous to 8.8 in the organic systems for Yb3+ ). Moreover, the local coordination environment changes dramatically. Potential of mean force calculations show that the LnIII -ligand coordination interaction strengths follow the order of LnIII -nitrate>LnIII -water>LnIII -DMDBTDMA. They increase 2-fold in the lipophilic environment in comparison to the aqueous phase, and we attribute this to the shedding of the outer solvation shell. Our findings highlight the importance of outer sphere interactions on the competitive solvation energetics that cause ions to migrate between immiscible phases; an essential ingredient for advancing important applications such as rare earth metal separations. Some open questions in simulating the coordination behavior of heavy metals are also addressed.

12.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 18(45): 31254-31259, 2016 Nov 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27819101

ABSTRACT

Redox-driven ion transfer between phases underpins many biological and technological processes, including industrial separation of ions. Here we investigate the electrochemical transfer of nitrate anions between oil and water phases, driven by the reduction and oxidation of cerium coordination complexes in oil phases. We find that the coordination environment around the cerium cation has a pronounced impact on the overall redox potential, particularly with regard to the number of coordinated nitrate anions. Our results suggest a new fundamental mechanism for tuning ion transfer between phases; by 'trapping' the migrating ion inside the coordination sphere of a redox-active complex. This presents a new route for controlling anion transfer in electrochemically-driven separation applications.

13.
Langmuir ; 32(44): 11532-11539, 2016 11 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27715067

ABSTRACT

Many industrial and biological processes involve the competitive adsorption of ions with different valencies and sizes at charged surfaces; heavy and precious metal ions are separated on the basis of their propensity to adsorb onto interfaces, often as anionic ion clusters (e.g., [MClx]n-). However, very little is known, both theoretically and experimentally, about the competition of factors that drive preferential adsorption, such as charge density or valence, at interfaces in technologically relevant systems. There are even contradictory pictures described by interfacial studies and real life applications, such as chlorometalate extractions, in which charge diffuse chlorometalate ions are extracted efficiently even though charge dense chloride ions present in the background are expected to occupy the interface. We studied the competition between divalent chlorometalate anions (PtCl62- and PdCl42-) and monovalent chloride anions on positively charged amine-functionalized surfaces using in situ specular X-ray reflectivity. Chloride anions were present in vast excess to simulate the conditions used in the commercial separation of heavy and precious metal ions. Our results suggest that divalent chlorometalate adsorption is a two-step process and that the divalent anions preferentially adsorb at the interface despite having a charge/volume ratio lower than that of chloride. These results provide fundamental insight into the structural mechanisms that underpin transport in phases that are relevant to heavy and precious metal ion separations, explaining the high efficiency of low charge density ion transport processes in the presence of charge dense anions.

14.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 55(40): 12436-9, 2016 09 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27554437

ABSTRACT

Waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) such as mobile phones contains a plethora of metals of which gold is by far the most valuable. Herein a simple primary amide is described that achieves the selective separation of gold from a mixture of metals typically found in mobile phones by extraction into toluene from an aqueous HCl solution; unlike current processes, reverse phase transfer is achieved simply using water. Phase transfer occurs by dynamic assembly of protonated and neutral amides with [AuCl4 ](-) ions through hydrogen bonding in the organic phase, as shown by EXAFS, mass spectrometry measurements, and computational calculations, and supported by distribution coefficient analysis. The fundamental chemical understanding gained herein should be integral to the development of metal-recovery processes, in particular through the use of dynamic assembly processes to build complexity from simplicity.

15.
Inorg Chem ; 55(12): 6247-60, 2016 Jun 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27256829

ABSTRACT

Extraction and binding studies of [PtCl6](2-) are reported for 24 mono-, bi-, and tripodal extractants containing tris(2-aminoethyl)amine (TREN) or tris(3-aminopropyl)amine (TRPN) scaffolds. These reagents are designed to recognize the outer coordination sphere of [PtCl6](2-) and to show selectivity over chloride anion under acidic conditions. Extraction from 0.6 M HCl involves protonation of the N-center in tertiary amines containing one, two, or three urea, amide, or sulfonamide hydrogen-bond donors to set up the following equilibrium: 2L(org) + 2H(+) + [PtCl6](2-) ⇌ [(LH)2PtCl6](org). All reagents show higher Pt loading than trioctylamine, which was used as a positive control to represent commercial trialkylamine reagents. The loading of [PtCl6](2-) depends on the number of pendant amides in the extractant and follows the order tripodal > bipodal > monopodal, with urea-containing extractants outperforming amide and sulfonamide analogues. A different series of reagents in which one, two, or three of the alkyl groups in tris-2-ethylhexylamine are replaced by 3-N'-hexylpropanamide groups all show a comparably high affinity for [PtCl6](2-) and high selectivity over chloride anion in extractions from aqueous acidic solutions. (1)H NMR titration of three extractants [LH·Cl] with [(Oct4N)2PtCl6] in CDCl3 provides evidence for high selectivity for [PtCl6](2-) over chloride for tri- and bipodal extractants, which show higher binding constants than a monopodal analogue.

16.
Chemistry ; 22(20): 6899-904, 2016 05 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27060294

ABSTRACT

The lanthanide contraction is conceptualized traditionally through coordination chemistry. Here we break this mold in a structural study of lanthanide ions dissolved in an amphiphilic liquid. The lanthanide contraction perturbs the weak interactions between molecular aggregates that drive mesoscale assembly and emergent behavior. The weak interactions correlate with lanthanide ion transport properties, suggesting new strategies for rare-earth separation that exploit forces outside of the coordination sphere.

17.
J Phys Chem B ; 119(35): 11910-27, 2015 Sep 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26244450

ABSTRACT

Coordination polymers (CPs) of metal ions are central to a large variety of applications, such as catalysis and separations. These polymers frequently occur as amorphous solids that segregate from solution. The structural aspects of this segregation remain elusive due to the dearth of the spectroscopic techniques and computational approaches suitable for probing such systems. Therefore, there is a lacking of understanding of how the molecular building blocks give rise to the mesoscale architectures that characterize CP materials. In this study we revisit a CP phase formed in the extraction of trivalent lanthanide ions by diesters of the phosphoric acid, such as the bis(2-ethylhexyl)phosphoric acid (HDEHP). This is a well-known system with practical importance in strategic metals refining and nuclear fuel reprocessing. A CP phase, referred to as a "third phase", has been known to form in these systems for half a century, yet the structure of the amorphous solid is still a point of contention, illustrating the difficulties faced in characterizing such materials. In this study, we follow a deductive approach to solving the molecular structure of amorphous CP phases, using semiempirical calculations to set up an array of physically plausible models and then deploying a suite of experimental techniques, including optical, magnetic resonance, and X-ray spectroscopies, to consecutively eliminate all but one model. We demonstrate that the "third phase" consists of hexagonally packed linear chains in which the lanthanide ions are connected by three O-P-O bridges, with the modifying groups protruding outward, as in a bottlebrush. The tendency to yield linear polynuclear oligomers that is apparent in this system may also be present in other systems yielding the "third phase", demonstrating how molecular geometry directs polymeric assembly in hybrid materials. We show that the packing of bridging molecules is central to directing the structure of CP phases and that by manipulating the steric requirements of ancillary groups one can control the structure of the assembly.

18.
Inorg Chem ; 54(17): 8685-92, 2015 Sep 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26308970

ABSTRACT

High anion selectivity for PtCl6(2-) over Cl(-) is shown by a series of amidoamines, R(1)R(2)NCOCH2CH2NR(3)R(4) (L1 with R(1) = R(4) = benzyl and R(2) = R(3) = phenyl and L3 with R(1) = H, R(2) = 2-ethylhexyl, R(3) = phenyl and R(4) = methyl), and amidoethers, R(1)R(2)NCOCH2CH2OR(3) (L5 with R(1) = H, R(2) = 2-ethylhexyl and R(3) = phenyl), which provide receptor sites which extract PtCl6(2-) preferentially over Cl(-) in extractions from 6 M HCl solutions. The amidoether receptor L5 was found to be a much weaker extractant for PtCl6(2-) than its amidoamine analogues. Density functional theory calculations indicate that this is due to the difficulty in protonating the amidoether to generate a cationic receptor, LH(+), rather than the latter showing weaker binding to PtCl6(2-). The most stable forms of the receptors, LH(+), contain a tautomer in which the added proton forms an intramolecular hydrogen bond to the amide oxygen atom to give a six-membered proton chelate. Dispersion-corrected DFT calculations appear to suggest a switch in ligand conformation for the amidoamine ligands to an open tautomer state in the complex, such that the cationic N-H or O-H groups are also readily available to form hydrogen bonds to the PtCl6(2-) ion, in addition to the array of polarized C-H bonds. The predicted difference in energies between the proton chelate and nonchelated tautomer states for L1 is small, however, and the former is found in the X-ray crystal structure of the assembly [(L1H)2PtCl6]. The DFT calculations and the X-ray structure indicate that all LH(+) receptors present an array of polarized C-H groups to the large, charge diffuse PtCl6(2-) anion resulting in high selectivity of extraction of PtCl6(2-) over the large excess of chloride.

19.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 54(26): 7534-8, 2015 Jun 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25906967

ABSTRACT

Ceric ammonium nitrate (CAN) is a single-electron-transfer reagent with unparalleled utility in organic synthesis, and has emerged as a vital feedstock in diverse chemical industries. Most applications use CAN in solution where it is assigned a monomeric [Ce(IV) (NO3 )6 ](2-) structure; an assumption traced to half-century old studies. Using synchrotron X-rays and Raman spectroscopy we challenge this tradition, converging instead on an oxo-bridged dinuclear complex, even in strong nitric acid. Thus, one equivalent of CAN is recast as a two-electron-transfer reagent and a redox-activated superbase, raising questions regarding the origins of its reactivity with organic molecules and giving new fundamental insight into the stability of polynuclear complexes of tetravalent ions.

20.
ACS Cent Sci ; 1(9): 493-503, 2015 Dec 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27163014

ABSTRACT

Controlling the assembly of soft and deformable molecular aggregates into mesoscale structures is essential for understanding and developing a broad range of processes including rare earth extraction and cleaning of water, as well as for developing materials with unique properties. By combined synchrotron small- and wide-angle X-ray scattering with large-scale atomistic molecular dynamics simulations we analyze here a metalloamphiphile-oil solution that organizes on multiple length scales. The molecules associate into aggregates, and aggregates flocculate into meso-ordered phases. Our study demonstrates that dipolar interactions, centered on the amphiphile headgroup, bridge ionic aggregate cores and drive aggregate flocculation. By identifying specific intermolecular interactions that drive mesoscale ordering in solution, we bridge two different length scales that are classically addressed separately. Our results highlight the importance of individual intermolecular interactions in driving mesoscale ordering.

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