Jaime de La Sota PDF
Jaime de La Sota PDF
Jaime de La Sota PDF
J. Chem. Thermodynamics
journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/jct
a r t i c l e
i n f o
Article history:
Received 6 June 2016
Received in revised form 22 July 2016
Accepted 30 July 2016
Available online 1 August 2016
Keywords:
Ionic liquids
Tetraethylammonium
Monoethanolamine
Imidazolium
Pyridinium
Morpholinium
Pyrrolidinium
Pyrazolium
Thermodynamics
Infrared spectra
a b s t r a c t
Carbon dioxide (CO2) capture by aqueous amine solutions is an industry grade technology nowadays.
Some drawbacks of this technology motivate development of new CO2 scavengers. Due to low volatility,
thermal stability, non-flammability, and tunability, room-temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) are viewed as
prospective universal solvents. The amino groups can be grafted to the organic cations yielding species
with the increased CO2 capture performance. Many favorable physical properties of the original RTILs
can be retained in this way. We report systematic computational analysis (enthalpy, entropy, Gibbs free
energy, geometric parameters, partial charges, vibrational frequencies) of six organic cations, each representing a different family of RTILs. We found that the longer side hydrocarbon chain of the cations offer
the most prospective sites in view of the CO2 capture. In turn, chemisorption in the rings is less thermodynamically favorable. It was possible to corroborate the thermodynamic regularities in terms of electrophile + nucleophile organic reactions involving partial charges and structure perturbations due to
carbamate formation. The reported results foster development of alternative CO2 scavengers by eliminating their volatility and increasing reaction yields.
2016 Elsevier Ltd.
1. Introduction
Carbon dioxide (CO2) belongs to the greenhouse gases, which
are responsible for global warming. During a couple of last decades,
development of efficient CO2 removal methods became an important problem [14]. A variety of techniques, based on absorption,
adsorption, membranes, and hybrid setups were devised [3].
Despite numerous efforts, aqueous amine solutions still offer the
most economically efficient solution [59]. In turn, roomtemperature ionic liquids (RTILs), due to their tunability, emerge
as interesting competitors of aqueous amines [1,1012]. Mixtures
of amines and RTILs in water are currently under investigation,
since they allow to combine favorable physical chemical properties
of both [13,14].
RTILs are composed of bulky asymmetric carbon-based cations
and organic or inorganic anions. Most RTILs are non-volatile or
low-volatile [15,16], being thermally and electrochemically stable,
with high ignition points. These features minimize solvent losses
because of evaporation and decomposition at working conditions
Corresponding author.
E-mail address: vvchaban@gmail.com (V.V. Chaban).
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jct.2016.07.045
0021-9614/ 2016 Elsevier Ltd.
2. Methodology
The wave functions were optimized at the Mller-Plesset second order level of theory [41]. The calculations were started from
conventional Hartree-Fock method, whose self-consistence field
convergence criterion was set to 10 8 Hartree. Subsequently, an
energy contribution originated from the correlation of electrons
was iteratively computed. Frequency analysis was conducted and
molecular partition functions were used to deduct thermodynamic
potentials for the products and the reactants [42]. The system
wave function was approximated by the atom-centered splitvalence triple-zeta polarized basis set with diffuse functions for
every atom, 6311++G. Prior to conducting analysis, each molecular configuration was optimized until the local minimum was
found. The iterations terminated, when the forces on all atoms,
including hydrogen atoms, became smaller than 0.4 kJ mol 1 nm 1. Only configurations with positive vibrational frequencies
were analyzed to exclude transition states.
The initial configurations of the simulated species were prepared in Gabedit [43]. VMD (Visual Molecular Dynamics, v. 1.9)
[44] was used to visualize results, measure geometric parameters,
and prepare artwork at high resolution. The GAMESS package was
applied using efficient parallelization over 16 cores [41].
Fig. 1. The optimized structures of the investigated organic cations: (1) tetraethylammonium (TEA+, (C2H5)4N+); (2) 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium (EMIM+,
C3H3N2(CH3)(C2H5)+);
(3)
1-methylmorpholinium
(MM+,
C4H9NO(CH3)+);
(4) 1-methylpyridinium (MPD+, C5H5N(CH3)+); (5) 1-ethyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium
(EMPL+,
C4H8N(CH3)(C2H5)+);
(6)
1-ethyl-2-methylpyrazolium
(EMPZ+,
C3H3N2(CH3)(C2H5)+). The labeled sites were used to attach the amino group,
which subsequently gave rise to a respective carbamate molecule.
DH, kJ mol
TDS, kJ mol
DG, kJ mol
13.2
46.7
59.9
EMIM+
C3
CW1
CW2
CH2
ET
ME
41.0
39.7
86.3
46.1
15.9
11.3
41.6
45.2
46.4
45.7
44.7
45.0
82.6
84.6
132.7
91.7
60.6
56.3
MM+
C1
C2
C3
C4
ME
23.0
85.0
42.7
30.8
71.5
47.2
44.1
44.2
45.2
46.8
70.2
129.1
86.9
76.0
118.3
MPD+
C1
C2
C3
ME
65.6
105.8
61.6
37.9
46.6
43.6
43.6
52.0
112.1
149.3
105.2
90.0
EMPL+
C1
C2
C3
C4
CH2
ET
ME
103.2
36.2
37.7
36.0
51.2
1.6
30.3
47.0
46.9
45.5
45.7
47.5
47.6
47.4
150.2
83.0
83.3
81.7
98.7
49.3
77.8
EMPZ+
C1
C2
C3
CH2
ET
ME
64.3
32.1
45.3
93.9
8.1
34.6
49.7
36.3
45.5
45.4
44.0
44.1
114.0
68.4
90.8
139.3
52.0
78.7
MEA
C
39.8
43.7
83.5
Table 2
Angle CANAC (see Fig. 2) for different products of the CO2 chemisorption. The
analogous angle in MEA equals to 123.8.
Atom
TEA+
EMIM+
MM+
MPD+
EMPL+
EMPZ+
C1/CW1
C2/CW2
C3
C4
CH2
ET
ME
123.8
122.9
121.9
123.3
124.7
123.2
118.2
122.4
124.0
121.7
122.8
118.3
122.9
126.0
132.1
122.0
125.6
127.2
127.4
125.2
128.9
124.2
124.9
116.7
128.1
122.6
115.2
123.5
122.6
Fig. 2. Fraction of the entropic contribution to the Gibbs free energy of the CO2 chemisorption.
Fig. 3. Optimized structures of carbamates obtained from (a) MEA and (b) EMPZ+.
The CANAC angle characterizes the configuration of the grafted carbamate moiety.
Fig. 4. Mid- and far-infrared vibrational spectra of the EMPL+ cation based carbamates. See Fig. 1 for site designation.
Frequency,
cm 1
Intensity,
km mol 1
Site
Frequency,
cm 1
Intensity,
km mol 1
EMIM+
C3
CW1
CW2
CH2
ET
ME
1880
1878
1881
1865
1869
1817
605
648
450
603
711
369
MM+
C1
C2
C3
C4
ME
1892
1881
1872
1891
1854
622
541
602
632
273
EMPL+
C1
C2
C3
C4
CH2
ET
ME
1855
1868
1868
1870
1861
1862
1869
330
707
714
638
605
643
570
EMPZ+
C1
1865
C2
1872
C3
1874
CH2 1850
ET
1874
ME
1878
259
795
642
276
719
609
MPD+
C1
C2
C3
ME
1879
1885
1872
1883
646
495
697
620
TEA+
ET
1867
MEA
C
1850
714
556
dependent on the identity of the organic cation and the aminofunctionalized site within the cation (Table 3). The frequencies at
the ET sites are higher, as compared to those in MEA. The computed spectra suggest that spectroscopic identification of the CO2
capture is straightforward.
4. Conclusions
To recapitulate, the present paper reports ab initio thermodynamic analysis of the performance of different RTILs upon
chemisorption of CO2 via the carbamate formation mechanism.
The regularities of chemisorption were corroborated by means of
computational infrared spectroscopy, geometric parameters, and
charge density distributions. The CO2 capture was found to significantly depend on the location of the amino group within the
organic cation. In terms of Gibbs free energy, the difference may
exceed 100%. Interestingly, the performance of cations with the
amino-functionalized side chains is better than that of MEA. In
all cases, the entropic contribution constitutes a very important
fraction of the Gibbs free energy. Thus, the investigated reactions
are sensitive to pressure.
Thermodynamic potentials correlate with the electron density
distribution and can be explained as reactions between the electrophile (CO2) and a set of nucleophiles (amino-functionalized
organic cations) of somewhat different strength. This strength
depends on the carbon atom of the cation, to which the amino
group is grafted. A less important factor is steric hindrances due
to formation of the carbamate moiety in the vicinity of the side
chains.
A surprising result is that hydrocarbon chains were found to
exhibit smaller Gibbs free energies, as compared to MEA. While
the amino-functionalized hydrocarbons R-(NH2)n cannot be
directly used for CO2 capture due to their notorious volatility, they
lose volatility completely when grafted to the organic cations. Furthermore, many RTILs are soluble in water, unlike hydrocarbons.
Usage of the aminated RTILs, therefore, allows for avoiding hydroxyl groups, whose goal in the industrial amines (MEA, methyl
diethanolamine, etc) is to modulate solubility and decrease volatility. The computational results reported in the present work inspire
development of new CO2 scavengers, whose working characteris-
tics may be comparable (or even better, e.g. because of nonvolatility) than those of aqueous amines.
References
[1] S. Babamohammadi, A. Shamiri, M.K. Aroua, A review of CO2 capture by
absorption in ionic liquid-based solvents, Rev. Chem. Eng. 31 (2015) 383412.
[2] C. Chen, J. Kim, W.S. Ahn, CO2 capture by amine-functionalized nanoporous
materials: a review, Korean J. Chem. Eng. 31 (2014) 19191934.
[3] C.H. Yu, C.H. Huang, C.S. Tan, A review of CO2 capture by absorption and
adsorption, Aerosol Air Qual. Res. 12 (2012) 745769.
[4] C. Gouedard, D. Picq, F. Launay, P.L. Carrette, Amine degradation in CO2
capture. I. A review, Int. J. Greenhouse Gases Control 10 (2012) 244270.
[5] M. Sobrino, E.I. Concepcin, . Gmez-Hernndez, M.C. Martn, J.J. Segovia,
Viscosity and density measurements of aqueous amines at high pressures:
MDEA-water and MEA-water mixtures for CO2 capture, J. Chem. Thermodyn.
98 (2016) 231241.
[6] H. Pahlavanzadeh, S. Fakouri Baygi, Modeling CO2 solubility in aqueous
methyldiethanolamine solutions by perturbed Chain-SAFT Equation of State, J.
Chem. Thermodyn. 59 (2013) 214221.
[7] I.M.S. Lampreia, .F.S. Santos, M.-L.C.J. Moita, L.C.S. Nobre, Thermodynamic
study of aqueous 2-(isopropylamino)ethanol. A sterically hindered new amine
absorbent for CO2 capture, J. Chem. Thermodyn. 81 (2015) 167176.
[8] D. Fu, L. Wang, P. Zhang, C. Mi, Solubility and viscosity for CO2 capture process
using MEA promoted DEAE aqueous solution, J. Chem. Thermodyn. 95 (2016)
136141.
[9] D. Fernandes, W. Conway, R. Burns, G. Lawrance, M. Maeder, G. Puxty,
Investigations of primary and secondary amine carbamate stability by 1H NMR
spectroscopy for post combustion capture of carbon dioxide, J. Chem.
Thermodyn. 54 (2012) 183191.
[10] O. Ben Ghanem, M.I.A. Mutalib, J.M. Leveque, G. Gonfa, C.F. Kait, M. El-Harbawi,
Studies on the physicochemical properties of ionic liquids based On 1-Octyl-3methylimidazolium Amino Acids, J. Chem. Eng. Data 60 (2015) 17561763.
[11] K.M. Gupta, J.W. Jiang, Systematic investigation of nitrile based ionic liquids
for CO2 capture: a combination of molecular simulation and ab initio
calculation, J. Phys. Chem. C 118 (2014) 31103118.
[12] M. Klahn, A. Seduraman, What determines CO2 solubility in ionic liquids? A
molecular simulation study, J. Phys. Chem. B 119 (2015) 1006610078.
[13] P. Zhang, L.X. Du, D. Fu, Experiment and model for the surface tension of
amine-ionic liquids aqueous solutions, J. Chem. Thermodyn. 74 (2014) 16.
[14] F.L. Bernard, F.D. Vecchia, M.F. Rojas, R. Ligabue, M.O. Vieira, E.M. Costa, V.V.
Chaban, S. Einloft, Anticorrosion protection by amine-ionic liquid mixtures:
experiments and simulations, J. Chem. Eng. Data 61 (2016) 18031810.
[15] J.M.S.S. Esperanca, J.N.C. Lopes, M. Tariq, L.M.N.B.F. Santos, J.W. Magee, L.P.N.
Rebelo, Volatility of aprotic ionic liquids a review, J. Chem. Eng. Data 55
(2010) 312.
[16] L.P.N. Rebelo, J.N.C. Lopes, J.M.S.S. Esperanca, E. Filipe, On the critical
temperature, normal boiling point, and vapor pressure of ionic liquids, J.
Phys. Chem. B 109 (2005) 60406043.
[17] D. Roy, M. Maroncelli, Simulations of solvation and solvation dynamics in an
idealized ionic liquid model, J. Phys. Chem. B 116 (2012) 59515970.
[18] K. Paduszynski, E.V. Lukoshko, M. Krolikowski, U. Domanska, J. Szydlowski,
Thermodynamic study of binary mixtures of 1-butyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium
dicyanamide ionic liquid with molecular solvents: new experimental data and
modeling with PC-SAFT equation of state, J. Phys. Chem. B 119 (2015) 543
551.
[19] X.X. Zhang, M. Liang, N.P. Ernsting, M. Maroncelli, Conductivity and solvation
dynamics in ionic liquids, J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 4 (2013) 12051210.
[20] K. Paduszynski, M. Okuniewski, U. Domanska, Renewable feedstocks in green
solvents: thermodynamic study on phase diagrams of D-Sorbitol and xylitol
with dicyanamide based ionic liquids, J. Phys. Chem. B 117 (2013) 70347046.
[21] X.X. Zhang, J. Breffke, N.P. Ernsting, M. Maroncelli, Observations of probe
dependence of the solvation dynamics in ionic liquids, Phys. Chem. Chem.
Phys. 17 (2015) 1294912956.
[22] C.E.S. Bernardes, T. Mochida, J.N.C. Lopes, Modeling the structure and
thermodynamics of ferrocenium-based ionic liquids, Phys. Chem. Chem.
Phys. 17 (2015) 1020010208.
[23] K. Paduszynski, U. Domanska, Solubility of aliphatic hydrocarbons in
piperidinium ionic liquids: measurements and modeling in terms of
perturbed-chain statistical associating fluid theory and nonrandom
hydrogen-bonding theory, J. Phys. Chem. B 115 (2011) 1253712548.
[24] V.V. Chaban, O.V. Prezhdo, Ionic and molecular liquids: working together for
robust engineering, J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 4 (2013) 14231431.
[25] D. Almantariotis, S. Stevanovic, O. Fandino, A.S. Pensado, A.A.H. Padua, J.Y.
Coxam, M.F.C. Gomes, Absorption of carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide, ethane and
nitrogen by 1-Alkyl-3-methylimidazolium (C(n)mim, n = 2,4,6) Tris
(pentafluoroethyl)trifluorophosphate Ionic Liquids (eFAP), J. Phys. Chem. B
116 (2012) 77287738.
[26] S. Stevanovic, A. Podgorsek, A.A.H. Padua, M.F.C. Gomes, Effect of water on the
carbon dioxide absorption by 1-Alkyl-3-methylimidazolium acetate ionic
liquids, J. Phys. Chem. B 116 (2012) 1441614425.
[27] D. Almantariotis, T. Gefflaut, A.A.H. Padua, J.Y. Coxam, M.F.C. Gomes, Effect of
fluorination and size of the alkyl side-chain on the solubility of carbon dioxide
in 1-Alkyl-3-methylimidazolium Bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)amide Ionic
Liquids, J. Phys. Chem. B 114 (2010) 36083617.
[28] X.Y. Luo, X. Fan, G.L. Shi, H.R. Li, C.M. Wang, Decreasing the viscosity in CO2
capture by amino-functionalized ionic liquids through the formation of
intramolecular hydrogen bond, J. Phys. Chem. B 120 (2016) 28072813.
[29] B.H. Lv, Y.F. Xia, Y. Shi, N. Liu, W. Li, S.J. Li, A novel hydrophilic amino acid ionic
liquid [C(2)OHmim][Gly] as aqueous sorbent for CO2 capture, Int. J.
Greenhouse Gas Control 46 (2016) 16.
[30] J. Li, Z.D. Dai, M. Usman, Z.W. Qi, L.Y. Deng, CO2/H-2 separation by amino-acid
ionic liquids with polyethylene glycol as co-solvent, Int. J. Greenhouse Gas
Control 45 (2016) 207215.
[31] V. Hiremath, A.H. Jadhav, H. Lee, S. Kwon, J.G. Seo, Highly reversible CO2
capture using amino acid functionalized ionic liquids immobilized on
mesoporous silica, Chem. Eng. J. 287 (2016) 602617.
[32] B.B. Cao, J.Y. Du, S.Y. Liu, X. Zhu, X.J. Sun, H.T. Sun, H. Fu, Carbon dioxide
capture by amino-functionalized ionic liquids: DFT based theoretical analysis
substantiated by FT-IR investigation, RSC Adv. 6 (2016) 1046210470.
[33] Y.S. Sistla, A. Khanna, CO2 absorption studies in amino acid-anion based ionic
liquids, Chem. Eng. J. 273 (2015) 268276.
[34] Z.M. Xue, Y.W. Zhang, X.Q. Zhou, Y.Y. Cao, T.C. Mu, Thermal stabilities and
decomposition mechanism of amino- and hydroxyl-functionalized ionic
liquids, Thermochim. Acta 578 (2014) 5967.
[35] Y. Zhang, P. Yu, Y.N. Luo, Absorption of CO2 by amino acid-functionalized and
traditional dicationic ionic liquids: properties, Henrys law constants and
mechanisms, Chem. Eng. J. 214 (2013) 355363.
[36] K.M. Gupta, Tetracyanoborate based ionic liquids for CO2 capture: from
ab initio calculations to molecular simulations, Fluid Phase Equilib. 415 (2016)
3441.
[37] J.J. Chen, W.W. Li, X.L. Li, H.Q. Yu, Carbon dioxide capture by aminoalkyl
imidazolium-based ionic liquid: a computational investigation, Phys. Chem.
Chem. Phys. 14 (2012) 45894596.
[38] B.H. Lv, G.H. Jing, Y.H. Qian, Z.M. Zhou, An efficient absorbent of amine-based
amino acid-functionalized ionic liquids for CO2 capture: high capacity and
regeneration ability, Chem. Eng. J. 289 (2016) 212218.
[39] Z.M. Xue, Z.F. Zhang, J. Han, Y. Chen, T.C. Mu, Carbon dioxide capture by a dual
amino ionic liquid with amino-functionalized imidazolium cation and taurine
anion, Int. J. Greenhouse Gas Control 5 (2011) 628633.
[40] N.A. Sairi, R. Yusoff, Y. Alias, M.K. Aroua, Solubilities of CO2 in aqueous Nmethyldiethanolamine and guanidinium trifluoromethanesulfonate ionic
liquid systems at elevated pressures, Fluid Phase Equilib. 300 (2011) 8994.
[41] M.W. Schmidt, K.K. Baldridge, J.A. Boatz, S.T. Elbert, M.S. Gordon, J.H. Jensen, S.
Koseki, N. Matsunaga, K.A. Nguyen, S. Su, et al., General atomic and molecular
electronic structure system, J. Comput. Chem. 14 (1993) 13471363.
[42] H.A. Guggeheim, Thermodynamics: An Advanced Treatment for Chemists and
Physicists, fifth ed., Elsevier, New York, 1967.
[43] A.R. Allouche, Gabedit-A graphical user interface for computational chemistry
softwares, J. Comput. Chem. 32 (2011) 174182.
[44] W. Humphrey, A. Dalke, K.V.M.D. Schulten, Visual molecular dynamics, J. Mol.
Graphics 14 (1996) 3338.
[45] L.A. Curtiss, P.C. Redfern, K. Raghavachari, Gaussian-4 theory, J. Chem. Phys.
126 (2007) 084108.
[46] S. Bishnoi, G.T. Rochelle, Absorption of carbon dioxide in aqueous piperazine/
methyldiethanolamine, AIChE J. 48 (2002) 27882799.
[47] H. Hikita, S. Asai, Y. Katsu, S. Ikuno, Absorption of carbon-dioxide into aqueous
monoethanolamine solutions, AIChE J. 25 (1979) 793800.
[48] E. Sada, H. Kumazawa, M.A. Butt, Chemical absorption kinetics over a widerange of contact time absorption of carbon-dioxide into aqueous-solutions of
monoethanolamine, AIChE J. 22 (1976) 196198.
[49] F.L. Hirshfeld, Bonded-atom fragments for describing molecular charge
densities, Theoret. Chim. Acta 44 (1977) 129138.
[50] A.S. Aquino, F.L. Bernard, J.V. Borges, L. Mafra, F. Dalla Vecchia, M.O. Vieira, R.
Ligabue, M. Seferin, V.V. Chaban, E.J. Cabrita, et al., Rationalizing the role of the
anion in CO2 capture and conversion using imidazolium-based ionic liquid
modified mesoporous silica, RSC Adv. 5 (2015) 6422064227.
JCT 16-449