Yizhak M. - DES
Yizhak M. - DES
Yizhak M. - DES
Deep Eutectic
Solvents
Deep Eutectic Solvents
Yizhak Marcus
123
Yizhak Marcus
Department of Chemistry
Hebrew University
Jerusalem, Israel
This Springer imprint is published by the registered company Springer Nature Switzerland AG
The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland
Preface
The subject area of “Deep Eutectic Solvents” was inaugurated for research and
application just 15 years ago, in Abbott’s paper (with coworkers) of 2003 in
Chemical Communications. Since then, publications on this subject proliferated in
an exponential mode, their number increasing 1.6-fold annually, there being already
some 200 publications that appeared in the first quarter of 2018. Of the total number
of publications. only 3.2% are in non-English languages and 4.0% are patents, the
other papers are in scientific journals and deal with the preparation, properties, and
applications of these neoteric solvents. In retrospect, it appears timely to summarize
what has been achieved in this area and this book is a result.
Chapter 1 deals with the role of solvents in general in chemical laboratory
practice and in the chemical industry in particular. Recent trends are to replace
conventional organic solvents with neoteric ones devoid of the hazards involved
with the former, including room temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) and supercritical
fluids. They then specify the requirements from solvents to be considered as being
“green”, i.e., to be ecologically friendly and safe, nontoxic, biodegradable, and to
be prepared easily from readily available low-cost materials. Deep eutectic solvents
are liquid mixtures at ambient conditions of (generally) two components that are
themselves not necessarily liquid under such conditions. Therefore, a short pre-
sentation of solid–liquid phase diagrams and the means of their determination is
placed here in order to illustrate the “deep eutectic” aspect of the solvents that are
the subject of this book.
Chapter 2 shows the great variety of the deep eutectic solvents (DESs), i.e.,
mixtures that are liquid at ambient conditions and can be considered to act as
“green” solvents as specified in the previous chapter. Natural deep eutectic solvents
(NADES) are a subclass, the components of which are of natural origin and need
not be synthesized. The prototype of the DESs is the 1:2 choline chloride/urea
mixture (commercially available as Reline) and many other DESs based on a
choline salt or its analogs have been described. Most of the DESs of which there are
reports in the literature comprise alkyl-substituted ammonium or phosphonium salts
on the one hand and amides or substances with hydroxyl groups (alkanols, polyols,
carboxylic acids) on the other at a definite molar ratio, and may be called
v
vi Preface
conventional deep eutectic solvents. These DESs are ionic liquids, being based on
salts of various types, and may be considered to be a subgroup of the
well-established room temperature ionic liquids (RTILs). There are, however, a
substantial number of nonconventional DESs, involving metal salts, metal salt
hydrates, and zwitterionic amino acids which are also ionic. On the other hand,
nonionic DESs involving sugars and carboxylic acids also share properties and
applications with the conventional ones, and are dealt with here.
Chapter 3 describes the physical and chemical properties of the deep eutectic
solvents. The solid–liquid phase diagrams of DESs are dealt with, but surprisingly,
perhaps, complete diagrams are available for only a fraction of the systems that are
deemed to be deep eutectic solvents (some DESs, however, are low transition
temperature mixtures (LTTMs) that form glasses on cooling rather than crystalline
solids). The thermodynamic properties include vapor–liquid equilibria, i.e., vapor
pressures (that are very low), enthalpies of vaporization, boiling points, and critical
points, but these are rather unimportant for actual applications. The heat capacity
and surface tension of the DESs are of greater relevance. The volumetric properties:
the density, thermal expansibility, and compressibility are presented, as are the
transport properties: viscosity, electrical conductivity, diffusion coefficients, and
thermal conductivity. Other physical properties that are included are the refractive
index and polarizability, the electrical permittivity, and the magnetic susceptibility.
The chemical properties of DESs are their liquid structures, as obtained by
diffraction experiments and computer simulations, their solvatochromic indices that
are relevant to their ability to solvate solutes, their basicity or acidity, and
hydrophilicity or hydrophobicity. The ability of DESs to absorb gases is dealt with
as are their electrochemical properties (electrochemical potential window) and
capacitance. Finally, the important issues that pertain to the DESs being “green”,
i.e., their toxicity (cytotoxicity and phytotoxicity, as well as hazard to humans) and
biodegradability are discussed.
Chapters 4 and 5 deal with the reported applications of deep eutectic solvents,
with illustrative examples (certainly not an exhaustive set) of reports to the end of
2017, with a few interesting ones from the beginning of 2018. The applications
described in Chap. 4 include the use of DESs as reaction media, including
ionothermal synthesis of metal-based inorganic compounds based on dissolved
metal oxides in the solvents, as well as catalyzed or non-catalyzed synthesis of
organic compounds and enzymatic catalyzed synthesis of biomolecules. The pro-
cessing of biomass (lignocellulose) and the production of biodiesel in DESs have
received widespread attention and are dealt with. Deep eutectic solvents have been
used for the electrodeposition of metals on the one hand and on their
electro-polishing on the other. Nanotechnology is another area for which wide-
spread applications have been reported, including nanosized metallic particles and
magnetic oxides used as catalysts, carbon nanotubes and graphene sheets, and
porous molecularly imprinted polymers.
The applications described in Chap. 5 involve extraction and sorption by the
DESs. The desulfurization and denitrification of fuels is one of the fields of
application and extraction of or from hydrocarbons, such as aliphatic–aromatic
Preface vii
1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
1.1 Solvents for Processing and in the Laboratory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
1.2 Green Solvents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.3 Solid–Liquid Phase Diagrams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
2 The Variety of Deep Eutectic Solvents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......... 13
2.1 Deep Eutectic Solvents Based on Choline Chloride
and Analogs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
2.2 Deep Eutectic Solvents Based on Other -Onium Salts . . . . . . . . . . 21
2.3 Unconventional Deep Eutectic Solvents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
2.4 Nonionic Deep Eutectic Solvents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
3.1 Solid–Liquid Phase Diagrams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
3.2 Thermodynamic Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
3.2.1 Vapor–Liquid Equilibria . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
3.2.2 Solid–Liquid Equilibria . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
3.2.3 Heat Capacity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
3.2.4 Surface Tension . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
3.3 Volumetric Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
3.3.1 Density and Expansibility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
3.3.2 Compressibility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
3.4 Transport Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
3.4.1 Viscosity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
3.4.2 Electric Conductivity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
3.4.3 Self-diffusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
3.4.4 Thermal Conductivity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
ix
x Contents
Deep eutectic solvents (DESs) are a certain class of liquids at ambient conditions
(that have freezing points below, say, 25 °C) that are binary compositions of two
components, each of which has a melting point above that of the deep eutectic
solvent, hence they are eutectics. Deep eutectic solvents are a subgroup of room
temperature ionic liquids (RTILs), but are binary mixtures contrary to ordinary
RTILs that are single substances. Being generally ionic in nature, deep eutectic
solvents should have appreciable electrical conductivities, but nonionic deep
eutectic solvents have also been described. As solvents, they should be able to
dissolve a variety of solutes, be these organic substances, metal oxides, or sub-
stances of other kinds. The deep eutectic solvents also should be noninflammable,
nontoxic, and friendly to the environment (‘green’, biodegradable) in order to be
useful for industrial processes. The freezing point of 25 °C is set as an arbitrary
upper limit to deep eutectic solvents to be dealt with in this book.
Much of chemistry takes place or is carried out in a liquid solution. This is the case
in nature: geochemical reactions and physiology in plants and living organisms, in
industry: textile, paper, food, biomass processing, hydrometallurgy, bulk chemicals,
and pharmaceuticals, and in the laboratory: synthesis, purification, and analysis.
Therefore, solvents are required that have the desired properties for the processes to
be carried out on the one hand and that do not have disadvantageous properties on
the other.
There are several features of liquids that make them suitable as solvents.
A solvent should have an appropriate liquid range, i.e., it should be liquid at
ambient temperatures and pressures and over a suitable range of these conditions. It
should be available at commercial quantities at the purity required for the envisaged
process, or be readily purified for this purpose, and be inexpensive. It should be
© Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2019 1
Y. Marcus, Deep Eutectic Solvents,
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-00608-2_1
2 1 Introduction
recyclable (generally, but not necessarily, by distilling it out from the process
mixture, after the product has been recovered) and when disposed-of should be
environmentally friendly. Tunability is a desired aspect, in that by changing con-
ditions (the temperature or pressure) or by addition of co- or anti-solvents the
solubilities of the desired product and of undesired by-products and residual raw
materials can be controlled. Several attributes of prospective solvents should be
avoided: these include high viscosity that impedes ready flow, high volatility,
flammability, and toxicity to humans and the environment.
Water is, of course, a very widely utilized solvent, because of its advantageous
properties and minimal detrimental ones. It is readily available at the required
purity, it is cheap, it has a convenient liquid range, it is readily recycled, and has
good solvent properties for a wide variety of solutes. It is also nontoxic, non-
flammable, and environmentally friendly. It may even be utilized under increased
pressures at elevated temperatures, beyond its normal boiling point, and even at
supercritical conditions. Water is, of course, the primary solvent for physiological
processes as well as for many geochemical ones.
However, water is a poor solvent at ambient conditions for nonpolar substances,
for many permanent gases, for most industrial polymers, and for those solid
materials that have such large crystal energies that cannot be overcome by the
solvation energies and the entropy changes involved in the dissolution.
Furthermore, water is highly reactive towards many solutes and cannot be used if
such solutes are required to be unchanged by the solvent itself during the process.
Therefore, alternative solvents have been extensively used in industry and in the
laboratory, that have better solvent properties regarding such prospective solutes for
which water is inadequate as a solvent.
Organic liquids have for a long time served for this purpose, both dipolar and
hydrogen bonded ones and nonpolar solvents as well, for different classes of
solutes. Their main role is their ability to solvate the particles (molecules or ions) of
the solutes. Their general properties have been summarized in several monographs,
e.g., [1, 2], and those properties conducive to their solvating abilities have also been
summarized [2]. For some applications, it has been found that aqueous/organic
solvent mixtures and nonaqueous mixtures of organic solvents perform better than
individual ones, for example for pharmaceutical solutes [3]. General and solvating
ability properties of such mixtures have also been summarized [4]. Although such
organic solvents are generally readily available commercially in high purity, their
costs have to be taken into account for industrial applications. Furthermore, such
solvents may be too volatile, toxic, flammable, and detrimental to the environment,
so that special precautions have to be undertaken in their utilization. The present
general trend in the industry is to avoid the commonly employed organic solvents
and to replace them with solvents that are not volatile, nontoxic, nonflammable, and
environmentally friendly.
Supercritical solvents, in particular, supercritical carbon dioxide (SCD) [5–7]
and supercritical water (SCW) [8–10], but also, to a smaller extent, other super-
critical fluids, have been proposed for a variety of applications. These include the
sorption and separation of gases (SCD) and the total oxidation and elimination of
1.1 Solvents for Processing and in the Laboratory 3
The concept of ‘green solvents’ pertains to the wider area of ‘green chemistry’, for
which 12 principles have been established. These are as follows:
(1) Waste prevention: synthesis and processing should not leave waste materials
to clean-up and dispose.
(2) Safety: no toxic materials should result from the process.
(3) Hazard prevention: avoidance of the formation of materials or processes that
are hazardous.
(4) Preference for renewable feedstock: avoidance of depleting raw materials
from mining or fossil fuels.
(5) Preference for catalytic reactions: catalysts are preferable to stoichiometric
reagents.
(6) Avoidance of temporary modifications: derivatives require additional
reagents for the regeneration of the desired products.
(7) Atom economy should be maximized: wasted atoms should be avoided.
(8) Safe solvents need to be used: minimal quantities of recyclable solvents are
preferred.
(9) Energy efficiency is to be maximized: ambient temperatures and pressures
should be preferred.
(10) Degradable products and reagents are preferred: the materials should not
accumulate in the environment.
(11) In-time control: monitoring of reactions for the elimination of undesired
by-products.
(12) Minimization of the potential for accidents: explosion, fire, and pollution
possibilities of processes must be kept in mind.
In view of these principles, the chemical community is proceeding in recent
years toward sustainable industrial processes, for which summit conferences are
organized, annual Green Chemistry and Engineering Conferences take place, and
Green Chemistry and Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering journals and series
are published.
More than 107 tons of organic solvents are produced each year for industrial
purposes [18], but most of these do not conform to the requirements of ‘green
chemistry’. Industry has, indeed, in recent years, followed the slogan “pollution
prevention pays” [19] by reduction of the amounts of solvents that are used in the
processes and by their recycling, so that much smaller amounts are disposed into
the environment. As a consequence, the demand for ‘green solvents’ has prolifer-
ated, meeting the essential criteria listed above [20].
Water is the ‘greenest solvent’ imaginable, as mentioned in Sect. 1.1: it is
readily available at the required purity, it is cheap, it is readily recycled, nontoxic,
nonflammable, and environmentally friendly. However, even water, widely used as
a solvent in a variety of industrial applications, should be avoided as much as
possible, because of the hazard of return of contaminated water to the natural
1.2 Green Solvents 5
sources: underground reservoirs, rivers, and lakes. Apart from water, there are few
solvents from natural sources, and employment of these, mainly hydrocarbons from
the refining of fossil fuels, contradicts principle (4) of “green chemistry”.
Alternative solvents may include supercritical water [8, 9] and carbon dioxide [21],
ionic liquids [12–14], and fluorous phases [22]. Synthetic solvents are sought that,
in addition to their desired positive properties, such as availability at low costs,
dissolution abilities of the prospective solutes and the required widths of their
spectroscopic and electrochemical windows, avoid the undesirable features of
toxicity, flammability, loss through volatility, and environmental incompatibility.
Several metrics for the environmental health and safety properties of solvents
exist that deal with process safety, human health, and the environment [23]. Several
guiding specifications have been adopted by industry. The Pfizer guide provides a
simple comparison of common solvents, deeming them “preferred”, “usable”, or
“undesirable”. The GSK guide focuses on small molecule organic solvents in the
pharmaceutical industry and is most useful when choosing among known alterna-
tives [24]. The Sanofi solvent selection guide provides a clear rank (recommended,
problematic, hazardous, or highly hazardous) to each solvent which includes a
number of bio-derived and less common solvents [25]. A further solvent selection
guide is available in [26].
The process safety aspects include the flash point, the vapor pressure, explosion
risk (peroxide formation potential), auto-ignition temperature, static charge for-
mation, self-reaction potential, and corrosiveness. The health aspects include car-
cinogenicity, mutagenicity, reprotoxicity, skin absorption, acute toxicity, and
respiratory and eye irritation, as well as prolonged occupational exposure hazard.
The environmental aspects include water contamination, ozone depletion, bioac-
cumulation, energy demand for distillation, photoreactive potential, and
non-degradability.
Room temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) have been widely promoted in recent
years as ‘green solvents’. A recent publication [27] shows that *80% of papers
dealing with solvents for green technologies pertain to room temperature ionic
liquids (RTILs), *15% pertaining to supercritical carbon dioxide, and only *5%
pertaining to other ‘green solvents’. Industrial applications of room temperature
ionic liquids have been described [28, 29] and their properties have been sum-
marized [11].
One of the main features of room temperature ionic liquids is their low volatility,
so that loss to the environment and its pollution by the vapors of room temperature
ionic liquids is minimized. Other hazards of room temperature ionic liquids may be
minimal, but some have flashpoints below 200 °C, examples being: 1-ethyl-3-
methylimidazolium ethyl sulfate (157.0 °C), 1-hexyl-3- methylimidazolium chloride
(178.5 °C), 1-butyl-3-methyl-imidazolium methyl sulfate (102 °C) [30]. These tem-
peratures are diminished when the room temperature ionic liquids are heated for a
moderately prolonged time [31]. In spite of their very low vapor pressures, room
temperature ionic liquids are combustible rather than nonflammable [32] and may
auto-ignite at >400 °C [33].
6 1 Introduction
Room temperature ionic liquids are not devoid of toxicity, as recent discussions
on applications of ionic liquids in the food and bioproducts industries reveal [34,
35]. Thus, although the imidazolium-based RTILs are the most popular choice, this
choice occurs despite clear indications about their toxicity. Room temperature ionic
liquids with lower toxicity, such as cholinium saccharinate, were synthesized [36]
and had lower eco-toxicity levels toward crustaceans, when compared to most
common ionic liquids, a fact related to the natural origin of the ions. The use of
renewable natural compounds for the synthesis of room temperature ionic liquids,
such as amino acids, lipid-like compounds, or those involving acids from natural
origin is emerging.
The low vapor pressures of room temperature ionic liquids make them much less
susceptible to air pollution than common organic solvents. However, room tem-
perature ionic liquids are not per se innocuous environmentally, and relevant issues
of room temperature ionic liquids, including environmental behavior and toxicity,
and routes for designing nontoxic room temperature ionic liquids and the tech-
niques that might be adopted for the removal/recovery of room temperature ionic
liquids have been discussed [37]. Of major concern are their fate, transport, and
transformations in terrestrial and aquatic systems. The adsorption of room tem-
perature ionic liquids on soils and sediments has been investigated [38]. The
biodegradation of room temperature ionic liquids, including methods for its
assessment, the trends observed for structurally related room temperature ionic
liquids, and applications of biodegradable ionic liquids in synthetic chemistry have
been reviewed [39]. Room temperature ionic liquids that are classified as readily
biodegradable require a 60% biodegradation level in 28 days and full
biodegradation should yield completely nontoxic products.
A further issue that pertains to the use of room temperature ionic liquids as
solvents is their considerable viscosity at ambient conditions. Water and common
organic solvents: n-hexane, methanol, tetrahydrofuran, and acetonitrile have at
25 °C dynamic viscosities η/mPa∙s < 1. On the other hand, typical room temper-
ature ionic liquids have at 25 °C viscosities η/mPa∙s of 15.0 for 1-ethyl-3-
methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate, 35.6 for 1-butyl-4-methylpyridinium
dicyanamide, 30.0 for 1-butyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium trifluoromethylsulfonate,
and 245 for octyl tributylphosphonium dicyanamide, and even larger viscosities for
other members of these classes of room temperature ionic liquids [11].
All these considerations are relevant also to the deep eutectic solvents that are
dealt with in this book, and are discussed in turn at the appropriate places.
there may occur a eutectic, that is, a composition that has a lower melting point than
any other composition, including the neat components. On the other hand, a
crystalline compound may be formed between the two components, and this has its
own characteristic melting point. If the liquid formed on fusion of this compound
crystallizes back on cooling to this same compound it is said to melt congruently,
otherwise, it melts incongruently and the original compound is not reformed on
cooling the liquid melt, but either of the initial components may crystallize out.
A further complication that may occur is the formation of solid solutions of the
components of the mixture formed on cooling the liquid melts, rich in the one
component or in the other as the overall concentration changes.
Several methods are used to obtain the solid–liquid equilibrium (SLE) diagrams
of binary mixtures. Commonly, the components at given molar ratios are mixed and
heated above the melting point of the mixture to form a homogeneous liquid. The
mixture is allowed to cool gradually and its temperature is measured until visually a
solid phase appears. This procedure may be carried out by means of a hot-stage
microscope [40]. A more sophisticated method is to monitor the temperature of the
cooling liquid mixture with time and to note a halt in the cooling curve that
indicates equilibrium crystallization of the solid phase. A possible undercooling can
be noted in such cooling curves, and on nucleation of the melt, a temperature upshot
is seen toward the halt at the true freezing point. A further method that is widely
employed is differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) which on heating the mixture
shows an endothermic peak, the onset of which indicates the melting point and the
enthalpy change of fusion is obtained from integration of the DSC curve [40]. An
exothermic peak is shown by DSC on cooling the molten material, indicating the
freezing point.
Simple solid–liquid phase diagrams with a single eutectic are found in many
binary mixtures, and the melting points of the eutectic can be a great deal below
those of the constituent compounds. The distance between the eutectic melting
point and the point at the composition of the eutectic on the straight line connecting
the melting points of the constituents is called the eutectic distance, Dtm, and
characterizes the success with which the melting point tm has been diminished. This
is demonstrated in Fig. 1.1 for the mixtures of a-naphthol (tm/°C = 95.1) with
o-nitroaniline (tm/°C = 69.6), where a eutectic occurs (tm/°C = 44.0) at a mole
fraction of o-nitroaniline of 0.5616 [41], but its tm is above ambient temperature. In
this case, the eutectic distance is Dtm/°C = 36.
Similar situations are observed also with inorganic materials, for instance, for
salt hydrates that have melting points not far from ambient temperatures, in contrast
with molten salts [11] that are outside the scope of this book. The solid–liquid phase
diagram of mixtures of magnesium chloride hexahydrate (MgCl2∙6H2O,
tm/°C = 112) with nickel chloride hexahydrate (NiCl2∙6H2O, tm/°C = 30) [42] is
shown in Fig. 1.2. The eutectic at the 1:1 composition has a melting point
tm/°C = 4. This binary salt hydrate system may serve as a deep eutectic solvent, but
has not been so described and used so far, as much as is known, and the eutectic
distance Dtm/°C = 67 is quite appreciable.
8 1 Introduction
A fairly complicated phase diagram occurs for the corresponding nitrate sys-
tems: mixtures of magnesium nitrate hexahydrate (Mg(NO3)2∙6H2O, tm/°C = 89.5)
with nickel nitrate hexahydrate (Ni(NO3)2∙6H2O, tm/°C = 56.7) [42, 43], shown in
Fig. 1.3. A maximum in the diagram occurs at the 1:1 composition, at which a
congruently melting compound is formed (tm/°C = 87), surrounded by two minima
(eutectics) with tm/°C = 70 and 51.
An even more complicated phase diagram is obtained for solutions of magne-
sium chloride in water [44], in which a series of hydrates are successively at
equilibrium with the solution, the dodecahydrate, octahydrate, hexahydrate,
tetrahydrate, and dihydrate, as shown in Fig. 1.4.
1.3 Solid–Liquid Phase Diagrams 9
The deep eutectic solvents dealt with in this book have the much simpler form of
solid–liquid phase diagram, with a single eutectic, as shown in Fig. 1.1 for the
o-nitroaniline/a-naphthol system, and in Fig. 1.2 for the MgCl2∙6H2O/NiCl2∙6H2O
system.
Fig. 1.4 The solid–liquid phase diagram of aqueous MgCl2 [44]. The lines connecting the
experimental points are guides to the eye and have no further significance. Up to the first triangle
from the left, the hydrates at equilibrium with the solution are successively the dodecahydrate and
the octahydrate; between the two triangles the hexahydrate is at equilibrium with the solution, and
beyond the second triangle it is the tetrahydrate, that in turn reverts to the dihydrate (outside the
figure)
10 1 Introduction
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Chapter 2
The Variety of Deep Eutectic Solvents
The following definition is generally used in this book: deep eutectic solvents
(DESs) are binary mixtures of the definite composition of two components, one of
which being ionic, that yield a liquid phase at ambient conditions, 25 °C. Some
cases that do not conform to this restrictive definition are, however, also included,
since they have properties and uses similar to those that do. The general mode of
preparation of deep eutectic solvents, if their ingredients are solids at ambient
conditions, is to mix the components at the prescribed molar ratio and heat the
mixture to a moderately elevated temperature (generally 60–100 °C) for a few
hours until the entire mass is converted to a homogeneous clear liquid. If one of the
ingredients is itself liquid at ambient conditions the other component is dissolved in
it, if necessary by moderate heating for some time. A variant is to dissolve both
components in water, which is then vacuum evaporated or removed by
freeze-drying, and to dry the resulting deep eutectic solvent in a desiccator [1, 2].
One general mode for the formulation of a deep eutectic solvent is to have one
component of the binary mixture a hydrogen bond acceptor (HBA), e.g., an ionic
component with an anion such as chloride, and the other a hydrogen bond donor
(HBD), such as an amide, an alcohol, or a carboxylic acid. The deep eutectic
solvent keeps the identities of the components which interact via hydrogen bonding,
and no covalent compound between them is formed. The optimal ratio of the
hydrogen bond acceptor and hydrogen bond donor that forms the eutectic depends
on the mutual hydrogen bonding abilities of the components.
The concept of natural deep eutectic solvents (NADES) involves as the
hydrogen bond donor components of the binary mixtures any of the many sub-
stances from natural origins that form deep eutectic solvents with choline chloride
(itself a natural product) or other hydrogen bond acceptor ingredients of natural
origin. The advantage of natural deep eutectic solvents over other deep eutectic
solvents is that the natural ones are expected to be nontoxic, biodegradable, hence
more environmentally friendly, and to be prepared easily from readily available
low-cost materials.
Figure 2.1 shows the structures of commonly used hydrogen bond acceptor
ingredients of deep eutectic solvents and Fig. 2.2 shows the corresponding struc-
tures of the hydrogen bond donor components [3].
Some publications consider eutectic mixtures that have melting/freezing points
above 25 °C as deep eutectic solvents, but here mainly those that melt/freeze below
this temperature are dealt with. However, some mixtures do not crystallize on
cooling but have a glass transition point rather than having a freezing/melting point.
Such mixtures are termed ‘low transition temperature mixtures’ (LTTMs) and act
like deep eutectic solvents in most respects and are dealt with here. The scope of
deep eutectic solvents is extended by the addition of a third component, another
hydrogen bond donor agent, as, for example, water. However, here mostly binary
mixtures of one hydrogen bond acceptor agent and one hydrogen bond donor agent
are dealt with.
Fig. 2.1 Structures of hydrogen bond accepting components of deep eutectic solvents (from [3],
by permission of the publisher, Elsevier)
2.1 Deep Eutectic Solvents Based on Choline Chloride and Analogs 15
Fig. 2.2 Structures of commonly used hydrogen bond donor components of deep eutectic
solvents (from [3] with permission of the publisher, Elsevier)
The first deep eutectic solvent (DES) was suggested by Abbott et al. [4]: the
eutectic combination of choline chloride and urea. This deep eutectic solvent is
nowadays known under the trade name “Reline” and is commercially available.
However, it is simply prepared by mixing the solid components at the appropriate
molar ratio, 1 choline chloride: 2 urea, heating while stirring to 80 °C, and the
homogeneous transparent liquid deep eutectic solvent is thereby formed. For the 1:2
eutectic, the melting point is tme/°C = 12 [4] (but see Sect. 3.1 for disagreeing
values), making the liquid mixture an attractive solvent so that Reline is widely
used as a solvent for a host of applications.
The raw materials for this particular deep eutectic solvent, Reline, are widely
available natural products and are biodegradable, hence environmentally friendly,
i.e., ‘green’, making this combination a NADES. Choline chloride (2-hydroxyethyl-
N,N,N-trimethylaminium chloride (HOC2H4N(CH3)+3 Cl−, CAS No. 67-48-1) is
mass produced as a growth-promoting chicken feed additive at a price of
*850 USD/ton. It is a white deliquescent crystalline solid, has a molar mass of
M/g mol−1 = 139.62 and has a melting point of tm/°C = 302 (but it decomposes on
melting). It is very hydrophilic: its octanol/water distribution constant is
logKW O
¼ 5:16, and it is highly soluble in water: s/g dm−3 > 650 at room tem-
perature. Choline chloride is a skin irritant and hazardous in case of ingestion, but
16 2 The Variety of Deep Eutectic Solvents
potential chronic health effects are not known. The material is combustible but not
readily flammable.
Urea (O=C(NH2)2, CAS No. 57-13-6) is mass produced as a nitrogen fertilizer at
a price of *200 USD/ton. It is a white crystalline solid, has a molar mass of
M/g mol−1 = 60.06, and has a melting point of tm/°C = 132.7. It is moderately
hydrophilic: its octanol/water distribution constant is logKW O
¼ 1:52, and it is
−3
highly soluble in water: s/g dm = 1080 at 20 °C. Urea is a skin irritant and
hazardous in case of ingestion and inhalation, but potential chronic health effects
are not known. Urea is nonflammable, but may be combustible at high
temperatures.
The eutectic distance for the 1:2 choline chloride: urea eutectic combination is
Dtm/°C = 178, in view of the melting points of the ingredients: 302 and 133 °C. The
hydrogen bond acceptor chloride anion of the choline salt may be exchanged for
other anions that also have good hydrogen bond accepting abilities, such as nitrate
(tme/°C = 4) or fluoride (tme/°C = 1) for the resulting deep eutectic solvent [4].
However, for a choline salt with an anion less prone to accept hydrogen bonds the
melting point of the 1:1 combination is considerably above ambient: tme/°C = 67 for
the tetrafluoroborate salt.
Choline chloride may be substituted by other similar quaternary ammonium salts
that form deep eutectic solvents with urea [3, 4]. A change of one of the methyl
groups of the choline cation to an ethyl or benzyl group lowers the melting point of
the quaternary ammonium salt/urea deep eutectic solvent. The chloride of
2-hydroxyethyl-ethyl-N,N–dimethylaminium has tme/°C = –38 and that of
2-hydroxyethyl-benzyl-N,N–dimethylaminium has tme/°C = −33. Other substitu-
tions of choline, such as 2-acetylethyl-N,N,N–trimethylaminium, tme/°C = –14,
N,N-bis(2-hydroxyethyl)-benzyl-methylaminium, tme/°C = −6, and 2-chloroethyl-
N,N,N–trimethylaminium, tme/°C = 15, are further examples [4].
Table 2.1 summarizes the compositions regarding deep eutectic solvents based on
choline and its analogs, their molar masses M and their melting/freezing points tme.
Some amides besides urea also produce deep eutectic solvent with choline chloride,
the most effective being trifluoroacetamide (CF3C(O)NH2, CAS No. 354-38-1) at a
molar ratio of choline chloride: amide of 2:5, with tme/°C = −43.6. The eutectic
distance, in this case, is Dtm = 184 °C [5, 6], slightly larger than for urea as a com-
ponent. Some other amides than urea and trifluoroacetamide have also been tried with
choline chloride, but do not produce deep eutectic solvents: they have melting points
above ambient. Methyl-substituted ureas are examples: 1-methyl-, 1,2-dimethyl-,
1,1-dimethyl-urea eutectics with choline chloride have tme/°C = 29, 70, 149,
respectively. The eutectic of choline chloride with acetamide has tme/°C = 80, with
benzamide has tme/°C = 129, and with thiourea has tme/°C = 175 [4].
Choline chloride is an ingredient of a wide range of other deep eutectic solvents,
for instance, those formed with a carboxylic acid as the hydrogen bond donating
ingredient. When a monobasic acid is employed, the ratio 1:2 choline chloride: acid
produces the low-melting eutectic: tme/°C = 20 for phenylpropanoic acid
2.1 Deep Eutectic Solvents Based on Choline Chloride and Analogs 17
Table 2.1 Deep eutectic solvents based on choline chloride and its analogs formed at the
indicated ratios of HBA:HBD, their molar masses M, and the melting point of the eutectics, tme
HBA HBD M/kg mol–1 tme/°C Ref.
Choline chloride urea (1:2), Reline 0.25974 12 [4]
Thiourea (1:3) 0.36790 <10 [5]
trifluoroacetamide (1:2) 0.36570 –44 [6, 7]
propanoic acid (1:2) 0.28778 <–80b [8]
chloroacetic acid (1:2) 0.32862 <–80c [8]
trichloroacetic acid (1:2) 0.46640 <–80d [8]
phenylacetic acid (1:2) 0.42595 25 9
phenylpropanoic acid (1:2) 0.43998 20 [9]
malonic acid (1:1), Maline 0.24368 10 [9]
glutaric acid (1:1) 0.27174 –16 (tge) [3]
glycolic acid (1:1) 0.21507 –16 (tge) [9]
lactic acid (1:2) 0.31978 –78 [9]
levulinic acid (1:3) 0.48795 –11 [10]
oxalic acid dehydrate (1:1) 0.26569 –40 [3]
malic acid (1:1) 0.27371 –56 [9]
Trifluoromethanesulfonic acid < 25 [11]
p-toluenesulfonic acid (1:2) 0.52007 <–80e [8]
ethylene glycol (1:2), Ethaline 0.26376 –66 [12]
diethylene glycol (1:3) 0.45738 < –20 [13]
triethylene glycol (1:3) 0.58953 -19.8 [14]
glycerol (1:2), Glyceline 0.32380 –40 [15]
1,2-propanediol (1:3) 0.36732 < –20 [16]
1,4-butanediol (1:2) 0.31986 –32 [2, 9, 10]
2,3-butanediol (1:3) 0.40938 < –20 [16]
PEG 200 (1:2) 0.53902 < 25 [17]
furfuryl alcohol (1:3) 0.43392 –36 [10]
xylitol (1:1) 0.29177 LRTa [19, 20]
d-sorbitol (1:1) 0.32179 9 [7]
d-isosorbide (1:2) 0.43190 LRTa [19, 20]
xylose (1:1) 0.28915 LRTa [21]
fructose (2:1) 0.43237 10 [3]
glucose (2:1) 0.43237 15 [3]
Sucrose (1:1) 0.48132 LRTa [21]
phenol (1:3) 0.42195 –20 [3, 22]
o-cresol (1:3) 0.43597 –24 [3, 22]
p-cresol (1:2) 0.33699 <20 [23]
2,3-xylenol (1:3) 0.50613 18 [3, 22]
4-chlorophenol (4:5) 0.29972 < 20 [3, 22]
2-methoxyphenolf (1:3) 0.51144 <20 [24]
(continued)
18 2 The Variety of Deep Eutectic Solvents
(C6H5C2H4CO2H, CAS No. 501-52-0), but when a dibasic acid is used, the ratio is
1:1, e.g., with malonic acid (CH2(CO2H)2, CAS No. 141-82-2) tme/°C = 10 [7].
The deep eutectic solvent with malonic acid is commercially called “Maline”.
However, some other carboxylic acids produce with choline chloride eutectics with
melting points above ambient: so do phenylacetic acid, tme/°C = 25, oxalic acid,
tme/°C = 34, and succinic acid, tme/°C = 71 among others [7]. With glutaric acid
(1,3-propanedicarboxylic acid, CAS No. 110-94-1) a low transition temperature
mixtures (LTTMs), tge/°C = –16, is produced, where tge is the glass transition
temperature, i.e., the deep eutectic solvent is a liquid above this temperature but
does not crystallize. Oxalic acid dihydrate (CAS No. 6153-56-6) forms with choline
chloride at a 1:1 ratio a low transition temperature mixtures, tge/°C = −40.2 [3],
contrary to the anhydrous oxalic acid.
2.1 Deep Eutectic Solvents Based on Choline Chloride and Analogs 19
(OHC4H8OH, CAS No. 110-63-4) at a ratio of 1:3 forming deep eutectic solvents
with tme/°C = −32 [2, 7, 8]. Other polyols, derived from sugars, are also effective
with choline chloride: furfuryl alcohol (2-furylmethanol, CAS No. 98-00-0) at a 1:3
ratio has tme/°C = −36 [10] or −35.8 [8] and d-sorbitol (hexahydroxyhexane, CAS
No. 50-70-4) at the 1:1 ratio has tme/°C = 8.6 [6]. Two further polyols are men-
tioned in [11] that form deep eutectic solvents with choline chloride, i.e., mixtures
that are liquid at room temperature: xylitol (pentahydroxypentane, CAS
No. 87-99-0) at a 1:1 ratio and d-isosorbide (CAS No. 652-67-5) at a 1:2 ratio, but
the melting points were not reported [12]. Sugars, such as d-fructose and d-glucose,
also form deep eutectic solvents with choline chloride at 1:2 molar ratios, with
tme/°C = 10 and 15, respectively [3].
As for the carboxylic acids, some of the polyol hydrogen bond donors are natural
products that form with choline chloride natural deep eutectic solvents. Glycerol,
the hydrogen bond donor component of Glyceline, is obtained from the hydrolysis
of fats and oils in the manufacture of soap at a reference price of USD 500/ton on a
>1 million tons scale annually. Glycerol serves as a humectant, solvent, and
sweetener in food and beverages, and is also used as filler in commercially prepared
low-fat foods. Xylitol is naturally found in low concentrations in the fibers of many
fruits and vegetables as well as fibrous material such as corn husks and sugar cane
bagasse. Industrial production of xylitol, at a reference price of USD 3000/ton,
starts from a hemicellulose extracted from hardwoods or corncobs, which is
hydrolyzed and catalytically hydrogenated. Xylitol has no known toxicity in
humans and is used as a sweetener. Sorbitol is obtained by reduction of glucose at a
reference price of USD 500/ton. It is used as a sweetener and has no toxicity to
humans. Furfuryl alcohol is manufactured industrially at a reference price of USD
1500/ton by the catalytic reduction of furfural, which is obtained from corncob and
sugar cane bagasse. It is used as a solvent and as a chemical intermediate for furan
resins in thermoset polymer matrix composites, cements, adhesives, and coatings. It
is irritating to eyes, skin, and respiratory tract and harmful if inhaled or swallowed.
The two sugars mentioned above, are, of course, nontoxic ingredients of natural
deep eutectic solvents.
Another kind of hydrogen bond donors for deep eutectic solvents with choline
chloride are phenols at a 1:3 mol ratio. With phenol itself (CAS No. 108-95-2) the
deep eutectic solvents based on choline chloride has tme/°C = −20.1, with o-cresol
(2-methylphenol, CAS No. 95-48-7) it has tme/°C = −23.8, and with 2,3-xylenol
(2,3-dimethylphenol, CAS No. 526-75-0) it has tme/°C = 17.7 [3, 13]. The phenols
are toxic and this should be considered if they are to be employed.
The hydrogen bond donor agent producing with choline chloride a deep eutectic
solvent needs not be an organic substance: calcium chloride hexahydrate provides
water as the hydrogen bond donor agent, and various molar ratios of it with the
choline chloride have freezing temperatures below ambient, ranging from the 1:4
mixture, tme/°C = 16.8 to the 1:10 mixture, tme/°C = 24.1 [14].
It should be noted in Table 2.1 that some of the hydrogen bond donor com-
ponents of the deep eutectic solvents are themselves liquid at ambient temperatures
and that some of the eutectic temperatures are very low indeed, down to more than
2.1 Deep Eutectic Solvents Based on Choline Chloride and Analogs 21
90 °C below ambient (25 °C), i.e. tme/°C < −65, for example, those with ethylene
glycol and lactic acid. In cases where no melting or glass transition points have
been reported but physical properties or applications have been reported down to a
certain temperature t/°C, this is denoted as <t in the appropriate column.
Quaternary ammonium salts other than those of choline or its analogs have been
used as hydrogen bond accepting ingredients (HBA) of deep eutectic solvents.
However, non-quaternary alkylammonium salts have also been used for this pur-
pose. Symmetrical tetraalkylammonium salts are not useful as room temperature
ionic liquids (RTILs), of which deep eutectic solvents are a subcategory, because
they have melting points much above ambient. However, when suitable hydrogen
bond donating substances (HBD) are added, they do form low-melting eutectics. In
many cases, the hydrogen bond donating ingredient employed was a liquid at
ambient conditions, so that the solid salt hydrogen bond acceptor and the liquid
hydrogen bond donor could be shaken together in an incubator shaker at 80 °C for
2 h, and the colorless homogeneous transparent liquid deep eutectic solvents was
formed.
Ethylammonium chloride (C2H5NH3+Cl−, CAS No. 557-66-4) forms a deep
eutectic solvent at a 1:4 ratio with glycerol having a melting point (read from a figure)
of tme/°C = −58 [15]. With urea and trifluoroacetamide, it forms deep eutectic solvents
at 2:3 ratios having melting points (read from a figure) of tme/°C = 30 and 20,
respectively [16]. Alkylammonium bromides form deep eutectic solvents at a 1:2 molar
ratio with glycerol: ethylammonium bromide (C2H5NH3+Br−, CAS No. 593-55-5)
tme/°C = −6, propylammonium bromide (C3H7NH3+Br−, CAS No. 4905-83-3)
tme/°C = −4, and butylammonium bromide (C4H9NH3+Br−, CAS No. 15567-09-6)
tme/°C = −10 [17]. Another example of a non-quaternary ammonium salt is N,N-
diethylethanolammonium chloride ((C2H5)2(HOC2H4)NH+Cl−, CAS No. 14426-20-1)
that at 1:2 mol ratios with ethylene glycol forms a deep eutectic solvent with
tme/°C = −31.0 and with glycerol it forms one with tme/°C = −1.3 [18]. This tertiary
salt also forms deep eutectic solvents at a 1:1 ratio with malonic acid and with zinc
nitrate hexahydrate as the hydrogen bond donating agents, but their freezing points
were not specified [19].
Tetraethylammonium chloride ((C2H5)4NCl, CAS No. 56-34-8) forms a deep
eutectic solvent at a 1:4 molar ratio with levulinic acid, with tme/°C < −60, i.e., a
freezing point not detectable in the range −60 tm/°C 80 [20].
Tetraethylammonium bromide ((C2H5)4NBr, CAS No. 71-91-0) forms deep
eutectic solvent at 1:4 molar ratios with ethylene glycol, tme/°C = −24.4, and with
triethylene glycol (3,6-dioxa-1,8-octanediol, HOCH2CH2OCH2CH2OCH2CH2OH,
CAS No. 112-27-6) and levulinic acid, all with tme/°C < −60 [20]. With
1,2-dimethyl-urea (O=C(NHCH3)2, CAS No. 98-31-1) it forms a deep eutectic
solvent at an unspecified molar ratio with tme/°C in the range 20–25.
22 2 The Variety of Deep Eutectic Solvents
phenol, and lactic acid at 1:3 mol ratios. They have tm/°C < −90, except that with
lactic acid that has tme/°C = −56.3 [31].
Tetramethyl-, tetraethyl-, and tetrabutylammonium chlorides form low transition
temperature mixtures with lactic acid at a 1:2 ratio that do not crystallize on cooling
but form glasses, with glass transition temperatures of −69, −71, and −66 °C,
respectively [32]. Guanidine carbonate mixed with malic acid at a 2:1 ratio prob-
ably forms guanidinium malate when heated for prolonged periods at 70 °C, and
then forms a deep eutectic solvent with ethylene glycol, useful for the capture of
carbon dioxide [33].
Of the quaternary phosphonium salts, mainly methyltriphenylphosphonium
bromide (CH3P(C6H5)3Br, CAS No. 1779-49-3) has been used to obtain deep
eutectic solvents. With the polyols ethylene glycol tme/°C = −46, with triethylene
glycol tme/°C = −8, and with glycerol tme/°C = −5, all at the 1:3 ratio [3]. With
trifluoroacetamide, it forms a deep eutectic solvent at an unspecified molar ratio
with tme/°C = −69.3, and with levulinic acid, it forms a deep eutectic solvent at a
1:4 molar ratio with tm/°C < −60 [20]. Benzyltriphenylphosphonium chloride
(C6H5CH2(C6H5)3PCl, CAS No. 1100-88-5) forms eutectics with glycerol (1:5)
with tme/°C = 50.4 and with ethylene glycol (1:3) with tme/°C = 47.9, i.e., above
ambient, so they are not proper deep eutectic solvents [34]. However, with glycerol
a deep eutectic solvent is formed at a 1:16 HBA:HBD ratio, tme/°C = −22.0 and the
corresponding allyltriphenylphosphonium bromide (CH2=CHCH2(C6H5)3PBr,
CAS No. 1560-54-9) forms with glycerol a deep eutectic solvent at a 1:14 ratio with
tme/°C = −23.8 [35]. The symmetrical tetrabutylphosphonium bromide
((C4H0)4PBr, CAS No. 3115-68-2) forms with levulinic acid at a 1:4 molar ratio a
deep eutectic solvent with tm/°C < −60 [20]. Such deep eutectic solvents based on
the phosphonium salts have definite toxicity toward bacteria and possibly also
larvae of aquatic organisms [36].
Deep eutectic solvents based on these -onium hydrogen bond acceptors
(HBA) mixed with various hydrogen bond donors (HBD) at appropriate ratios are
summarized in Table 2.2. In cases, where no melting or glass transition points have
been reported but physical properties or applications have been reported down to a
certain temperature t/°C, this is denoted as <t in the appropriate column.
Prior to the advent of the choline chloride/urea deep eutectic solvent, stoichiometric
mixtures of halide salts of organic cations and certain metal halides were found to
have melting points below ambient, i.e., to be room temperature ionic liquids.
Examples of such moieties are 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride mixed at a
1:1 ratio with aluminum chloride forming the tetrachloroaluminate (CAS
No. 80432-05-9) tm/°C = 8 and mixed at a 1:2 ratio forming the heptachlorodia-
luminate (1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium+Al2Cl7−), tm/°C = −98 [37]. However,
24 2 The Variety of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Table 2.2 Deep eutectic solvents based on –onium salts as hydrogen bond acceptors, at ratios of
HBA:HBD as noted, their molar masses M, and the melting point of the eutectics, tme
HBA HBD Ratio HBA:HBD M/kg mol–1 tme/°C Ref.
–
+
Me4N Cl acetic acid 1:4 0.34980 < –20 [25]
decanoic acid 2:9 0.88477 26f [49]
lactic acid 1:2 0.28975 –69a [47]
EtNH3N+Cl– glycerol 1:4 0.44990 –58 [27]
urea 2:3 0.34326 30 [28]
trifluoroacetamide 2:3 0.50220 20 [28]
EtNH3N+Br– glycerol 1:2 0.31017 –6 [29]
2-methoxyphenolf 1:3 0.33430 <20 [24]
Et2(HOEt)NH+Cl– ethylene glycol 1:2 0.27779 –31.0 [30]
glycerol 1:2 0.33765 –1.3 [30]
Triethylene glycol 1:4 0.60083 –16.6 [14]
Et3MeN+Cl– acetic acid 1:2 0.27178 < –20 [25]
Et4N+Cl– acetic acid 1:2 0.28589 [25]
butanoic acid 1:2 0.33808 < 25 [50]
hexanoic acid 1:2 0.45024 < 25 [50]
octanoic acid 1:2 0.50632 < 25 [50]
decanoic acid 2:3 0.51031 24f [49]
levulinic acid 1:4 0.63014 < –60 [36]
lactic acid 1:2 0.34586 –71a [47]
Et4N+Br– ethylene glycol 1:4 0.45844 –24 [36]
glycerol 1:2 0.31017 –6 [29]
triethylene glycol 1:4 1.06632 < –60 [36]
levulinic acid 1:4 0.67460 < –60 [36]
1,2-dimethylurea 20-25 [36]
PrNH3+Br– glycerol 1:2 0.32420 –4 [36]
Pr4N+Cl– acetic acid 1:6 0.58211 < –20 [25]
butanoic acid 1:2 0.39803 < 25 [50]
hexanoic acid 1:2 0.45411 < 25 [50]
octanoic acid 1:2 0.51019 < 25 [50]
decanoic acid 2:5 0.65216 15f [49]
dodecanoic acid 1:2 0.62235 25f [49]
levulinic acid 1:4 0.68624 < –60 [36]
ethanolamine 1:4 0.46613 < –20 [25]
Pr4N+Br– (TPAB) ethylene glycol 1:4 0.51454 –23 [36]
glycerol 1:3 0.53653 –16 [36]
triethylene glycol 1:3 0.90838 –19 [36]
butanoic acid 1:2 0.28248 < 25 [50]
hexanoic acid 1:2 0.33856 < 25 [50]
levulinic acid 1:4 0.73070 < –60 [36]
(continued)
2.3 Unconventional Deep Eutectic Solvents 25
these mixtures constitute a single molten salt, hence are not proper deep eutectic
solvents, for which the two initial components retain their separate identities.
Proper deep eutectic solvents are formed when the metal halide is the hydrogen
bond acceptor and a suitable hydrogen bond donor is added: a mixture of zinc
chloride and urea at a 2:7 mol ratio has tme/°C = 9, with acetamide (CH3C(O)NH2,
CAS No. 60-35-5) at a 1:4 mol ratio it has tme/°C = −16. In the eutectic mixtures,
zinc is present in the cationic species, e.g., [ZnCl(urea)]+, as shown by mass
spectrometry. With ethylene glycol (1,2-ethanediol) at a 1:4 mol ratio, zinc chloride
has tme/°C = −30, and with 1,6-hexanediol at a 1:4 mol ratio it forms a deep
eutectic solvent tme/°C = −23 [38, 39]. Similarly, 2-chloroethyl trimethylammo-
nium chloride (ClC2H4N(CH3)+3 Cl−, Cas No. 999-81-5) produces with zinc chloride
at a 1:2 molar ratio a deep eutectic solvent melting at 23 °C [40], but this may be a
chlorozincate room temperature ionic liquid rather than a deep eutectic solvent in
which each ingredient retains its identity. Zinc nitrate hexahydrate with urea at a
mole ratio of 2:1 forms a deep eutectic solvent with a melting point of 9 °C that
remains stable (does not lose water) up to 50 °C [41]. Choline chloride forms a
deep eutectic solvent with calcium chloride hexahydrate at several molar ratios, the
lowest melting of which is at a 1:2 molar ratio, tm/°C = 2.70 [42]. Other metal
halides also form with asymmetrical quaternary ammonium salts low-melting
mixtures having melting points below 25 °C [43]. There is no certainty, however,
that in all these cases proper deep eutectic solvents are formed, i.e., mixtures in
which the components retain their identities, rather than ionic liquids that are single
components, made up from a cation and an anion. Potassium carbonate forms low
transition temperature mixtures with glycerol at molar rations 1:4–1:6 that are liquid
at 10 °C, but do not crystallize on cooling and have glass transition temperatures
(that for the 1:4 ratio of −38 °C) [44]. Potassium and ammonium thiocyanates form
with amides low-melting eutectics that can be used as solvents for the absorption of
sulfur dioxide [45]. Several deep eutectic solvents have been prepared, based on
lithium bis[trifluoromethylsulfonyl]imide as the hydrogen bond acceptor compo-
nent and amides (urea [46], acetamide [47], N-methylacetamide [48]) as the
28 2 The Variety of Deep Eutectic Solvents
hydrogen bond donor components. To this category could be added the deep
eutectic solvents formed by trimethylsulfonium bis[trifluoromethylsulfonyl]imide
as the hydrogen bond acceptor and formamide or trifluoroacetamide as the
hydrogen bond donor component, although trimethylsulfonium is not a metal cation
[49]. Table 2.3 summarizes the compositions and melting points of the low-melting
mixtures formed from metal salts (or their hydrates) and organic substances. In
cases, where no melting or glass transition points have been reported but physical
properties or applications have been reported down to a certain temperature t/°C,
this is denoted as <t in the appropriate column.
Certain amino acids have served as the hydrogen bond acceptor component of
deep eutectic solvents with several hydrogen bond donor component, such as urea,
1,2-ethanediol, and carboxylic acids. In many cases, glass formation was observed as
the temperature was decreased, but no freezing to a crystalline solid took place
[50, 51]. Exceptions to this general trend are the 1:1 mixture of l-proline
(pyrrolidine-2-carboxylic acid, CAS No. 147-85-3) and oxalic acid (HCO2CO2H,
CAS No. 144-62-7), tme/°C = −14.5 [52] and trimethylglycine ((CH3)3NCH2CO2H,
CAS No. 107-43-7, betaine) and mandelic acid (C6H5CH(OH)CO2H, CAS
No. 90-64-2) tme/°C = 13 [53]. Trimethylglycine (betaine) at 1:2 ratios forms with
glycolic acid (HOCH2CO2H, CAS No. 79-14-2) a deep eutectic solvent
tme/°C = −36, with phenylacetic acid a deep eutectic solvent tme/°C = −7, and with
2-furoic acid (furan-2-carboxylic acid, CAS No. 88-14-2) a deep eutectic solvent
with tme/°C = 11 [53]. When the hydrogen bond donor component is a carboxylic
acid, the zwitterionic amino acid is taken to be protonated, so that an ionic deep
eutectic solvent is produced.
On the other hand, amino acids have also been suggested as the hydrogen bond
donor component of deep eutectic solvents, with tetrabutylammonium chloride as
the hydrogen bond acceptor component. In such cases, rather large ratios of the salt
to the hydrogen bond donating agent yield the low-melting compositions, but at
near ambient temperatures or somewhat above them. The deep eutectic solvent
formed with aspartic acid at 9:1 HBA:HBD has tm/°C = 25.1, that with glutamic
acid at 10:1 ratio has tm/°C = 28.9, that with arginine at 6:1 ratio has tm/°C = 25.1
[54], that with serine at 8:1 ratio has tm/°C = 24.9, that with threonine at 9:1 ratio
has tm/°C = 20.2, and that with methionine at 11:1 ratio has tm/°C = 19.1 [55].
Water could well be a hydrogen bond donor ingredient to form deep eutectic
solvents with suitable hydrogen bond acceptor components, such as certain salts
and ionic liquids. Alkyl-(2-hydroxyethyl)-dimethylammonium bromide ionic liq-
uids, where alkyl = CnH2n+1 with n = 2, 3, 4 and 6, form with water at a 1:2 mol
ratio deep eutectic solvents [56]. For n = 2 (ethyl) [57] tme = −25.1 °C and for the
other n values tme is somewhat higher, up to −13 °C. It is to be noted that in the
case n = 1, i.e., of alkyl being methyl, choline bromide, water has not been men-
tioned as forming a deep eutectic solvent with this salt. Water forms a deep eutectic
solvent also with ethyl-(2-hydroxyethyl)-dimethylammonium tetrafluoroborate at a
1:3 mol ratio, tme = −27.2 °C [57]. Thus, although stronger hydrogen bond
acceptor anions such as chloride, acetate, and fluoride are required for the con-
ventional deep eutectic solvent formation with amides, carboxylic acids, and
2.3 Unconventional Deep Eutectic Solvents 29
Table 2.3 Deep eutectic solvents formed between metal salts and organic substances and the
melting point of the eutectics, tme
Metal salt Organic substance Molar ratio tme/°C Ref.
LiClO4 Acetamide 1:4 n.a. [89]
Propionamide 1:4 n.a. [89]
LiNO3 N-methylacetamide 1:2 –75 [90]
LiPF6 N-methylacetamide 1:5 –52 [90]
LiTFSIa urea 1:3.6 –37.6 [86]
acetamide 1:4 –67 [87]
N-methylacetamide 1:2 –72 [90]
K2CO3 ethylene glycol 1:10 -122b [150]
glycerol 1:4 – 1:6 < 10 [83]
1:10 -91b [150]
KSCN acetamide 1:3 5 [85]
caprolactam 1:3 0 [85]
NH4SCN acetamide 1:3 5 [85]
caprolactam 1:3 –10 [85]
urea 2:3 24 [85]
MgCl2∙6H2O choline chloride 1:1 16 [91]
CaCl2∙6H2O choline chloride 1:2 2.7 [66]
ZnCl2 urea 2:7 9 [78]
acetamide 1:4 –16 [78]
1,2-ethanediol 1:4 –30 [78]
1,6-hexanediol 1:4 –23 [78]
chloroethyltrimethylammonium+Cl– 1:2 23 [44]
choline chloride 2:1 23-25 [82]
bromopropyltrimethylammonium+Br– 2:1 22-24 [82]
Zn(NO3)2∙6H2O choline chloride 1:1 <25 [31]
diethylethanolammonium+Cl– 1:1 <25 [92]
SnCl2 benzyldimethylethanolammonium+Cl– 2:1 17 [82]
2-acetyloxytrimethylammonium chloride 2:1 20 [74]
AlCl3 urea 1:1 <25 [78]
acetamide 1:1 –63c [78]
FeCl3 benzyldimethylethanolammonium+Cl– 2:1 21 [82]
tetrabutylphosphonium bromide 1:2 15.7 [70]
CrCl3∙6H2O urea 2:1 9 [81]
FeCl3 benzyldimethylethanolammonium+Cl– 2:1 21 [82]
tetrabutylphosphonium bromide 1:2 15.7 [70]
a
lithium bis[trifluoromethylsulfonyl]imide. b Glass transition temperature
30 2 The Variety of Deep Eutectic Solvents
polyols, for water as the hydrogen bond donor even mild hydrogen bond accepting
anions, such as bromide and tetrafluoroborate, suffice for deep eutectic solvent
formation.
Water features also as the hydrogen bond donor component with more con-
ventional ionic liquids, The deep eutectic solvent formed with 1-butyl-3-
methylimidazolium p-toluenesulfonate has tme/°C = −36 at the water mole frac-
tion xW = 0.70 (read from a figure) [58]. N-hexyl-3-methylpyridinium p-toluene-
sulfonate forms with water a deep eutectic solvent that has tme/°C = −10.0 at
xW = 0.879 [59]. The deep eutectic solvent formed between water and 1-butyl-3-
methylpyridinium dicyanamide has tme/°C = −28 at xW = 0.76 (read from a figure)
[60, 61]. The deep eutectic solvent formed between water with 1-butyl-1-
methylpiperidinium thiocyanate has tme/°C = −56 at xW = 0.66 [62] and that with
1-butyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium thiocyanate has tme/°C = −92 at xW = 0.69 [63].
These values were read from a figure with non-random two-liquid (NRTL)-modeled
lines leading to the eutectic point, whereas the experimental points themselves do
not necessarily lead to them. Complete solid–liquid phase diagrams (reaching from
the pure components to the eutectic) were reported in figures also for the deep
eutectic solvents formed between water with 1-butyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium
dicyanamide, tme/°C = −31 at xW = 0.77, with its trifluoromethylsulfonate,
tme/°C = −30 at xW = 0.60, and with its tricyanomethanide, tme/°C = 13 at
xW = 0.42 [64]. Incomplete diagrams were shown there also for mixtures of water
with other ionic liquids, but no eutectic points could be deduced from them.
Complete phase diagrams, but where NRTL-modeled lines lead to the eutectic point
rather than the experimental points themselves, were reported for water with
1-alkyl-1-methylmorpholinium bromide, where alkyl = CnH2n+1 with n = 3, 4, and
5 [65]. The eutectic points (read from figures) have tme/°C = −33 at xW = 0.82 for
n = 3, tme/°C = −42 at xW = 0.82 for n = 4, and tme/°C = −73 at xW = 0.69
for n = 5. For the corresponding water and 1-pentyl-1-methylpiperidinium bro-
mide system, tme/°C = −28 at xW = 0.75 was derived from the NRTL-modeled
lines [65].
Table 2.4 summarizes the deep eutectic solvents formed between water and
organic salts and ionic liquids.
With monohydric alkanols, on the other hand, no real deep eutectic solvents are
formed with room temperature ionic liquids, the observed eutectic temperatures
being only 1–6 °C lower than the freezing points of the alkanols themselves. This
was reported for 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium p-toluenesulfonate with 1-octanol
and with 1-decanol and presumably holds also with ethanol, 1-butanol, and
1-hexanol, although no complete phase diagrams were shown for these three
alkanols [58]. The same is the case for 1-hexyl-3-methylpyridinium p-toluene-
sulfonate for these five alkanols [59] and for 1-butyl-1-methylpiperidinium thio-
cyanate with 1-alkanols CnH2n+1OH, n = 8, 9, 10, and 12 [62].
It is interesting to note that fairly deep eutectic liquids are formed between benzene,
devoid of hydrogen bond donating properties, and two ionic liquids: tme/°C = −27 at
benzene mole fractions xB = 0.65 for 1-hexyl-3-methylpyrrolidinium thiocyanate and
tm/°C = –13 at xB = 0.55 for 1-butyl-1-methylpiperidinium thiocyanate (where
2.3 Unconventional Deep Eutectic Solvents 31
Table 2.4 Deep eutectic solvents formed between water as the hydrogen bond donor component
and organic salts and ionic liquids as hydrogen bond acceptor components and the melting point of
the eutectics, tme
HBA Cation HBA Anion xW tme/°C Ref.
ethyl-(2-hydroxyethyl)-dimethylammonium bromide 0.642 –25.1 [98]
BF4– 0.737 –27.2 [98]
propyl-(2-hydroxyethyl)-dimethylammonium bromide 0.65 –31 [97]
butyl-(2-hydroxyethyl)-dimethylammonium bromide *0.65 –22 [97]
hexyl-(2-hydroxyethyl)-dimethylammonium bromide *0.65 –13 [97]
1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium tosylate 0.70 –36 [99]
1-butyl-3-methylpyridinium N(CN)–2 0.76 –28 [101]
1-hexyl-3-methylpyridinium tosylate 0.879 –10.0 [100]
1-butyl-1-methylpiperidinium thiocyanate 0.66 –56 [103]
1-butyl-1-methylpyrrolidinium thiocyanate 0.69 –92 [104]
N(CN)–2 0.71 –37 [105]
N(CN)–2 0.75 –40 [107]
CF3SO3– 0.60 –30 [105]
CF3SO3– 0.60 –28.5 [107]
C(CN)–3 0.42 13 [105]
C(CN)–3 0.52 –31 [107]
B(CN)–4 0.43 6 [107]
1-propyl-1-methylmorpholinium bromide 0.82 –0.33 [106]
1-butyl-1-methylmorpholinium bromide 0.82 –42 [106]
1-pentyl-1-methylmorpholinium bromide 0.69 –73 [106]
1-pentyl-1-methylpiperidinium bromide 0.75 –28 [106]
tme/°C = 5.5 for benzene itself and 22.2 and 31.1 for the two ionic liquids, respec-
tively) [66]. Benzene (subscript B) also forms with N-butylquinolinium bis
(trifluoromethylsulphonyl)imide (tm/°C = 56.4), a deep eutectic having tme/°C = −8.3
at xB = 0.746 [67] and with N-butylpyridinium bis[(trifluoromethyl)sulphonyl]imide
(tm/°C = 18.2), a deep eutectic having tme/°C = –22.9 at xB = 0.642 [68].
A further group of binary mixtures that nominally can be termed ‘deep eutectic
solvents’, but are not generally recognized as such, are mixtures of ice with certain
salt hydrates or mixtures of two salt hydrates. Some salt hydrates that melt con-
gruently, i.e., crystallize unchanged on cooling their melts, yield deep eutectic
solvents with water. They feature such properties that commonly used or proposed
deep eutectic solvents should have: they are definitely nonflammable, they are
nontoxic (heavy metal salts, such as Cd(NO3)24H2O, are avoided), they are
inexpensive (expensive metal salts, such as CsFH2O, are avoided), and are readily
reconstituted after use. Several lithium and magnesium salt hydrates, among a
variety of other salts, are prone to yield deep eutectic solvents with ice. As for many
other deep eutectic solvents, one of the components (water) is liquid at ambient
conditions and the eutectic temperatures may reach very low values. A large body
32 2 The Variety of Deep Eutectic Solvents
of information is available in the compilations by Linke and Seidel [69, 70] and by
Kirgintsev et al. [71], generally in the form of solid/liquid equilibrium at certain
temperatures at compositions given as w = g anhydrous salt per 100 g saturated
aqueous solution. The mole fraction of the n-hydrate (that with n molecules of water
per formula unit of the anhydrous salt) is calculated, using the molar mass of the
anhydrous salt, M/g mol−1, and that of water, 18.015 g mol−1, as
The molar ratios of the components are generally not ratios of integers, unlike
most of the deep eutectic solvents with choline chloride, its analogs, and other
-onium salts as the hydrogen bond acceptor components. The eutectic distances,
Dtme/°C, are not as large as those for, say, choline chloride with urea, 178.
Nevertheless, for some salt hydrates, they reach as much as Dtm/°C = 137 for ice/
Mg(ClO4)26H2O and 113 for ice/KOHH2O [72]. If related to the unhydrated salts
the eutectic distances, Dtm, are much more appreciable.
Table 2.5 summarizes the formation of deep eutectic solvents between water and
salt hydrates.
Mixtures of magnesium chloride hexahydrate (MgCl26H2O) with nickel chlo-
ride hexahydrate (NiCl26H2O) [73] can also be called deep eutectic solvents, see
Chap. 1, Fig. 1.3. The melting points of the components are tm/°C = 112 for
MgCl26H2O and 30 for NiCl26H2O, and the eutectic at the 1:1 composition has a
melting point tm/°C = 4 and the distance Dtm/°C = 67 is quite appreciable.
Ammonium nitrate forms with manganese and zinc nitrate hexahydrates deep
eutectic solvents with large melting point distances of the eutectics [74]. With Mn
(NO3)26H2O (tm/°C = 25.8) at the ammonium nitrate mole fraction of 0.450, the
eutectic has tme/°C = 4.6 and Dtme/°C = 100.0 (given tm/°C = 169 for NH4NO3
[75]) and for Zn(NO3)26H2O (tm/°C = 36.4) at the ammonium nitrate mole fraction
of 0.447 the eutectic has tme/°C = 12.7 and Dtme/°C = 109.7.
Mixtures of the incongruently melting calcium chloride hexahydrate with a few
other salt hydrates also form deep eutectic solvents [76]. With 0.35 mol fraction
calcium bromide hexahydrate tme/°C = 14, with 0.25 mol fraction calcium nitrate
tetrahydrate tm/°C = 13 and with 0.17 mol fraction magnesium nitrate hexahydrate
tm/°C = 9 (in the latter two cases these are not necessarily the eutectic points) [73].
The deep eutectic solvents described in this and the previous sections are all more
or less hydrophilic, they absorb water from the atmosphere and are soluble in water.
For certain uses, hydrophobic (deep eutectic) solvents would be useful and such have
been proposed in recent years. Certain tetraalkylammonium halides form hydrophobic
deep eutectic solvents with decanoic acid (C9H17CO2H, CAS No. 334-48-5) at 1:2
molar ratios: tetrabutylammonium chloride tme/°C = −12.0, tetraheptylammonium
chloride ((C7H13)4NCl, CAS No. 10247-90-2) tme/°C = −16.7, tetraoctylammonium
chloride ((C8H15)4NCl, CAS No. 13125-07-3) tme/°C = 2.0, and bromide
((C8H15)4NBr, CAS No. 14866-33-2) tme/°C = 9.0, and methyltricotylammonium
2.3 Unconventional Deep Eutectic Solvents 33
Table 2.5 Deep eutectic solvents formed between congruently melting salt hydrates with ice as
the hydrogen bond donor component, the melting points of the salt hydrates, tmsh, of the eutectics,
tme, the eutectic composition (mole fraction of the salt hydrate, xeutectic, and the eutectic distance,
Dtme [114]
Salt hydrate tmsh/°C of salt tme/°C of eutectic xeutectic Dtme/°C
Al(NO3)3∙9H2O 71.0 –27.2 0.36 53
CaBr2∙6H2O 38.2 –22.2 0.59 45
Ca(NO3)2∙4H2O 47.7 –28.7 0.38 45
Ca(ClO4)2∙6H2O 45.5 –74.6 0.39 90
Co(NO3)2∙6H2O 55.8 –26.2 0.42 49
FeCl3∙6H2O 36.8 –55.0 0.36 68
KF∙4H2O 18.5 –40.2 0.39 47
KOH∙H2O 126.8 –65.2 0.38 113
K2HPO4∙4H2O 13.0 –13.5 0.40 19.4
LiCH3CO2∙2H2O 57.8 –16.1 0.17 26
LiNO3∙3H2O 29.5 –22.9 0.31 32.1
LiClO3∙3H2O 8.1 –40.2 0.32 43
LiClO4∙3H2O 95.1 –18.2 0.21 38
LiI∙2H2O 75.0 –69.0 0.45 100
Mg(CH3CO2)2∙4H2O 57.2 –29.2 0.31 50
MgBr2∙6H2O 164.4 –42.7 0.38 105
MgCl2∙6H2O 116.2 –33.6 0.34 73
Mg(NO3)2∙6H2O 89.5 –4.1 0.40 40
Mg(ClO4)2∙6H2O 154.8 –68.6 0.44 137
MnCl2∙4H2O 57.8 –25.6 0.44 51
Mn(NO3)2∙6H2O 25.8 –36.2 0.45 48
NaCH3CO2∙3H2O 57.8 –18.2 0.35 38
NaOH∙H2O 65.1 –28.2 0.19 41
NiCl2∙6H2O 30.2 –45.3 0.39 57
Ni(NO3)2∙6H2O 56.7 –34.1 0.41 57
Zn(NO3)2∙6H2O 36.4 –32.0 0.41 46
solutes from aqueous media. On the other hand, deep eutectic solvents prepared
from tetrabutylammonium chloride and hexanoic, octanoic, decanoic, and dode-
canoic acids, although hydrophobic, are not sufficiently stable in water to serve for
extraction in biphasic systems [79].
The definition of the deep eutectic solvents presented at the beginning of this
chapter, namely “Deep eutectic solvents (DESs) are binary mixtures of definite
composition of two components, one of which being ionic, that yield a liquid phase
at ambient conditions” precludes the inclusion of nonionic deep eutectic solvents in
this exposition. However, many such moieties have been described in the literature
and deserve consideration here, perhaps under the changed subtitle: low transition
temperature mixtures (LTTMs). They are characterized by low iconicity, hence by
low electrical conductivity, but such solvents appear to be compatible with enzy-
matic reactions. Most of them consist of naturally originating components and may
be classified as NADES. They are of several types: polyalcohols (including sugars)
with carboxylic acids, zwitterionic amino acids with non-protonating hydrogen
bond donating components, and mixtures of amides. For only very few of
the nonionic mixtures described in the literature as deep eutectic solvents have
the actual freezing points of the eutectics been reported, although in some cases the
glass transition temperatures have been, but in any case, these mixtures are liquid
near ambient temperatures. In addition to binary mixtures, some ternary mixtures
have also been dealt with in this context and are mentioned here.
The sugars glucose, fructose, and sucrose in 1:1 combination with malic, maleic,
and citric acids feature in [1, 80, 81] and in [1] also other sugars and sugar alcohols:
xylitol, adonitol (ribitol), and sorbitol are considered. The 1:1 mixtures of citric acid
with glucose and adonitol are dealt with in [82]. The 1:1 mixture of fructose with
malic acid is used in [83] for extraction purpose and with citric and tartaric acids in
[84] as tools for bioavailability. The latter two acids in 1:1 combination with
glucose are considered and the glass transition points, 9.8 and −18.3 °C are
reported in [85] whereas the polarities of the mixtures are reported in [86]. Menthol
(racemic 5-methyl-2-(propan-2-yl)cyclohexan-1-ol, CAS No. 89-78-1) produces
eutectic solvents with carboxylic acids at various molar ratios: 1:1 with acetic acid,
1:2 with pyruvic and lactic acids, and 2:1 with lauric (dodecanoic) acid. Their glass
transition points are −7.8, −58.8 and −6.8, −61.1, and 7.1 and 13.8 °C, respec-
tively, with two such points detected by thermal analysis for two of the mixtures.
Other physical properties, the density and viscosity, and their temperature depen-
dences are also reported in [87]. Menthol forms deep eutectic solvents with several
other carboxylic acids (benzoic acid, phenylacetic acid, and ibuprophen CAS
No. 15687-27-1) at 3:1 molar ratios [88].
2.4 Nonionic Deep Eutectic Solvents 35
Table 2.6 Some non-ionic low transition temperature solvents for which glass transition
temperatures, tg, have been reported
HBA HBD Ratio HBA:HBD tg/°C Ref.
0.6 acetamide + 0.4 urea PEG400 13:1 32a [143]
proline oxalic acid 1:1 –14.5 [144]
glycolic acid 1:1 –30.7 [145]
lactic acid 2:1 –36.7 [144]
malic acid 1:3 –44.4 [144]
malic acid –8.2 [145]
betaine urea 1:2 –42.5 [134]
ethylene glycol 1:4 < –60 [132]
phenol 1:3 < –80 [131]
2-furoic acid 1:2 11a [96]
phenylacetic acid 1:2 –7a [96]
oxalic acid 1:1 –17.2 [144]
glycolic acid 1:2 –36a [96]
lactic acid 2:1 –46.9 [144]
mandelic acid 1:1 13a [96]
malic acid 1:3 –20.0 [144]
levulinic acid 1:2 < 30 [146]
dimethyldodecyl-N-oxide phenylacetic acid 1:1 –34 [68]
dimethyloctadecyl-N-oxide phenylacetic acid 1:1 20 [68]
N-methylmorpholine-N-oxide phenylacetic acid 1:1 –21 [68]
N-dodecylmorpholine-N-oxide phenylacetic acid 1:1 –27 [68]
carnitine ethylene glycol 1:4 < –60 [132]
phenol 1:3 < –80 [131]
menthol acetic acid 1:1 –7.8 [131]
CnH2n+1COOH (n =3,5,7,9) 1:1 < 25 [52]
octanoic acid ? <25 [54]
dodecanoic acid 2:1 7.1 [128]
lactic acid 1:2 –61.1 [128]
levulinic acid 1:1 < 25 [52]
pyruvic acid 1:1 –58.8 [128]
glucose citric acid 1:1 9.8 [147]
tartaric acid 1:1 –18.3 [147]
sucrose citric acid 1:1 –14.0 [147]
BuMe2N(C2H6)SO3 camphorsulfonic acid 1:2 13a [136]
Bu3N(C2H6)SO3 camphorsulfonic acid 1:2 9a [136]
DoMe2 N(C2H6)SO3 camphorsulfonic acid 2:3 –1a [136]
Octanoic acid Dodecanoic acid 3:1 9.0a [148]
Nonanoic acid Dodecanoic acid 3:1 9.0a [148]
Decanoic acid Dodecanoic acid 2:1 18.0a [148]
a
Melting temperature, tm/°C
References 37
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Chapter 3
Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
In view of the deep eutectic solvents being eutectics, it may be surprising that rather
few complete phase diagrams of the systems leading to these eutectics have been
published. In some cases, the eutectic is deep and sharp in the sense that the
composition range of its occurrence is very narrow, as illustrated in Chap. 1 in
Fig. 1.2 for the a-naphthol with o-nitroaniline mixtures (this system is not a deep
eutectic solvent, because the eutectic temperature is above ambient). On the other
hand, there are systems for which the composition near the eutectic is rather
extensive (a shallow diagram). This has the advantage that the composition of the
binary mixture needs not to be very precisely defined for functioning as a deep
eutectic solvent.
In many cases, no full solid–liquid phase diagrams have been reported but only
the freezing points of certain ratios of the hydrogen bond accepting salt component
(HBA) and hydrogen bond donating component (HBD) or mole fractions of the
latter. In other cases, the freezing points at compositions rich in the HBA com-
ponent and those rich in the HBD component have been reported (in some cases in
tables, in others in figures), but data near the eutectic point are missing. In such
cases, instead, the existing data have been modeled, generally by means of the
nonrandom two-liquid (NRTL) method on both sides of the eutectic, and the
meeting point of the modeled curves is deemed to represent the eutectic compo-
sition and temperature.
© Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2019 45
Y. Marcus, Deep Eutectic Solvents,
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-00608-2_3
46 3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Choline chloride is the basis of many deep eutectic solvents, but its fusion
properties cannot be measured directly because it decomposes at elevated tem-
peratures. These properties had, therefore, to be estimated indirectly, from its sol-
ubility in mixtures involving also a second, a hydrogen bond donating, component.
The resulting melting point was 597 ± 7 K and the molar enthalpy of fusion was
4.3 ± 0.6 kJ mol−1 [1]
The phase diagram of the primary deep eutectic solvents, 1:2 choline chloride
and urea (“Reline”) [2] is shown in Fig. 3.1. Note that there are no data for
xurea < 0.35 (except for pure choline chloride) nor for xurea > 0.85 (except for pure
urea); hence, the curves are guides to the eye and have no further significance. The
mixtures being hygroscopic, they absorb water from the atmosphere, but the sample
studied under the measurement conditions were found to contain <1 wt% water
by NMR analysis. The eutectic temperature for the 1:2 mixture was reported as
tm/°C = 12 [2]. However, it was subsequently found by Chemat et al. [3] to be
12.70 °C for the 1:2 mixture whereas Morrison et al., using DSC, found that the
onset of melting of the solid 1:2 mixture appeared at 17.1 °C [4]. A more complete
phase diagram for xurea > 0.85 was reported (in a small figure) by Kim and Park [5]
in general agreement with the data of Abbott et al. [2] and Morrison et al. [4], but
divergent values were obtained for xurea < 0.4. No value of the eutectic temperature
was reported there [5], however. Still more recently, Meng et al. [6] stressed the fact
that the mixture readily absorbs water from a moist atmosphere, and that for the dry
1:2 system, the eutectic temperature was appreciably higher: tm/°C = 25 [6]. This
result was obtained both by direct microscopic observation and by differential
scanning calorimetry (DSC). A eutectic point having tm/°C = 12 corresponded to
6 wt% of water in the mixture, and even lower eutectic points were attained with
more water absorbed, near 0 °C for 10 wt% water [6]. Although dried starting
materials were employed in the primary report on the choline chloride/urea system
and NMR analysis showed <1 wt% water in the mixture leading to the usually
quoted eutectic temperature of 12 °C [2], there remains appreciable uncertainty
regarding this value in view of the subsequent reports [4, 6].
For the “Ethaline” systems involving choline chloride and ethylene glycol (EG),
the freezing points were reported for only three compositions: xEG =0.636 with
tm/°C = −33.3, xEG =0.667 with tm/°C = −6.0, and xEG =0.714 with tm/°C = 4.2.
Similarly, for choline chloride and glycerol (Gl) “Glyceline”, the freezing points are
at xGl =0.500 tm/°C = 8, xGl =0.667 tm/°C = −36.2, and xGl =0.750 tm/°C = −32.7
[7]. These data were plotted in a not very clear phase diagram, together with the
freezing points of the end members, in [8]. However, a detailed phase diagram was
shown in a figure in [9] for mixtures of choline chloride with glycerol, in essential
agreement with the values reported in [7].
In the case of choline chloride/malonic acid (“Maline”) mixtures, the lack of
nucleation prohibited the construction of a phase diagram for this system using
differential scanning calorimetry [3]. Acetylcholine chloride reaches with glycerol
an even lower eutectic temperature than for choline chloride, at xGl =0.800 with
tm/°C * −73, as read from the figure, and other ammonium salts (ethylammonium
chloride, chloroethyl trimethylammonium chloride, and tetrapropylammonium
bromide) at mole ratios of 1:3 with glycerol also have freezing points lower than the
1:2 choline chloride: glycerol system [9]. For the systems involving choline chlo-
ride and trifluoroacetamide (TFA), the freezing points were reported for only three
compositions: xTFA =0.636 with tm/°C = 2.7, xTFA =0.667 with tm/°C = −30.0, and
xTFA =0.714 with tm/°C = −43.6 [5]. Fairly detailed phase diagrams of the mixtures
of choline chloride with carboxylic acids were reported in [10]. The phase diagram
of the binary mixture of choline chloride with o-cresol is shown in Fig. 3.2, con-
structed from data in [11].
Very little attention has been given the vaporization of the deep eutectic solvents,
their boiling points, and their critical constants. In fact, there is general agreement
that the vapor pressures of the neat deep eutectic solvents (contrary to their mixtures
with water) at ambient temperatures are low or even negligible. Only recently have
the vapor pressures of the deep eutectic solvents formed by choline chloride with
polyols at 25 °C been studied. They were predicted to be of the order of pPa to nPa;
for example, p/pPa = 85 for ethylene glycol, 204 for glycerol, 10.6 for diethylene
glycol, and 19 for triethylene glycol as the hydrogen bond donating agents [19].
Actual measurements of the vapor pressures of deep eutectic solvents have again
only recently been made, and only at considerably above ambient temperatures, 70–
120 °C. The values of p/Pa at 70 °C being 2.14 for choline chloride/glycerol, 0.336
for choline chloride/urea, 2.16 for diethylethanolammonium chloride/glycerol,
0.138 for diethylethanolammonium chloride/urea, and 0.832 for methyltriph-
enylphosphonium bromide/glycerol [20].
Mirza et al. [21] devoted a study to the estimation of the boiling point and
critical constants, using the method proposed by Valderrama and Robles [22]
among others. According to this method, using group contributions, the boiling
point of deep eutectic solvents would be
Here ni is the number of the i groups in the molecule and Tbi is their group
contribution (in K), listed for 31 commonly occurring groups and for variants of 11
among them when present in rings. The estimated boiling points of 27 deep eutectic
solvents based on choline chloride with various hydrogen bond donating compo-
nents and in addition those of 12 deep eutectic solvents based on other hydrogen
bond accepting components were presented in a table [21]. These estimated boiling
points range from 75.3 °C for the 2:3 mixture of ethyl trimethylammonium chloride
with trifluoromethanesulfonamide (F3CSO2NH2) to 389.8 °C for the 1:1 mixture of
choline chloride with fructose. The estimated critical temperatures, Tc/K, are
1.25–1.55 (most commonly 1.36) times higher than the estimated boiling points
Tb/K, requiring the input of another listed 42 group contributions, and the critical
pressures and critical volumes also result [21]. These quantities were used (with a
non-specified procedure) to estimate the densities of the 39 deep eutectic solvents at
40 °C for comparison with experimental values, with fair agreement, generally
within 10%, with better agreement than another density estimation method [23]
produced. Since, however, the densities of deep eutectic solvents can be readily
measured directly, this cumbersome estimation does not fulfill a very useful
function.
The normal boiling points Tb of deep eutectic solvents are generally not relevant
for their applications, but represent the upper limit of their usage, if they do not
decompose below these Tb. Therefore, the critical temperatures Tc that are on the
3.2 Thermodynamic Properties 51
average about 4/3(Tb/K) [21] are not quantities that are relevant to their applications,
but have found use for the estimation of other properties that have not been mea-
sured as functions of the temperature.
A path for the estimation of the critical temperatures is described in [24] alter-
native to the group additivity method followed by Mirza et al. [21]. The surface
tensions r of liquids over a temperature range are related to their critical temper-
atures Tc according to the Eötvös and the Guggenheim relationships (see
Sect. 3.2.4). These relationships may be inverted in order to deduce the critical
temperatures from r(T) and q(T) data that are available in the literature, which are
linear over a wide temperature range. Thus, the critical temperature TEc according to
the Eötvös expression is
h i
TcE ¼ T= 1rðT ÞV ðT Þ2=3 =A0 ð3:2Þ
The freezing temperatures of most of the deep eutectic solvents dealt with here have
been reported (see Chap. 2 and Sect. 3.1), but there is very little information
regarding the heat change of the freezing process. Glass transition temperatures
may have been reported for those deep eutectic solvents that do not crystallize on
sufficient cooling. The integral of the endothermic peak of the differential scanning
calorimetry curve on slow heating the solid mixtures forming the deep eutectic
solvents provided the heat change of the melting for the archetypical 1:2 choline
chloride/urea deep eutectic solvent. However, two different melting points and
related molar enthalpies of fusion have been reported: the one is 17 °C and
6.15 kJ mol−1 [4] and the other is 25 °C and 8.05 kJ mol−1 [6]. These values are
appreciably smaller than the molar enthalpies of fusion of the components:
DfH/kJ mol−1 = 29.75 estimated for choline chloride (it could not be measured
3.2 Thermodynamic Properties 53
because of decomposition near the melting point) [8] and 14.79 for urea [26].
Values for other deep eutectic solvents could not be found, although those for the
components are readily available.
The molar heat capacities of deep eutectic solvents have received considerably
more attention than their enthalpies of fusion and values are available for a small
variety of them over a certain temperature range. They have been measured by
differential scanning calorimetry and follow the expression:
with the coefficients shown in Table 3.2 taken from [27]. A few additional values
have also been reported [28, 29]. The molar heat capacity increases with the
temperature and with the molar mass of the deep eutectic solvent [28], and in view
of this the values reported for the tetrabutylammonium chloride/urea system [29]
appears to be completely out of line and may require revision.
It was noted that the water content of the deep eutectic solvents (absorbed from
the atmosphere) affects the heat capacity, and data are available also for solutions of
deep eutectic solvents in water [28, 29]. The heat capacity of the deep eutectic
solvent formed between choline chloride and malonic acid at a 1:2 molar ratio
(“Maline”) could not be determined experimentally (possibly due to its high vis-
cosity) but was estimated computationally [30]. At 25 °C, the computed value is
Table 3.2 Molar heat capacity, CP/J K−1 mol−1, of deep eutectic solvents at 298.15 K and the
coefficients of Eq. (3.4) from [27] or as noted
HBA HBD CP(298 K) a1 a2 103a3 107a4
−
+
Choline Cl Urea 180.2a
247.4 −0.5633 1.141
Ethylene glycol 185.1a 181.9 −0.1936 0.737
Glycerol 235.7a 302.8 −0.6783 1.531
Triethylene 299.0 8552 −34.27 40.17 −0.1427
glycol
Fructose 311.5 12,140 −45.83 50.12 −0.2332
Glucose 327.5 −891 6.562 –8.879 44.48
Malonic acid 226.9 829.5 −2.695 3.584 −1.045
Citric acid 422.0 3869 −14.75 18.11 −5.877
Oxalic acid 270.8 2930 −10.70 12.27 −4.984
Phenol 219.3 1274 −4.09 4.717 −2.259
Et2(HOEt) Ethylene glycol 202.0b 107.1 0.319
NH+Cl−
(continued)
54 3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
CP/J K−1 mol−1 = 229, intermediate between the values for the deep eutectic sol-
vents with ethylene glycol 209 and with glycerol 259, contrary to expectations in
view of its larger molar mass. The computed values for the latter two deep eutectic
solvents are 12 and 9% larger than the (extrapolated) experimental values
(Table 3.2), however.
Table 3.3 Surface tensions, r/mN m−1, of deep eutectic solvents at 25 °C and their temperature
coefficients (dr/dt)/mN m−1 °C−1
HBA HBD HBA: r dr/dt Ref.
HBD
Choline chloride Urea 1:2 52.0 [147]
Ethylene glycol 1:2 48.91 −0.0932 [25]
Ethylene glycol 1:2 48.0 [147]
Glycerol 1:2 56.0 [147]
Glycerol 1:2 58.05 −0.1353 [148]
Glycerol 1:2 57.24 −0.0896 [25]
1,4-butanediol 1:3 47.17 [25]
Fructose 2:1 74.0 −0.200 [88]
Glucose 2:1 71.57 −0.0524 [149]
Glucose 2:1 71.71 −0.0516 [25]
Phenylacetic acid 1:2 41.86a [10]
Malonic acid 1:1 65.98a [10]
Malonic acid 1:1 65.7 [147]
Ethanolamine 1:7 49.18 −0.0694 [150]
Ethylammonium Br Glycerol 1:2 57.6 [151]
Propylammonium Br Glycerol 1:2 51.7 [151]
Butylammonium Br Glycerol 1:2 44.9 [151]
Diethylethanolammonium+Cl− Ethylene glycol 1:4 47.51 −0.0956 [25]
Glycerol 1:5 59.35 −0.1132 [25]
Glycerol 1:2 54.54 −0.0888 [148]
Trifluoroacetamide 1:2 40.27 [152]c
Tetrapropylammonium+Br− Ethylene glycol 1:4 47.05 −0.0877 [153]
Glycerol 1:3 53.12 −0.0883 [153]
Triethylene glycol 1:3 46.57 −0.0814 [153]
Tetrabutylammonium+Cl− Ethylene glycol 1:3 40.49 −0.0817 [12]
Glycerol 1:5 47.35 −0.0700 [12]
Triethylene glycol 3:1 40.22 −0.0849 [12]
Glutamic acid 10:1 37.6b −0.1375 [154]
Aspartic acid 9:1 38.5b −0.1150 [154]
Arginine 6:1 40.4b −0.0750 [154]
Serine 8:1 68.34 −0.0103 [155]
Threonine 9:1 40.60 −0.1050 [155]
Methionine 11:1 39.89 −0.1070 [155]
Tetrabutylammonium+Br− Glycerol 1:4 36.57 −0.1409 [148]
Ethanolamine 1:4 35.83 −0.0392 [150]
MethyltriphenylP+Br− Ethylene glycol 1:4 51.29 −0.1056 [152]c
Glycerol 1:3 58.94 −0.1259 [152]c
Glycerol 1:3 54.35 −0.0883 [148]
(continued)
56 3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
for the Eötvös correlation, where V is the molar volume of the deep eutectic
solvents and
for the Guggenheim correlation, where A and r0 are constants obtained for a
reference temperature. The critical temperatures Tc, in turn, have been discussed
earlier in this chapter, as derived from group contributions.
For the nonconventional deep eutectic solvents based on salt hydrates, there are
only few data for the concentrated aqueous solutions that are relevant for them. At
moderate concentrations, the surface tension varies linearly with the concentration,
but there is no guarantee that this linearity persists to the eutectic composition. The
following data could still be found in the literature for salts listed in Table 2.4
pertaining to 25 °C. The sets of the three values of the surface tensions r/mN m−1,
their temperature derivatives (dr/dT)/mN m−1 K−1, and the relevant molalities are:
KF 86.3, unspecified, 7.10 m (extrapolated beyond 4.0 m) [31]; KOH 97.9, −0.19,
17.01 m (interpolated for 25 °C) [32]; NaOH 82.62, −0.077, 6.51 m (interpolated
for 25 °C) [33]; MgCl2 87.6, unspecified, 4.09 m [34]; Mg(NO3)2 88.0, unspeci-
fied, 5.29 [35]; Zn(NO3)2 85.58, −0.122, 5.51 m [36]. In these cases as for the
conventional deep eutectic solvents, dr/dT is negative and the surface tension r is
>10 mN m−1 larger than that of water, i.e., the ions are driven away from the
surface layer.
3.3 Volumetric Properties 57
The density of deep eutectic solvents is readily measured and should be available
for most of the useful deep eutectic solvents. For the conventional deep eutectic
solvents based on choline chloride, its analogs, and other ammonium and phos-
phonium hydrogen bond accepting components, the densities at 25 °C are shown in
Table 3.4, as are the coefficients of the linear temperature dependence functions,
q = a − b(t/°C). In a few cases noted in the table, a quadratic expression in the
temperature was reported. Also presented in the table are the isobaric expansibili-
ties, aP = q−1(∂q/∂T)P = b/q(25 °C). The densities of these deep eutectic solvents
are mostly within the range 1.1–1.3 g cm−3 and the isobaric expansibilities are
within the range −0.55 to −0.65 kK−1; values outside these ranges (except for a few
density values <1.0) should be considered with due caution. For example, the
entries in Table 3.4 for the choline chloride/urea deep eutectic solvent at 25 °C are
sufficiently consistent, but nonconforming values have also been reported:
q/g cm−3 = 1.20, 1.212, and 1.25 [37].
Table 3.4 Densities, q/g cm−3, of deep eutectic solvents at 25 °C, their temperature dependen-
cies, q/g cm−3 = a − b(t/°C), and their isobaric thermal expansibilities 103aP/K−1
HBA HBD HBA: q/g cm−3 a 103b 103aP/K−1 Ref.
HBD
Choline chloride Urea 1:2 1.1981 1.2125 0.577 0.482 [158]
Urea 1:2 1.1974 1.2119 0.582 0.486 [159]
Urea 1:2 1.1979 1.2103 0.523 0.437 [160]
Ethylene glycol 1:2 1.1171 1.1314 0.572 0.512 [26]
Ethylene glycol 1:2 1.1182 1.1327 0.579 0.518 [25]
a
Ethylene glycol 1:2 1.1141 [161]
Ethylene glycol 1:2 1.1166 1.1305 0.557 0.499 [162]
Triethylene glycol 1:2 1.1285 1.1445 0.638 0.565 [145]
Glycerol 1:2 1.1913 1.2051 0.552 0.463 [153]
Glycerol 1:2 1.1924 1.2063 0.557 0.467 [25]
b
Glycerol 1:2 1.1916 [162]
Glycerol 1:2 1.2070 1.2195 0.5 0.41 [33]
1,4-butanediol 1:3 1.0610 [163]
Furfuryl alcohol 1:3 1.1351 1.3318 0.660 0.581 [164]
Fructose 2:1 1.1177 1.1324 0.589 0.527 [88]
Fructose 1:1 1.272 1.286 0.54 [165]
Fructose 2:1 1.2779 1.3081 1.179 0.907 [40]
Glucose 2:3 1.2672 1.2801 0.516 0.407 [36]
Glucose 2:1 1.2422 1.267 1.000 0.805 [40]
(continued)
58 3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Nonionic deep eutectic solvents include those based on N-oxides hydrogen bond
acceptors (HBA) with 1:1 phenylacetic acid, the densities at 25 °C being
q/g cm−3 = 1.156 for dodecyldimethyl-N-oxide HBA, 0.977 for octade-
cyldimethyl-N-oxide HBA, 1.156 for N-methylmorpholinium-N-oxide HBA, and
0.995 for N-dodecylmorpholinium-N-oxide HBA [38].
3.3 Volumetric Properties 61
Several attempts have been made to predict the densities of deep eutectic sol-
vents, although their measurement is readily carried out, so that the prediction does
not appear to be very useful. Shahbaz et al. used artificial intelligence and group
contribution methods for such predictions [39], applied to glycerol and ethylene
glycol hydrogen bond donating components with choline chloride,
diethylethanolammonium chloride, and methyltriphenylphosphonium bromide as
the hydrogen bond accepting components. Data at five temperatures in the range
25–85 °C were used as the training set for the neural network and ten other tem-
peratures within this range were used for validation of the predictions. The group
contribution method depended on the estimated critical points of the components
and used the measured density at 25 °C as a reference for the estimation of the
densities at higher temperatures. Mjalli et al. [25] showed that a combination of
Eqs. (3.4) and (3.6) yields the expression:
where C is a constant obtained from the density at a reference temperature for the
prediction of the densities at other temperatures. This method appeared to be
superior to the use of the modified Rackett expression for this purpose [25, 40].
The densities of less conventional deep eutectic solvents have also been reported
and for the mixtures involving a salt hydrate and ice, a comprehensive listing of the
densities and isobaric expansibilities at 25 °C is presented in Table 3.5. The values
were obtained from the two-parameter expression reported by Apelblat [41]:
qðT; wÞ ¼ qW ðT Þ= 1qW ðT Þ Aw þ Bw2 ð3:8Þ
Table 3.5 Densities q of eutectics of salt hydrates with ice at their anhydrous salt mass fractions
w, their molar volumes V, and their isobaric expansibilities aP at 25 °C [41]
Salt hydrate tm/°C of eutectic weutectic q/g cm−3 V/cm3 mol−1 103aP/K−1
Al(NO3)3 9H2O −27.2 0.399 1.375 387.9 0.35
CaBr2 6H2O −22.2 0.695 2.118 135.8 0.54
Ca(NO3)2 4H2O −28.7 0.527 1.540 202.0 0.39
Ca(ClO4)2 6H2O −74.6 0.548 1.556 280.3 0.40
Co(NO3)2 6H2O −26.2 0.512 1.613 221.4 0.41
FeCl3 6H2O −55.0 0.420 1.339 288.6 0.34
KF 4H2O −40.2 0.242 1.277 155.8 0.33
KOH H2O −65.2 0.488 1.502 76.5 0.38
K2HPO4 4H2O −13.5 0.563 1.400 108.3 0.73
LiCH3CO2 2H2O −16.1 0.201 1.102 299.3 0.28
LiNO3 3H2O −22.9 0.171 1.202 190.9 0.31
LiClO3 3H2O −40.2 0.371 1.284 189.7 0.33
LiClO4 3H2O −18.2 0.282 1.191 316.9 0.30
(continued)
62 3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Here qW(T) is the density of water at the temperature T, w is the mass fraction of
the (anhydrous) salt in the aqueous mixture, corresponding to the eutectic in the
present context, and A and B are temperature-independent constants listed for the
salts of interest and many others. The mass fractions w are related to the mole
fractions x of the eutectic listed in Table 2.4 as
where MW is the molar mass of water, 18.015 g mol−1, and MS is that of the
anhydrous salt.
Most density values for 25 °C for the relevant concentrated aqueous salt solu-
tions reported in the literature agree within 2% with those from Eq. (3.8). However,
a few density values and their temperature dependencies not agreeing with those
derived from Eq. (3.8) and shown in Table 3.5 have also been reported. The density
of aqueous Ni(NO3)2 from [42] extrapolated from 4.0 to 5.5 molal is 12% larger
and that for aqueous Mg(CH3CO2)2 from [43] extrapolated from 302.95 to
298.15 K is 7% larger than the values listed in Table 3.5, but on the whole the
values in Table 3.5 for the eutectic compositions should be valid.
The isobaric thermal expansibilities aP shown in Table 3.5 were calculated as
The densities at any temperature are calculated from that at the reference tem-
perature 25 °C, q(25), and the isobaric thermal expansibility according to:
3.3 Volumetric Properties 63
Table 3.6 Densities q of eutectics of deep eutectic solvents involving metal salts and organic
substances and their isobaric expansibilities aP at 25 °C
Metal salt Organic substance q/g cm−3 103aP/K−1 Ref.
ZnCl2 Urea 1.63 [184]
Acetamide 1.36 [184]
1,2-ethanediol 1.45 [184]
1,6-hexanediol 1.38 [184]
Zn(NO3)2 6H2O Choline chloride 1.482 1.35 [57]
Diethylethanolammonium+Cl– 1.220 1.64 [57]
CaCl2 6H2O Choline chloride 1.381 0.36 [185]
CrCl3 6H2O Urea 1.646 1.7 [186]
LiTFSI Acetamide 1.401 [156]
K2CO3 Glycerol 1.474 0.42 [187]
Glycerol (1:10) 1.2590 0.434 [188]
1,2-ethanediol (1:10) 1.2561 0.532 [188]
KSCN Acetamide 1.207 0.564 [189]
Caprolactam 1.155 0.578 [189]
NH4SCN Acetamide 1.090 0.613 [189]
Caprolactam 1.084 0.559 [189]
Urea 1.259 0.487 [189]
3.3.2 Compressibility
Little has been published regarding the compressibilities of deep eutectic solvents,
and the available information is mainly confined to deep eutectic solvents based on
choline chloride and is summarized in Table 3.7. The adiabatic (isentropic) com-
pressibility jS = 1/qu2 is obtained from the density q and the speed of sound u. The
isothermal compressibility jT = q−1(∂q/∂P)T is obtained from the pressure
dependence of the density or else from the adiabatic compressibility as
jT = jS + TVa2P/CP, where V is the molar volume M/q, M is the molar mass, and q
and aP are from Table 3.4 and the molar heat capacity CP is from Table 3.2.
The adiabatic (isentropic) compressibility of deep eutectic solvents composed of
salt hydrates and water has been reported for sufficiently concentrated aqueous
solutions of only a few of the salts listed in Table 2.4 as forming deep eutectic
solvents. The jS values at 25 °C were calculated from the reported data and are
64 3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Table 3.7 The compressibility and internal pressure of deep eutectic solvents based on choline
chloride and on allyltriphenylphosphonium bromide with several HBD components at 25 °C
HBD component jS/GPa−1 Ref. jT/GPa−1 Ref. Pint/MPa (∂jT/ ∂T )P/TPa−1K−1
Choline chloride HBA
Urea 0.208 [158] 626 0.34
0.179 [93] 0.202 644
0.180a [94] 0.203a 652
Ethylene glycol 0.287 [190] 518 0.51
0.238 [93] 0.269 553
Glycerol 0.245 [191] 568 0.72
0.186 [93] 0.208 669
Levulinic acid 0.287 [50] 0.337b 511 1.18c
Fructose 0.205 [93] 0.300 901
Glucose 0.094 [93] 0.167 1436
Allyltriphenylphosphonium bromide HBA
Diethylene glycol 2.30 [182] 81.6
Triethylene glycol 3.10 [182] 52.4
a
At 303.15 K
b
The molar heat capacity is not known, estimated as 220 J K−1 mol1 in view of other acids in
Table 3.2
c
For jS
Table 3.8 The compressibility of deep eutectic solvents based on salt hydrates with ice at 25 °C
Salt hydrate jS/GPa−1 (∂jS/ ∂T)P/TPa−1 K−1 Ref.
Ca(NO3)2 4H2O 0.205 a
0.42 [192]
KF 4H2O 0.288 [193]
KOH 0.123 [194]
LiNO3 3H2O 0.293b 1.44d [195]
Mg(CH3CO2)2 4H2O 0.212 3.51d [192]
MgCl2 6H2O 0.295 [193]
Mg(NO3)2 6H2O 0.206 [193]
NaOH H2O 0.217 [193]
Zn(NO3)2 6H2O 0.196c 0.54 [192]
a
There are also values 0.203 GPa−1 [196] and 0.206 GPa−1 [197]
b
There is also value 0.262 GPa−1 [196]
c
There is also value 0.199 GPa−1 [36]
d
From data in [196]
3.3 Volumetric Properties 65
3.4.1 Viscosity
The viscosity η of deep eutectic solvents is their key transport property that has
implications for their electrical conductivity. The viscosity diminishes greatly with
increasing temperatures and generally follows the Vogel–Fulcher–Tammann
(VFT) expression:
lnðg=1mPa sÞ ¼ Ag þ Bg = TT0g ð3:12Þ
Table 3.9 The viscosity, η/mPa s, of conventional deep eutectic solvents at 25 °C and parameters for the VFT correlation expression
DES HBA DES HBD Ratio η/mPa s Aη Bη T0/K Eη/kJ mol Ref.
Choline Cl Urea 1:2 829 −2.409 854 204.6 [159]
Urea 1:2 748 −15.818 6674 0 55.49 [3]
Urea 1:2 1571 −18.163 7581 0 63.03 [198]
Ethylene glycol 1:2 44.4 −2.15 863 153 [199]
Ethylene glycol 1:2 40 [50]
Glycerol 1:2 329 −2.485 1036 173.0 [162]
Glycerol 1:2 302 −9.263 4469 0 37.12 [148]
Triethylene glycol 1:2 839 −2.260 4849 0 40.31 [57]
Triethylene glycol 1:3 66 [50]
1:4-butanediol 1:4 55 [50]
Phenol 1:3 446 −2.10 702 179.1 [11]
Phenol 1:2 99.8 0.0495 972 170.5 [169]
o-cresol 1:3 77.7 [11]
p-cresol 1:2 102.0 0.0034 1875 115.9 [169]
p-chlorophenol 1:2 123.2 0.0796 892 176.8 [169]
Xylose 1:1 920 −3.823 1382 168.3 [165]
Xylose 1:1 51 −24.71 0 71.02 [200]
Ribose 1:1 1564 −3.888 1468 167.6 [165]
Glucose 3:2 7968 −21.27 9020 0 75.59 [149]
Glucose 1:1 6310 −15.35 7180 0 59.73 [201]
Glucose 1:1 1586 −3.853 1406 172.8 [165]
Glucose 1:1 644 −30.45 0 91.52 [200]
Fructose 2:1 11312 −13.90 6940 0 57.70 [88]
(continued)
3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Table 3.9 (continued)
DES HBA DES HBD Ratio η/mPa s Aη Bη T0/K Eη/kJ mol Ref.
Fructose 1:1 653 −3.958 169.1 [165]
Mannose 1:1 1068 −3.673 1324 173.8 [165]
Xylitol 1:1 7540 −17.64 7920 0 65.86 [201]
Sorbitol 1:12 19470 −18.73 8530 0 70.91 [201]
Sucrose 1:1 79590 0 104.50 [200]
3.4 Transport Properties
−30.87
Glycolic acid 1:1 548 −11.034 5157 0 42.58 [48]
Glycolic acid 1:1 399 [174]
Lactic acid 1:1 400 [105]
Oxalic acid 1:1 8953 −17.279 7842 0 65.20 [48]
Oxalic acid 1:1 458 −2.240 4610 0 38.32 [57]
Malonic acid 1:1 1350 −11.615 5612 0 46.66 [48]
Malonic acid 1:1 829 −2.304 4961 0 41.25 [57]
Glutaric acid 1:1 1936 −11.640 5727 0 47.62 [48]
Levulinic acid 1:2 102 −5.190 1783 116.5 39.93 [202]
Levulinic acid 1:2 256 −9.703 4051 31.8 33.68 [174]
Levulinic acid 1:2 216 −10.839 4834 0 40.19 [48]
Trifluoroacetamide 1:2 77.3 −2.175 3898 0 32.40 [57]
Citric acid 1:1 3852 −30.53 0 96.15 [200]
Tartaric acid 1:1 2389 −33.4 0 102.08 [200]
Ethanolamine 1:7 39.6 [47]
Zn(NO3)2 6H2O 1:1 107 −2.078 3835 0 31.88 [57]
CrCl3 6H2O 1:2 4671 [50]
Acetylcholine Cl Levulinic acid 1:2 115 −1.758 642 199.5 48.82 [202]
(continued)
67
Table 3.9 (continued)
68
DES HBA DES HBD Ratio η/mPa s Aη Bη T0/K Eη/kJ mol Ref.
Imidazole 1:3 464 0 48.48 [171]
Triazole 1:1 441 −15.336 6388 0 53.11 [171]
Guanidinium hydrochloride Ethanolamine 1:2 78.3 [47]
Ethylammonium Br Glycerol 1:2 307c [151]
Propylammonium Br Glycerol 1:2 398c [151]
Butylammonium Br Glycerol 1:2 421c [151]
Diethylethanolammonium Cl Glycerol 1:2 433 [47]
Benzyltrimethylammonium Cl Glycerol 1:2 716.6 [47]
Acetic acid 1:2 113.0 [47]
Oxalic acid 1:1 1335 −16.450 7050 0 58.62 [177]
p-toluenesulfonic acid 1:1 10830 −19.142 8477 0 70.48 [177]
Benzyltripropylammonium Cl Ethylene glycol 1:3 228 −4.01 1295 161 10.77 [178]
Glycerol 1:3 3095 −4.93 1619 173 13.46 [178]
Phenol 1:3 378 −2.63 748 211 6.22 [178]
Lactic acid 1:3 4216 −3.43 1046 209 8.70 [178]
Et2ethanolammonium Cl Ethylene glycol 1:2 50.6 −2.450 847 165.3 [172]
Glycerol 1:2 513 −2.042 875 192.6 [172]
Glycerol 1:2 425 −10.543 4948 0 41.14 [148]
Malonic acid 1:1 541 −2.302 4832 0 40.17 [57]
Zn(NO3)2 6H2O 1:1 163 −2.051 3798 0 31.57 [57]
Triethylmethylammonium Cl Ethylene glycol 1:2 41.7 [47]
Glycerol 1:2 236.6 [47]
Lactic acid 1:2 117.5 [47]
(continued)
3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Table 3.9 (continued)
DES HBA DES HBD Ratio η/mPa s Aη Bη T0/K Eη/kJ mol Ref.
Levulinic acid 1:2 96.4 [47]
Tetraethylammonium Cl Glycerol 1:2 310d [203]
Levulinic acid 1:2 93 −1.439 560 204.4 47.06 [202]
Octanoic acid 1:3 65.9 [47]
Tetraethylammonium Br Levulinic acid 1:2 106 518 210.3 49.67 [202]
3.4 Transport Properties
−1.254
Tetrapropylammonium Cl Ethanolamine 1:4 55.1 [47]
Acetic acid 1:6 32.7 [47]
Tetrapropylammonium Br Ethylene glycol 1:3 70.3 −9.512 4104 0 34.12 [153]
Glycerol 1:3 739 −14.890 3409 0 53.29 [153]
Triethylene glycol 1:3 90.0 −9.051 4040 0 33.59 [153]
Tetrabutylammonium Cl Ethylene glycol 1:3 85.6 −8.757 3936 0 32.72 [12]
Ethylene glycol 1:2 120 −5.006 1743 120.3 [174]
Glycerol 1:3 816 −14.355 6279 0 52.21 [12]
Triethylene glycol 4:1 90500a −8.330 6380 0 53.05 [12]
PEG 400 1:2 175 −3.039 1224 149.0 [174]
Acetic acid 1:2 20.9 [47]
Propanoic acid 1:2 154 −3.605 1211 158.1 [174]
Phenylacetic acid 1:2 288 −1.475 666 204.9 [174]
Levulinic acid 1:2 87 −1.627 587 201.9 46.78 [202]
Decanoic acid 1:2 265 [50]
Aspartic acid 9:1 1790 −15.211 6769 0 56.28 [154]
Glutamic acid 10:1 3578 −13.642 6507 0 54.10 [154]
Arginine 6:1 24,540 −15.908 7757 0 64.50 [154]
(continued)
69
Table 3.9 (continued)
70
DES HBA DES HBD Ratio η/mPa s Aη Bη T0/K Eη/kJ mol Ref.
Serine 8:1 325,000 0 60.95 [155]
Threonine 9:1 22,990 −5.711 4697 0 39.07 [155]
Methionine 11:1 330,000 −9.776 6703 0 55.73 [155]
Tetrabutylammonium Br Glycerol 1:4 869 −13.202 5954 0 49.50 [148]
Ethanolamine 1:6 51.8 [47]
Acetic acid 1:2 256.8 [47]
Levulinic acid 1:2 252 −2.829 921 188.0 56.11 [202]
Tetrahexylammonium Br Ethylene glycol 1:2 172 −3.673 1405 168.9 [176]
Glycerol 1:2 813 −3.474 1366 164.2 [176]
Tetraheptylammonium Cl Decanoic acid 1:2 173 [50]
Methyltrioctylammonium Cl Decanoic acid 1:2 783 [50]
Tetraoctylammonium Cl Decanoic acid 1:2 473 [50]
Tetraoctylammonium Br Decanoic acid 1:2 636 [50]
Tetraoctylammonium Br Decanoic acid 1:2 640 [177]
Methyltrioctylammonium Br Decanoic acid 1:2 577 [50]
Trimethylsulfonium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide Formamide 1:1 6.6 −1.478 390 182 3.24 [204]
Trifluoroacetamide 2:1 20 −1.959 595 178 4.95 [204]
Methyltriphenylphosphonium Br Ethylene glycol 1:4 106 −11.81 4881 0 40.58 [179]
Ethylene glycol 1:3 110.5 [47]
1,3-propanediol 1:4 119.5 [47]
Glycerol 1:1.75 4449 −17.60 7713 0 64.46 [179]
Glycerol 1:3 2190 −17.467 7501 0 62.37 [148]
Glycerol 1:4 1748 [47]
(continued)
3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Table 3.9 (continued)
DES HBA DES HBD Ratio η/mPa s Aη Bη T0/K Eη/kJ mol Ref.
Acetic acid 1:4 118.5 [47]
Levulinic acid 1:3 957 [47]
Trifluoroacetamide 1:8 172 −13.68 5614 0 46.68 [179]
Allyltriphenylphosphonium Br Glycerol 1:14 866 −14.524 6347 0 52.76 [148]
Benzyltriphenylphosphonium Cl Ethylene glycol 1:3 1430 6546 0 54.43 [179]
3.4 Transport Properties
−14.69
Glycerol 1:5 5490 −16.37 7448 0 61.93 [179]
Glycerol 1:16 1299 −15.071 6631 0 55.13 [148]
Betaine Levulinic acid 1:2 981 [203]
Li bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide Acetamide 1:4 100 [156]
N-Me-acetamide 1:4 40 961 164 7.99 [122]
KSCN Acetamide 1:3 44b 0.336 438 224 [189]
Caprolactam 1:3 1082b 1.660 397 252 [189]
NH4SCN Acetamide 1:3 20b 0.751 210 250 [189]
Caprolactam 1:3 294b 0.286 578 230 [189]
Urea 2:3 28b 1.667 186 248 [189]
a
At 50 °C
b
At 40 °C
c
At 20 °C
d
Extrapolated
71
72 3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
where c is the molar concentration. Equation (3.13) is generally valid without the
last term up to 1 mol dm−3 concentrations. Whereas the A coefficients of Eq. (3.13)
Table 3.10 Viscosity of aqueous salts at 25 °C that form eutectics as salt hydrates with ice
Salt meutectic η/mPa s A B Ref.
Ca(NO3)2 4H2O 6.80 10.31 −6.28 , −6.87
e f e
533 , 2752 f
[53, 205]
FeCl3 6H2O 4.46 9.07 [206]
KF 4H2O 7.10 2.17 [207]
KOH H2O 17.01 6.57 [208]
LiNO3 3H2O 6.23 1.75 −5.17a, 1712a, [209, 210]
−4.63b, 1530b
123LiI 2H2O 15.14 2.17 [211]
Mg(CH3CO2)2 4H2O 4.99 86.2 −13.89 5421 [43]
MgBr2 6H2O 4.86 4.77 [212]
MgCl2 6H2O 4.09 4.87 −5.73c, −5.70f 2170c, 2173f [205, 213, 214]
Mg(NO3)2 6H2O 5.29 7.6 −5.35d 2173d [43, 212]
Mg(ClO4)2 6H2O 6.23 7.10 [212]
Mn(NO3)2 6H2O 6.49 *7.7 [210]
MnCl2 4H2O 8.72 30.0 [215]
NaOH H2O 6.51 4.06 [208]
NiCl2 6H2O 5.07 8.07 −6.52 2564 [205]
Ni(NO3)2 6H2O 5.51 8.08 [42]
Zn(NO3)2 6H2O 5.51 6.97 [42]
Where multiple entries are shown for η they were derived from the references shown in sequence
a
Ref. [209]
b
Ref. [216]
c
Ref. [213]
d
Ref. [43]
e
Ref. [53], the full VFT equation needed with T0 = 170 K
f
Ref. [205]
3.4 Transport Properties 73
can be evaluated from theory and the B coefficients are available for individual ions
[52], hence for their combinations as salts, the D coefficients are scarce in the
literature. The relevant concentrations of the deep eutectic solvents forming salts are
above the validity of Eq. (3.13) without the term in the square of the concentration.
Still, numerical values for the viscosity of aqueous salt solutions at the molalities
corresponding to the mole fractions of the salt hydrates forming deep eutectic
solvents with ice are available for many of these salts at 25 °C, and are well
represented by a cubic expression in the molality above 1 mol (kg water)−1.
Interpolation or extrapolation to the needed molalities shown in Table 3.10 then
yield the viscosities presented there. These are generally <10 times the viscosity of
water at 25 °C, except for the magnesium acetate and manganese chloride solutions
that are more viscous. The temperature dependence of the viscosity of these con-
centrated salt solutions follows, where reported, the Arrhenius equation, i.e.,
Eq. (3.12) with T0η = 0, except for one report regarding calcium nitrate [53], where
T0η = 170 K is required for expressing the temperature dependence of the viscosity.
There are a few reports regarding the viscosity of other nonconventional deep
eutectic solvents: those involving metal salts with organic substances and mixtures
of ionic liquids (morpholinium and piperidinium bromides) with water, and of
amino acids with hydroxycarboxylic acids (proline and glycolic and malic acids
[54]). The temperature dependence, when measured, follows the Arrhenius
expression, i.e., Eq. (3.12) with T0η = 0, except for the deep eutectic solvents
involving inorganic thiocyanates. Table 3.11 summarizes the available data.
It should be noted that the deep eutectic solvents (except those involving salt
hydrates with ice) are rather viscous, having dynamic viscosities at room temper-
ature at least 30 times that of water at ambient conditions, but for most of them, the
viscosities are some hundreds fold larger than that of water, up to a few times 105 as
large (Tables 3.9 and 3.11).
Table 3.11 The viscosity of deep eutectic solvents involving metal salts with organic substances,
cyclic quaternary ammonium salts with water, and nonionic deep eutectic solvents
Salt Other Ratio η(25 °C)/ 105η0/ Eη/ Ref.
components mPa s mPa s kJ mol−1
ZnCl2 Choline 2:1 227,000 3.95 55.7 [217]
chloride
Choline 2:1 85,000 [184]
chloride
Urea 1:3.5 11,340 85 [184]
Acetanide 1:4 1800 85 [184]
Ethylene 1:4 85 [184]
glycol
1,6-hexanediol 1:6 85 [184]
Zn(NO3)2 Choline 1:1 107 8.0b 31.9 [57]
6H2O chloride
Et2EtOHNHCl 1:1 163 7.8b 31.6 [57]
(continued)
74 3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
3.4.3 Self-diffusion
Another transport property of deep eutectic solvents that ought to be known is the
self-diffusion of the three components making up the deep eutectic solvents: those
of the cation and anion of the hydrogen bond accepting ingredient and that of the
hydrogen bond donating ingredient. Such information is obtained from NMR
Table 3.12 The specific electrical conductivity, j, of deep eutectic solvents at 25 °C and parameters for the VFT correlation expression
76
DES HBA DES HBD Ratio j/mS cm−1 Aj Bj T0j/K Ej/kJ mol−1 Ref.
b
Choline Cl Urea 1:2 0.199 [222]
Urea 1:2 2.31c [57]
Trifluoroacetamide 1:2 2.48 [57]
Trifluoroacetamide 1:2 2.86b [222]
Ethylene glycol 1:2 7.61a [223]
Ethylene glycol 1:2 7.33 [224]
Ethylene glycol 1:2 0.64 0.618 −744 159 −6.09 [148]
Glycerol 1:2 1.047a [223]
Glycerol 1:2 1.75 [224]
Glycerol 1:2 1.02 5.3 104 −3238 0 −26.92 [148]
Triethylene glycol 1:2 1.41 [225]
Triethylene glycol 1:3 1.78 [226]
1:4-butanediol 1:4 1.606a [223]
Phenol 1:3 3.14 [11]
o-cresol 1:3 1.21 [11]
Xylitol 1:1 1.15 1063 −1107 136 −9.20 [227]
Phenylacetic acid 1:2 0.48 [10]
Phenylpropanoic acid 1:2 0.32 [10]
Oxalic acid 1:1 0.42 [10]
Oxalic acid 1:1 1.88 13.27 −3708 0 −30.83 [57]
Malonic acid 1:1 0.88 [10]
Malonic acid 1:1 0.91 16.35 −3724 0 −30.96 [57]
Levulinic acid 1:2 0.81 536 −720 187 −5.99 [202]
Zn(NO3)2 6H2O 1:1 9.28 9.07 −1989 0 −16.54 [57]
(continued)
3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Table 3.12 (continued)
DES HBA DES HBD Ratio j/mS cm−1 Aj Bj T0j/K Ej/kJ mol−1 Ref.
Water 1:1.6 1.76 9.02 0 −20.87 [228]
Acetylcholine Cl Urea 1:2 0.017b [222]
Levulinic acid 1:2 0.67 1488 −1013 167 −8.42 [202]
Ethylammonium Cl Urea 2:3 0.348b [222]
Acetamide 2:3 0.688b [222]
3.4 Transport Properties
DES HBA DES HBD Ratio j/mS cm−1 Aj Bj T0j/K Ej/kJ mol−1 Ref.
Phenylacetic acid 1:2 0.091 38 −568 194 −4.72 [174]
Levulinic acid 1:2 0.45 255 −805 171 −6.69 [202]
Tetrabutylammonium Br Glycerol 1:4 0.123 1.3 106 −4822 0 −40.09 [148]
Levulinic acid 1:2 0.22 138 −547 214 −4.55 [166]
Benzyltripropylammonium Cl Ethylene glycol 1:3 0.87 302 −901 144 −7.49 [178]
Glycerol 1:3 0.079 390 −970 184 −8.07 [178]
Phenol 1:3 0.274 39.6 −372 222 −3.09 [178]
Lactic acid 1:3 0.017 189 −783 214 −6.51 [178]
Trimethylsulfonium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide Formamide 1:1 16.20 398 −381 179 −3.17 [204]
Trifluoroacetamide 2:1 7.86 699 −552 175 −4.59 [204]
Methyltriphenylphosphonium Br Ethylene glycol 1:4 2.07 12.15 −1900 0 −15.80 [179]
Glycerol 1:1.75 1.08 4.78 104 −3190 0 −2652 [179]
Glycerol 1:3 0.060 3.04x107 −5978 0 −49.70 [148]
Trifluoroacetamide 1:8 3.42 2124 −1917 0 −15.94 [179]
Allyltriphenylphosphonium Br Glycerol 1:14 0.056 2.62 106 −5269 0 −43.81 [148]
Diethylene glycol 1:4 1.405 1256 −2038 0 −16.95 [166]
Triethylene glycol 1:4 0.739 7559 −2757 0 −22.93 [166]
Triethyleneglycol 1:10 0.464 [225]
Benzyltriphenylphosphonium Cl Ethylene glycol 1:3 0.50 1.0 10−32 21642 0 +180.96 [179]
Glycerol 1:5 0.02 6.9 10−4 997 0 +8.29 [179]
Glycerol 1:16 0.070 1.35 106 −5001 0 −41.58 [148]
Triethyleneglycol 1:8 0.212 [225]
Li bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide Urea 1:3.6 0.23 [229]
(continued)
3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Table 3.12 (continued)
DES HBA DES HBD Ratio j/mS cm−1 Aj Bj T0j/K Ej/kJ mol−1 Ref.
Acetamide 1:4 1.07 [156]
N-Methylacetamide 1:4 1.35 780 −852 164 −7.08 [122]
KSCN Acetamide 1:3 5.35b 203 [181]
Caprolactam 1:3 0.215b 224 [181]
NH4SCN Urea 2:3 2.05b 218 [181]
3.4 Transport Properties
Table 3.13 The specific electrical conductivity, j, at 25 °C of deep eutectic solvents based on salt
hydrate/ice eutectics
Salt meutectic j/mS cm−1 Ref.
Al(NO3)2 9H2O 3.12 0.150 [230]
Ca(NO3)2 4H2O 6.80 0.112, 0.068 [230]
KOH H2O 17.01 0.441 [231]
KF 4H2O 7.10 0.362, 0.305 [232, 233]
LiClO3 3H2O 6.53 0.149 [234]
LiClO3 3H2O 3.69 0.161 [233]
LiNO3 3H2O 6.23 0.169, 0.168 [233, 235]
LiI 2H2O 15.14 0.133 [233]
MgCl2 6H2O 4.09 0.197, 0.141, 0.141 [213, 230, 236]
Mg(NO3)2 6H2O 5.29 0.115, 0.110 [230, 236]
Mg(ClO4)2 6H2O 6.23 0.061 [230]
NiCl2 6H2O 5.07 0.124, 0.092 [236, 237]
measurements on the one hand and from molecular dynamics computer simulations
on the other hand. The so far reported information is, however, confined to four
choline chloride-based deep eutectic solvents only and is summarized in
Table 3.14. The temperature dependence of the self-diffusion coefficient Di (of the
ith ingredient) followed the Arrhenius expression, when it was reported:
ln DI ¼ ln DI þ ED =RT, where ED is the activation energy for the diffusion. The
Fig. 3.5 Logarithmic plots of the specific conductivities against the fluidities of 1:1 choline
chloride/malonic acid (circles), 1:2 choline chloride/trifluoroacetamide (squares), and 1:1 N,N-
diethylethanolammonium chloride/malonic acid (triangles)
3.4 Transport Properties 81
Table 3.14 The self-diffusion coefficients of the ingredients of choline chloride-based deep
eutectic solvents at 25 °C
DES Species 1012D/m s−1 ED/kJ mol−1 Method Ref.
Reline Cholinium +
3.5 −47.8 NMR [147]
Urea 6.6 −45.0 NMR [147]
Ethaline Cholinium+ 26.2 −37.1 NMR [147]
18.1 Simulation [30]
17.6 Simulation [70]
Chloride− 25.0 Simulation [30]
30.0 Simulation [70]
Ethylene glycol 47.7 NMR [147]
37.5 Simulation [30]
38.0 Simulation [70]
Glyceline Cholinium+ 3.8 −41.2 NMR [238]
3.8 −42.0 NMR [147]
3.0 Simulation [30]
Chloride− 4.6 Simulation [30]
Glycerol 5.2 −42.0 NMR [238]
5.1 −41.9 NMR [147]
4.5 Simulation [30]
Maline Cholinium+ 0.64 −44.4 NMR [147]
Malonic acid 0.60 −33.6 NMR [147]
rate of diffusion correlates with the free volume fraction, Vf, in the deep eutectic
solvents:
where V = M/q is the molar volume of the deep eutectic solvents, and VHBA and
VHBD are the molar volumes of the ingredients. All these volumes increase with the
temperature, but the free volume appears to increase more, hence enabling
increased diffusion.
A transport property of deep eutectic solvents for which hardly anything has been
published so far is the thermal conductivity. One report [61] presents a few values
for deep eutectic solvents at 20 °C: k/W m−1 K−1 = 0.217 for 1:2 ethylammonium
bromide/glycerol, 0.209 for 1:2 propylammonium bromide/glycerol, and 0.207 for
1:2 butylammonium bromide/glycerol, i.e., only slightly dependent on the alkyl
chain length of the cation. Another report deals with choline chloride/glycerol deep
82 3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
eutectic solvents at 1:2. 1:3. And 1:4 molar ratios which have thermal conductivities
at 25 °C (read from a figure) of k/W m−1 K−1 = 0.15, 0.20, 0.35, respectively,
increasing with the temperature [264]. These values are all smaller than that for
glycerol itself, k/W m−1 K−1 = 0.285, a fact attributed to the salts disrupting the
dense hydrogen-bonded structure of the glycerol, therefore conducive to good
thermal conductivity.
The refractive index nD at the sodium D-line frequency of deep eutectic solvents
has been reported in many publications as summarized in Table 3.15 for the values
observed at 25 °C. The agreement between values of nD reported for given deep
eutectic solvents by several authors is fair, but it is doubtful whether a deep eutectic
solvent can be identified by its refractive index value. The values of nD for most of
the deep eutectic solvents are between 1.46 and 1.51, but values larger than the
latter were observed for deep eutectic solvents involving phenyl groups in either of
the components. The temperature dependence of nD is linear and has been reported
in most of the references cited in Table 3.15. The molar refraction RD of the deep
eutectic solvents is according to the Lorentz–Lorenz expression:
RD ¼ ðM=qÞ n2D 1 = n2D þ 2 ¼ V n2D 1 = n2D þ 2 ð3:16Þ
It reflects mainly their molar volumes because of the narrow range of the nD
values. The polarizability a of the deep eutectic solvents is obtained from the molar
refraction as:
a ¼ ð3=4pNA ÞR1 3:92 1031 RD =cm3 mol1 ð3:17Þ
aqueous solutions and given the additivity of the molar refractions of the ions and
the water in the deep eutectic solvents, it is possible to calculate the molar refraction
of the solution at 25 °C at the composition that forms the eutectic. The molar
refractions of the ions RD þ and RD taken from [64] with that of water,
RDW = 3.84 cm3 mol−1, yield the molar refraction of the solution of the salt hydrate
CpAq nH2O at 25 °C, corresponding to the deep eutectic solvents at its eutectic
mole fraction xe:
The resulting molar refractions of these liquid deep eutectic solvents at room
temperature, shown in Table 3.16, are much smaller than those of the deep eutectic
Table 3.15 The refractive index and molar refractivity of deep eutectic solvents at 25 °C
HBA HBD HBA: V/ nD RD/ Ref.
HBD cm3mol cm3mol
Choline chloride Urea 1:2 217.32a 1.5044a 64.39 [239]
Urea 1:2 216.79 1.5117 65.02 [240]
Ethylene glycol 1:2 236.11 1.4682 65.66 [241]
Ethylene glycol 1:2 236.11 1.4611 64.80 [163]
Ethylene glycol 1:2 236.11 1.4691 65.77 [242]
Glycerol 1:2 271.80 1.4868 78.14 [241]
Glycerol 1:2 271.80 1.4852 77.93 [163]
Glycerol 1:2 271.80 1.4829 77.61 [48]
Glycerol 1:2 271.80 1.4779 76.92 [243]
Glycerol 1:2 271.80 1.4853 77.94 [242]
1,4-butanediol 1:3 301.47 1.4656 83.43 [163]
Fructose 2:1 387.33 1.5198 117.71 [88]
Glucose 2:3 341.20 1.6669 126.99 [149]
Levulinic acid 1:2 428.78 1.4619 117.81 [166]
Levulinic acid 1:2 428.78 1.4690 119.41 [167]
Lactic acid 1:9 1.4432 [240]
Phenylacetic acid 1:2 1.526 [9]
Phenylpropanoic 1:2 1.522 [9]
acid
Malonic acid 1:1 197.95 1.478 56.03 [9]
Malonic acid 1:1 197.95 1.4871 56.94 [48]
Malonic acid 1:1 197.95 1.4861 56.84 [240]
Oxalic acid 1:1 182.41 1.4865 52.42 [48]
Malic acid 1:1 1.4813 [240]
Malic acid 1:1 1.4866 [242]
Ethanolamine 1:7 1.4791 [150]
(continued)
84 3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
solvents based on organic components shown in Table 3.15. This is due to the large
water content of the salt hydrate/ice-based deep eutectic solvents, because of the
small value of the molar refraction of the water, RDW, noted above. Given the large
molar volumes V of the salt hydrate/ice-based deep eutectic solvents presented in
Table 3.5, inversion of the Lorentz–Lorenz expression (3.16) then yields quite low
values of the refractive indices of these solutions: nD = [V + 2RD)/(V − RD)]1/2,
also shown in Table 3.16.
Hardly anything has been reported regarding the dielectric permittivity and the
magnetic susceptibility of deep eutectic solvents. These mixtures, being highly
ionic, should cause some difficulties concerning the measurement of their static
permittivity, and indeed only estimates have been reported. The value e0 = 14.34
was estimated [65] for Reline (1 choline chloride: 2 urea) at 25 °C, increasing with
the temperature, contrary to the behavior of common organic solvents. Values in the
range 12.8 e0 29.4 at 20 °C were estimated for 1:4 molar ratios of salts with
acetamide (the salts are LiBr, LiNO3, LiClO4, NaClO4, NaSCN, and KSCN). These
estimated values are considerably smaller than those of acetamide at its melting
point, e0 * 64 at 81 °C [66].
The magnetic susceptibility of deep eutectic solvents appears not to have been
reported. Except when paramagnetic ions are involved, the magnetic susceptibility
should be additive and prorated for the diamagnetic susceptibilities of the ingre-
dients of the deep eutectic solvents. For common organic solvents, the molar
volume diamagnetic susceptibility is proportional to the molar refraction:
86 3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Table 3.16 The molar Salt hydrate xe(salt nH2O) RDe nDe
refractivity of the aqueous salt
hydrate-based deep eutectic Al(NO3)3 9H2O 0.36 25.74 1.265
solvents at 25 °C and their CaBr2 6H2O 0.59 30.42 1.366
derived refractive indices Ca(NO3)2 4H2O 0.38 16.66 1.127
Ca(ClO4)2 6H2O 0.39 21.82 1.119
Co(NO3)2 6H2O 0.42 21.53 1.150
FeCl3 6H2O 0.36 21.23 1.113
KF 4H2O 0.39 10.25 1.101
KOH H2O 0.38 6.64 1.134
K2HPO4 6H2O 0.40 17.60 1.257
LiCH3CO2 2H2O 0.17 6.87 1.035
LiClO3 3H2O 0.32 10.19 1.082
LiClO4 3H2O 0.21 8.15 1.039
LiI 2H2O 0.45 29.27 1.486
Mg(CH3CO2)2 4H2O 0.31 15.79 1.082
MgBr2 6H2O 0.38 20.17 1.125
MgCl2 6H2O 0.34 16.00 1.090
Mg(NO3)2 6H2O 0.40 19.58 1.126
Mg(ClO4)2 6H2O 0.44 23.22 1.120
MnCl2 4H2O 0.44 17.92 1.190
Mn(NO3)2 6H2O 0.45 23.32 1.202
NaCH3CO2 3H2O 0.35 11.61 1.099
NaOH H2O 0.19 4.85 1.046
NiCl2 6H2O 0.39 18.68 1.132
Ni(NO3)2 6H2O 0.41 20.93 1.130
Zn(NO3)2 6H2O 0.41 20.84 1.138
v=106 cm3 mol1 ¼ 2:46 105 RD =cm3 mol1 ð3:19Þ
and may, thus, be derived from the entries in Table 3.15 for the deep eutectic
solvents based on organic ingredients.
The liquid structure of deep eutectic solvents has received little attention, and
whatever was reported was just recently. Extended X-ray absorption fine structure
(EXAFS) has been applied for the study of the liquid structure of room temperature
ionic liquids, but required a metal atom to be a part of the ions constituting the ionic
3.6 Chemical Properties 87
choline hydroxyl group acting as hydrogen bond donors. Neutron scattering and
broadband dielectric spectroscopy were used on Glyceline, which has a much
smaller viscosity than glycerol. The glycerol hydrogen-bonding network dominates
the structure and the collective dynamics of Glyceline [76]. Two-dimensional
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy was applied to deep eutectic solvents with
trifluoroacetamide as the hydrogen bond donating component and various hydrogen
bond accepting components: chlorides of choline, chlorocholine, tetramethyl-, tet-
raethyl-, and benzyltrimethylammonium cations. Microheterogeneity was found for
all these liquids, increasing as the symmetry of the cation diminishes [77].
Values of EN T of several commonly used deep eutectic solvents: Reline, Ethaline, and
Glyceline [78–80] are shown in Table 3.17. In strongly acidic deep eutectic solvents, a
variant probe, ET(33), based on 2,5-dichloro-4-(2,4,6-triphenylpyridinium-1-yl)pheno-
late, had to be used, related to the more usual probe as ET(30) = 0.9953 ET(33) − 8.11
[81].
Other indices are the Kamlet–Taft p* that measures the combined polarity and
polarizability of solvents, a that measures their hydrogen bond donation ability, and
b that measures their hydrogen bond acceptance ability. These were obtained by the
use of the probes 4-nitroaniline and N,N-diethyl-4-nitroaniline in the deep eutectic
solvents, combined with their ET(30) values. The values had to be read from a
figure [79, 80, 82], to within ±0.02 units, and are shown in Table 3.17 too.
Somewhat differing numerical values were reported in [83], where the deep eutectic
solvents contained a small amount of water. Wrong expressions were used in [84]
for obtaining the p* and b values for Reline, so values disagreeing with those in
Table 3.17 resulted. The Catalan indices SP for polarizability, SdP for dipolarity,
SA for acidity, and SB for basicity [85] are also shown in Table 3.17 for these three
deep eutectic solvents, Reline, Ethaline, and Glyceline. Nile Red was used in [86]
3.6 Chemical Properties 89
as a probe for measuring the polarity of deep eutectic solvents, resulting in values
for 1:2 choline chloride/1,2-propanediol *1:2 choline chloride/glycerol >1:1
choline chloride/malic acid, but these cannot be readily compared with the values of
ENT or p .
*
The solvatochromic indices EN T (Eq. (3.20) and the Kamlet–Taft p , a and b have
*
also been determined for several other deep eutectic solvents, as shown in
Table 3.18 [83, 87].
The values of these solvatochromic indices that have been reported for deep
eutectic solvents are generally between those of methanol and water among com-
mon solvents and commensurate with those of room temperature ionic liquids. This
means that these deep eutectic solvents are highly polar and polarizable, and have
good hydrogen bond donation and acceptance abilities toward solutes.
3.6.3 Acidity/Basicity
Another quantity that characterizes the chemical solvent properties of deep eutectic
solvents is their acidity. This quantity is measured by the use of pH probes and
instruments calibrated with aqueous buffer solutions, hence “apparent pH” values
result that cannot be assigned physical meanings beyond their empirical values. The
reported data are for 25 °C are shown in Table 3.19. The measured apparent pH
diminishes linearly with increasing temperatures [88], their temperature dependence
90 3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Table 3.18 Solvatochromic indices of deep eutectic solvents other than Reline, Ethaline, and
Glyceline
Solvent HBA Solvent HBD EN
T Ref. p* Ref. a Ref. b Ref.
Choline chloride Acetic acid 1.10 [81] 0.53 [81]
Glycolic acid 0.36 [196] 1.08 [81] 0.49a [196]a 0.50 [81]
a a
Malic acid 0.79 [196] 1.08 [81] 1.39 [196] 0.42 [81]
Levulinic acid 0.35 [196] 1.00 [81] 0.51a [196]a 0.57 [81]
Et4N+Cl− Butanoic acid 0.92 [87] 0.99 [199] 0.76 [87]
Hexanoic acid 0.86 [87] 0.97 [199] 0.85 [87]
Octanoic acid 0.81 [87] 0.96 [199] 0.87 [87]
Pr4N+Cl− Butanoic acid 0.93 [87] 0.94 [199] 0.84 [87]
Hexanoic acid 0.85 [87] 0.91 [199] 0.92 [87]
Octanoic acid 0.80 [87] 0.90 [199] 0.96 [87]
Pr4N+Br− Butanoic acid 0.93 [87] 1.07 [199] 0.80 [87]
Hexanoic acid 0.87 [87] 1.02 [199] 0.86 [87]
Bu4-N+Cl− Butanoic acid 0.86 [87] 0.92 [199] 0.99 [87]
Hexanoic acid 0.81 [87] 0.90 [199] 1.02 [87]
Octanoic acid 0.69 [196] 0.76 [81] 1.41a [196] 0.99 [81]
0.69 [87] 0.94 [199] 1.19 [87]
Decanoic acid 0.65 [196] 0.73 [81] 1.36a [196] 0.97 [81]
0.86 [87] 0.85 [199] 1.28 [87]
Dodecanoic acid 0.69 [196] 0.71 [81] 1.45a [196] 1.04 [81]
Levulinic acid 1.06 [81] 0.82 [81]
Bu4N+Br− Butanoic acid 0.93 [87] 1.02 [199] 0.81 [87]
Hexanoic acid 0.92 [87] 1.02 [199] 0.93 [87]
Octanoic acid 0.84 [87] 0.98 [199] 1.09 [87]
Decanoic acid 0.71 [87] 0.95 [199] 1.05 [87]
a
Using 2,5-dichloro-4-(2,4,6-triphenylpyridinium-1-yl)phenolate (Reichardt’s dye 33) as the probe
being about −0.02 K−1 on the average. A few of the deep eutectic solvents for
which pH data have been reported are notably basic: potassium carbonate/glycerol
is an obvious example, but choline chloride/urea and choline chloride/
triethanolamine are further examples [249]. On the other hand, quite a number of
deep eutectic solvents are highly acidic according to their apparent pH values being
1.0: those involving acids such as choline chloride/malonic acid and choline
chloride/citric acid, diethylethanolammonium chloride/malonic acid, and ben-
zyltrimethyl- and benzyltriethylammonium chloride/malonic, oxalic, and citric
acids [89–91]. The same observation holds for deep eutectic solvents involving zinc
nitrate hexahydrate as the hydrogen bond donating component. Other deep eutectic
solvents are more nearly neutral, according to their apparent pH values shown in
Table 3.19. Bromphenol blue was the indicator used for probing the Brønsted
3.6 Chemical Properties 91
acidity of organic acids in Reline, Ethaline, and Glyceline [92]. The pKa values in
the deep eutectic solvents were 0.2–0.5 unit larger than in water (they are somewhat
less strongly acidic).
The acidity of a carboxylic acid in a deep eutectic solvent (Ethaline) is less
pronounced than in aqueous solutions, their pKa being 0.2–0.5 units larger [93].
This was established by means of measurements with the bromphenol blue indi-
cator and electrometrically with a glass electrode (yielding slightly smaller pKa
values). These acid/base properties should play important roles in the applications
of deep eutectic solvents.
Another measure of the acidity of highly acid solvents is their Hammett acidity
function, H0, measured with an indicator such as 4-nitroaniline. For this indicator,
the function is determined as
where INA and INAH þ are the light absorption intensities of the neutral and proto-
nated forms of the indicator. The following values of H0 obtained for deep eutectic
solvents consisting of 1:2 choline chloride + hydrogen bond donating
(HBD) component have been reported: for the following HBDs, they are as follows:
urea 1.73 [84], p-toluene sulfonic acid 0.87, trichloroacetic acid 0.96, mono-
chloroacetic acid 1.46, and propanoic acid 2.23 [91]. The smaller H0 is, the more
acidic is the solvent.
3.6.4 Hydrophilicity/Hydrophobicity
Deep eutectic solvents, being ionic, are generally highly hydrophilic and miscible
with water. For some applications, immiscibility with water is desirable, in order to
produce a biphasic system for the solvent extraction of certain solutes. For this
purpose, hydrophobic deep eutectic solvents are needed, and several such solvents
have been reported. Mixtures of certain quaternary ammonium salts as the hydrogen
bond accepting component and decanoic acid as the hydrogen bond donating one at
2:1 molar ratios have been suggested for this purpose [94]. Lidocaine (N-
(2,6-dimethylphenyl)-diethylacetamide) decanoate with decanoic acid also consti-
tutes a hydrophobic deep eutectic solvent [95] that may be used for the extraction of
metal ions from aqueous solutions. The hydrophobicity, measured as the water
content in the deep eutectic solvents after mixing the deep eutectic solvents with
water, increases in the hydrogen bond accepting series: tetrabutylammonium
chloride < trioctylammonium chloride < trioctylammonium bromide < tetrahepty-
lammonium chloride < tetraoctylammonium bromide < tetraoctylammonium
chloride. Methyltrioctylammonium chloride produces hydrophobic deep eutectic
solvents with a variety of alcoholic hydrogen bond donating agents [96] as well as
acidic hydrogen bond donating agents [97]. No quantitative measures of the
hydrophobicity of these deep eutectic solvents were reported, however. In other
cases, hydrophobicity is counterproductive for the intended application in
92 3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
extraction experiments [98] with toluene as one of the phases and for levulinic acid
as the hydrogen bond donating agent. For deep eutectic solvents with choline
chloride, benzyldimethyl-ethanolammonium chloride, and tetrabutylammonium
chloride as the hydrogen bond accepting agents, the last named is too hydrophobic
relative to the others and is lost to the toluene phase. On the other hand, tetra-
butylammonium chloride is not sufficiently hydrophobic to form water-stable deep
eutectic solvents with aliphatic carboxylic acids up to dodecanoic acid, and dis-
solves in water in a biphasic system [99]. Tetraoctylammonium chloride (or bro-
mide) with decanoic acid or perfluorodecanoic acid formed hydrophobic deep
eutectic solvents that were modeled by perturbed-chain statistical associated fluid
theory (PC-SAFT) with regard to carbon dioxide solubilities, but no further indi-
cation of their hydrophobicities was reported [100].
The solubility of gases in deep eutectic solvents, in particular of carbon and sulfur
dioxides, is another characterization of their chemical properties. The capacity of the
deep eutectic solvents for the absorption of a gas at a given temperature and partial
pressure of the gas is of importance. It may be expressed as the molality of the gas in
the deep eutectic solvents: moles gas per 1 kg deep eutectic solvent, as well as the
Henry law constant kH (the lower it is, the higher the solubility). These solubility
values and the enthalpy of dissolution of the gas are characterizing quantities. The
vapor pressure of the deep eutectic solvents is negligible with regard to the applied
pressures; therefore, the gas phase is pure carbon dioxide at equilibrium with the
saturated solution, and its fugacity is equated to its pressure, Pgas. Hence:
on the molality scale. The units of kH(x) generally employed are MPa, those of kH(m)
are MPa kg mol−1, and interconversion between them is via the molar mass
M/kg mol−1 of the deep eutectic solvents: kH(x) = kH(m)/M. The saturation molality
of the gas in the deep eutectic solvents at a partial pressure of the gas of Pgas is
obtained as m = Pgas/kH(m). The molar enthalpy of solution, DsolH, may serve for
the evaluation of the solubility at other temperatures. DsolH is obtained from:
Table 3.20 The electrochemical potential windows of choline salt-based deep eutectic solvents
according to [115]
HBA anion HBD Eanode/V Ecathode/V EPW/V
Chloride Urea −2.75 1.54 4.29
Methylurea −3.06 1.66 4.72
Ethylene glycol −2.35 1.26 3.61
1,4-butanediol −2.57 1.33 3.90
Glycerol −2.21 1.38 3.59
Xylitol −2.67 1.66 4.33
Oxalic acid −0.92 1.24 2.16
Malonic acid −2.55 1.70 4.25
Bromide Urea −2.09 1.23 3.32
Methylurea −1.76 0.82 2.58
Ethylene glycol −1.35 0.77 2.12
1,4-butanediol −1.14 0.58 1.72
Glycerol −2.36 1.16 3.52
Xylitol −2.67 1.66 4.35
Malonic acid −2.38 1.03 2.41
Iodide Urea −0.89 0.36 1.25
Methylurea −1.73 0.36 2.09
Ethylene glycol −2.38 0.30 2.68
Glycerol −2.17 0.42 2.59
Oxalic acid −2.32 0.44 2.76
Nitrate Methylurea −1.76 0.76 2.52
Perchlorate Methylurea −2.49 2.04 4.53
Tetrafluoroborate Methylurea −1.66 2.03 3.69
platinum electrodes are used: for choline chloride-based deep eutectic solvents they
are EPW= 2.64 V with 1:1 malonic acid, 2.10 V with 1:1 oxalic acid, 2.52 V with
1:2 triethanolamine, 2.02 V with 1:1 zinc nitrate hexahydrate, and 3.32 V with 1:2
trifluoroacetamide [57]. For N,N-diethylethanolammmonium chloride with 1:1
malonic acid, the window is 2.82 V and with 1:1 zinc nitrate hexahydrate, it is
2.42 V. Further EPW values for deep eutectic solvents were reported in [118].
Much wider potential stability windows were obtained for deep eutectic solvents
based on lithium salts with N-methylacetamide (NMA). For the lithium
hexafluorophosphate and the bis(trifluoromethanesulfonate)imide (LiTFSI) salts 1:4
NMA deep eutectic solvents, the window was 4.7 V and for the nitrate salt, it was
5.3 V [118]. However, electrochemical decomposition of choline chloride-based
deep eutectic solvents has been noted [119] in long-term electrolysis experiments,
contrary to short cyclic voltammetry ones, generally employed for the determina-
tion of the potential window. The decomposition (oxidation at a non-soluble anode)
may lead to chlorinated and/or toxic volatile products, voiding the claim of “green”
solvents regarding these deep eutectic solvents [54]. Caveat!
96 3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
The double layer capacitance of 1:2 choline chloride/glycerol (Glyceline) has been
measured at platinum, gold, and glassy carbon electrodes by cyclic voltammetry,
being 7.8 lF cm−2 within 0.2 units [120]. With liquid mercury electrodes, the
capacitance of 1:2 choline chloride-based deep eutectic solvents measured at the point
of zero charge is C/lF cm−2 = 51.2 for urea (Reline), 32.9 for ethylene glycol
(Ethaline), and 26.5 for 1,3-propylene glycol [121]. The 1:4 LiTFSI/NMA system
could be charged at 2 V up to a specific capacitance of ca. 150 F g−1 [122]. Deep
eutectic solvents produced from trimethylsulfonium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonate)
imide with trifluoroacetamide or formamide could be charged at 2 V up to 214 or
357 F g−1 as electrochemical double layer capacitors [123]. An electrolyte consisting
of 1:2 choline chloride/glycerol (Glyceline) had a specific capacitance of 78.7 F g−1
enhanced to 92.9 F g−1 by addition of 0.33 mol fraction c-butyrolactone [124].
The behavior of deep eutectic solvents based on choline chloride and urea,
glycerol, phenylacetic acid, malonic acid, and levulinic acid as hydrogen bond
donation components under static and dynamic external electrical fields was studied
by means of molecular dynamics simulations in [125]. Only moderate dipolar
reorientation took place under the applied fields (E < 2.5 V nm−1) because of the
large intrinsic fields in these fluids.
Deep eutectic solvents are generally claimed to be “green”, one attribute of which is
their having very low toxicity, especially in comparison with common organic
solvents and room temperature ionic liquids. The claimed low toxicity is not
entirely true, and certain deep eutectic solvents have non-negligible toxicity for
humans. This may have a deleterious effect when these are considered for
large-scale industrial uses, but any existing toxicity may be beneficial for their
antiseptic and therapeutic uses.
Hayyan and coworkers were the first to pose the question on whether deep
eutectic solvents were benign or toxic [126] and then studied the cytotoxicity of
these solvents [127–130] as did several other groups. Although Reline, Ethaline,
Glyceline, and choline chloride/triethylene glycol deep eutectic solvents were found
to be nontoxic toward four kinds of bacteria (both gram-positive and gram-negative
ones), their cytotoxicity toward brine shrimps, a primitive aquatic arthropod found
in lakes, was much larger than that of the individual components [126]. On the
other hand, methyltriphenylphosphonium bromide-based deep eutectic solvents
with ethylene glycol, triethylene glycol, and glycerol as the hydrogen bond
donating components did have toxic effects against the abovementioned bacteria, in
addition to their cytotoxicity toward brine shrimps [127]. The acute toxicity for
mice of these four kinds of phosphonium salt deep eutectic solvents was found to be
non-negligible and combined in vitro and in vivo toxicity profiles of deep eutectic
solvents were carried out and contributed to potential therapeutic uses of them
[128]. The cytotoxicity profiles of natural deep eutectic solvents, based on choline
3.7 Toxicity and Biodegradability 97
chloride with glucose, fructose, sucrose, glycerol, and malonic acid in the presence
of water was investigated in [129] and the one with malonic acid proved to be the
most cytotoxic. These solvents interact with the phospholipid cell membranes and
their accumulation defines their cytotoxicity. The cytotoxicity of the first two of
these solvents as well as one formed from diethylethanolammonium chloride and
triethylene glycol was further studied in [130] with respect to their anticancer
potential.
Deep eutectic solvents based on zwitterionic betaines were studied regarding
their toxicity by Cardellini and coworkers. Trimethylglycine forms deep eutectic
solvents that are liquid at room temperature with 2-furoic acid, phenylacetic acid,
mandelic acid, and glycolic acid [58]. Their cytotoxicity toward eukaryotic model
cells was evaluated and found to be due to their dehydrating activity, comparable to
the low cell toxicity of calcium chloride. Similar results were found for deep
eutectic solvents produced by camphoric acid and various betaines that have,
however, low ionicity [131].
The toxicity of choline chloride-based deep eutectic solvents toward fungi and
fish, using ethylene glycol, glycerol, urea, malonic acid, and two metal salts ZnCl2
and Zn(H2O)6(NO3)2 as the hydrogen bond donating agents was tested in [132].
The acute oral toxicity test of Glyceline in rats showed it to be nontoxic (median
lethal dose of 7.7 g kg−1) [133]. This deep eutectic solvent might therefore be used
as a carrier for the administration of drugs. The metal-containing solvents were
more toxic than the others and Ethaline proved essentially harmless. In a subse-
quent study regarding toxicity toward fungi and fish, the solvents tested included
also another acidic component, p-toluenesulfonic acid, which showed toxicity
between those of metal-containing ones and those based on alcohols, sugars, or urea
[134]. The deep eutectic solvents at their eutectic compositions showed toxicities
different from those of their components or non-eutectic mixtures thereof, signi-
fying that they might be treated as specific substance. The cytotoxicity toward fish
cell lines and phytotoxicity (wheat) of solvents based on choline chloride with
glycerol, glucose, and oxalic acid was tested in [135]. The former two exhibited low
toxicity whereas the one with oxalic acid showed moderate toxicity. Additional
deep eutectic solvents, using malic, citric, and lactic acids as well as fructose,
xylose, and mannose were tested with fish cell lines, exhibiting low cytotoxicity
[136]. Further tests with choline chloride-based deep eutectic solvents involving
acetic, citric, lactic, and glycolic acids showed them to be “moderately toxic”, their
toxicity being dominated by the concentration of the acid [137]. Deep eutectic
solvents based on choline acetate were less toxic than the corresponding Reline,
Ethaline, and Glyceline based on choline chloride toward bacteria, plant cells, and
hydra [138]. Some aspects of the toxicity and biodegradability of choline-based
deep eutectic solvents were discussed in [139].
The antiseptic and fungicidal aspects of the deep eutectic solvents may be
considered an asset, providing that their toxicity toward higher organisms is min-
imal. Broad antiseptic effects of the 1:1 cholinium geranate/geranic acid
(3,7-dimethyl-2,6-octadienoic acid) deep eutectic solvent against bacteria, fungi,
and viruses was demonstrated in [140] and suggested for skin treatment. The
98 3 Properties of Deep Eutectic Solvents
nonionic deep eutectic solvents composed of 1:1 sucrose/citric acid and 1:1:1
fructose/glucose/malic acid were tested for their antimicrobial effects in photody-
namic therapy upon dilution [141]. However, when biocatalysis in deep eutectic
solvents by enzymes that are not isolated from but incorporated in viable
microorganisms is desired, the cytotoxic properties of these solvents is a disad-
vantage. This could be overcome by a freeze-drying procedure, as had been applied
in the case of Escherichia coli TG1.pPBG11 bacteria incorporated into Glyceline
[93]. Maline was found to be effective for inhibiting the growth and b-lactamase
production by Bacillus cereus EMB20 [142]. Selected issues related to the toxicity
of deep eutectic solvents were reviewed in [143]. The question whether deep
eutectic solvents are more toxic than their ingredient or less toxic depends on the
individual solvents and has no general answer.
The biodegradability of deep eutectic solvents was studied in [132] and in [135],
the conclusion is that they are generally biodegradable, but a dissenting opinion was
published in [138], and the necessity to study this aspect further was voiced in
[137].
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Chapter 4
Applications of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Since their advent in 2003, deep eutectic solvents have found applications in
numerous fields where their properties as solvents, permitting the dissolution of a
large variety of solutes, and their being “green”, i.e., ecologically friendly as
described in Chap. 1, gave them advantages over more conventional solvents. It is
possible in the present chapter to present only examples of the numerous appli-
cations that have been proposed over less than a score of years that have passed
since the first publication regarding the deep eutectic solvents. Deep eutectic sol-
vents (among other neoteric ones) have recently been reviewed for their use as
green and sustainable solvents in chemical processes [1].
An application that cannot be classified under the headings of the following
sections nor under those in Chap. 5 is the preparation of solid composite elec-
trolytes for lithium/lithium-ion batteries. The deep eutectic solvent comprises 1:4
lithium bis(trifluorometanesulfonyl)imide as the hydrogen bond acceptor and N-
methylacetamide as the hydrogen bond donor. This liquid was mixed with 1:8.7
tetraethoxysilane and formic acid in a sol–gel process, to form the so-called
eutectogel as the battery electrolyte that is thermally stable to 130 °C and elec-
trochemically stable up to 4.8 V [2].
The use of deep eutectic solvents as reaction media is predicated on their being able
to dissolve the reactants and any catalyst that is to be used, on their not being
consumed in the reaction, on the ability to recover the product(s) of the reaction,
and on the ability to recycle the solvent and catalyst, if used. With these conditions
in mind, deep eutectic solvents have been chosen due to their being inexpensive,
readily produced, and readily (bio)degradable, i.e., being “green”. When
commercially available DESs have been used as reaction media, they are noted in
the following by their commercial names, as referred to in Chap. 2: Reline,
Ethaline, Glyceline, and Maline.
Several reports for the use of deep eutectic solvents in the synthesis of inorganic
materials have been published, many of them under the heading of “ionothermal
synthesis”. Metal oxides are soluble in DES based on choline chloride: Reline,
Ethaline, and Maline [3]. The latter shows the largest solubility of metal oxides,
being >0.5 mass% at 50 °C for V2O5, CrO3, MnO, Mn2O3, FeO, and Co3O4, and
>1.4 mass% for Cu2O, CuO, and ZnO. Appreciable but lower solubilities are
manifested in Maline by CoO, Fe3O4, V2O3, Fe2O3, and NiO. In Reline appreciable
solubilities have V2O3, CrO3, and ZnO, whereas in Ethaline the solubilities of metal
oxides are generally small, except for Cu2O and ZnO. The solutions have the metal
ions complexed with chloride anions and may be used for the preparation of other
complexes and compounds based on the metal ions. In a previous paper [4], sol-
ubilities at 50 °C of CuO, Fe3O4, and ZnO in Maline, and in choline chloride 1:1
with oxalic acid and 1:2 with phenylpropanoic acid were reported. When
CuCl22H2O is dissolved in a series of DES (at 0.02 mol dm−3), it forms trans-
parent colored solutions ranging from yellow (in Ethaline) through yellowish-green
(in Reline), blue (in Ethaline with added NH3) to purplish blue (in Ethaline with
added ethylenediamine) [5]. Lead oxide is added to the 3d elements dealt with
above, and the solubilities of ZnO, Cu2O, and PbO2 in Reline at 60 °C, which are
considerably larger than those of other metal oxides present in electric arc furnace
dust, are described [6, 7] and this DES may be used for their processing.
Ionothermal synthesis of various inorganic materials in deep eutectic solvents
that are liquid at room temperature has often been reported. A feature of the
ionothermal synthesis is the structure directing ability of the eutectic solvent
mixture, besides acting as the solvent. A list of such applications is presented in
Table 4.1.
Eutectic mixtures based on choline chloride with various urea derivatives
(1,3-dimethylurea, 2-imidazolone (1,2-ethyleneurea), and tetrahydro-2-
pyrimidinone (1,3-propyleneurea)) have been employed for the production of alu-
minum phosphates [8], the urea derivative decomposed during the reaction and
provided the template for the desired structure of the product. A layered gallium
phosphate was prepared in an eutectic mixture consisting of choline chloride and
imidazolidone [9] or tetrahydro-2-pyrimidinone [10] as a solvent and as a structure
directing agent. Cobalt aluminophosphates were prepared by ionothermal synthesis
in eutectic mixtures of choline chloride with succinic and glutaric acids (at 1:1
ratios) and with citric acid (at a 1:2 ratio) [11].
Novel vanadium fluorides and oxyfluorides were synthesized in a deep eutectic
solvent based on choline chloride and 1,3-dimethylurea or 2-imidazolone
(1,2-ethyleneurea) in the presence of hydrogen fluoride [12]. However, these
template producing solvents are not proper deep eutectic solvents as defined in this
book, since they are not liquid at room temperature and because a component of the
solvent, the urea derivative, is consumed in the structure directing reaction. Only
the eutectic formed from tetramethylammonium bromide and 1,3-dimethylurea,
4.1 Applications as Reaction Media 113
among those tested in the study [8], has a melting point <25 °C and is a proper deep
eutectic solvent.
There is an extensive list of reports dealing with the production of organic
compounds in deep eutectic solvents, a subject that has also been reviewed in
several publications [13–23]. These all stress the “green” aspect of the deep eutectic
solvents: environmental friendliness, sustainability, biodegradability, as well as
their direct utility in metal-catalyzed or non-catalyzed organic reactions.
Biocatalysis by means of enzymes was another feature that was pointed out in these
reviews [14, 16] and elsewhere [24–26].
The reactions that were reported as using deep eutectic solvents were Lewis
acid-catalyzed dehydration of carbohydrates, hydrogenation of olefins, isomeriza-
tion, cycloaddition to terminal azides and alkynes, and cross-coupling [16] as well
as replacement, condensation and oxidation, and reduction reactions [18]. The
synthesis of heterocyclic compounds as well as esterification and halogenation
reactions in deep eutectic solvents featured in [23]. The hydrogen bond accepting
(HBA) components of the deep eutectic solvents dealt with in these reviews
114 4 Applications of Deep Eutectic Solvents
media [29, 30], metal catalysis [16, 17, 19, 31–34], stereo- or enantioselectivity
[35–38], and biocatalysis [20, 24, 39–43].
Catalysis by the deep eutectic solvents themselves or as enzyme-friendly media
has been stressed in some further publications, where, for instance, Candida
116 4 Applications of Deep Eutectic Solvents
antarctica lipase A (CALA) and Escherichia coli TG1/pPBG11 are active in deep
eutectic solvents [25, 44]. The activity, stability, and structure of the enzyme lactase
from Bacillus HR03 in betaine-based natural deep eutectic solvents were studied in
[26].
The eutectic solvent prepared from 1:2 choline chloride with zinc chloride is the
solvent as well as the catalyst for transesterification reactions for biodiesel pro-
duction [45]. It was also effective for the cycloaddition reaction of organic nitriles
with sodium azide [46] and for acylation of secondary alcohols, phenols, and
naphthols [47]. Deep eutectic solvents consisting of choline chloride with urea,
glycerol, or p-toluene sulfonic acid act as both solvents and catalysts [48]. Deep
eutectic solvents consisting of benzyltrimethylammonium chloride with p-toluene
sulfonic acid, citric acid, or oxalic acid act as both solvent and catalyst in the
esterification of acetic acid with butanol [49] or with 2-ethylhexanol [50]. Selective
alkylation of imines and quinolines with organolithium reagents could be carried
out fast at room temperature and in the presence of air in Glyceline solvent [51].
Deep eutectic solvents are also used for the preparation of heterogeneous cata-
lysts used in catalytic reactions. Metallic gold with a large surface area is featured in
several publications. Gold nanowire networks were prepared in Reline and in
Ethaline, and were used in the catalytic reduction of 4-nitroaniline [52].
Monodisperse gold microparticles were prepared in Maline and used in the
reduction of 4-nitrophenol [53]. Gold nanoparticles on a titania support were pre-
pared in Reline and used in the selective hydrogenation of butadiene as catalysts
[54]. Gold nanofoams were prepared in Ethaline and used in the reduction of
aromatic nitro-compounds [55]. Molybdenum oxide catalyst for the upgrading of
heavy crude oil was dissolved in Reline [56]. Reline was used for the preparation of
nickel and nickel nitride nanoparticles used in catalytic reactions [57]. A sulfonic
acid functionalized nanocatalyst based on a magnetic Fe3O4 on silica and titania
surfaces was prepared in Reline [58]. A palladium catalyst with a pyridinophos-
phine ligand, usable in cross-coupling reactions, was successfully prepared in
Reline [59]. A cross-dehydrogenative coupling reaction using copper oxide
impregnated on magnetite as catalyst was carried out in Ethaline [60].
In those cases in which either the hydrogen bond accepting (HBA) or the
hydrogen bond donating (HBD) component of the deep eutectic solvent is a
monomer capable of polymerization, functional polymeric materials can result from
free-radical polymerization, in this kind of solvent as well as of the solvent itself.
An example of the monomeric HBA is choline methacrylate bromide at 2:1 with
malonic acid and an example of the monomeric HBD is acrylamide at 1:2 with
choline chloride forming the solvent [61]. Choline chloride was polymerized with
methacrylic acid (1:2) while incorporating magnetite in order to produce a magnetic
molecularly imprinted polymer for the selective recognition and separation of
bovine hemoglobin [62]. Deep eutectic solvents were also used as reaction media
for the production of molecularly imprinted polymers of which the solvent was not
a monomer [63].
4.2 Biomass and Biodiesel Processes 117
fiber gradually passing into a colloidal solution, but solutions boiling above or
below these limits are not solvents for cellulose [77]. A 59 mass% solution dis-
solved cellulose at 120 °C, the solution turning to a porous gel on cooling [78].
A solution of calcium thiocyanate in water at 59 mass%, a composition corre-
sponding to the hexahydrate, produced aerogels on the dissolution of the cellulose
[69]. A lower concentration, >48.5 mass%, corresponding to the tetra- (or lower)
hydrate was able to dissolve cellulose [79] and changes in the structure of
wood pulp take place at 55 mass% concentration of this salt [80], whereas NaSCN
at 60 mass% was rather ineffective for the dissolution [81].
Aqueous lithium salts are other media used for the dissolution and processing of
cellulose. Molten lithium perchlorate trihydrate and iodide dihydrate, which do
form deep eutectic solvents (see Chap. 2), yield transparent but viscous solutions of
cellulose [82, 83]. In addition to these lithium salts, also the molten thiocyanate
dihydrate dissolves cellulose [84]. Molten lithium acetate, chloride, and nitrate are
not effective for the dissolution, although they do cause swelling of the cellulose
[72, 84, 85]. On the contrary, molten lithium bromide hydrate, or the aqueous
solution at 54–60 mass%, is quite effective for this purpose [86, 87].
Dissolution of cellulose in hydroxide media is possible but less effective than the
aqueous salt media mentioned above. Dissolution in 8.5 mass% aqueous sodium
hydroxide required hydrothermal and ethanol–acid pretreatments [88] and when
applied to rice husks aqueous alkalis are able to dissolve the lignin (and the silica)
but not the cellulose, whereas the latter can be dissolved in aqueous tetrapropyl- and
tetrabutylammonium hydroxide [89].
No dissolution but in some cases fine dispersion and swelling was observed in
several molten salt hydrates, including LiCH3CO22H2O, LiNO33H2O, Na2SH2O,
NaCH3CO23H2O, MgCl26H2O, CaCl26H2O, Al(NO3)318H2O, and Zn
(NO3)26H2O. The dissolution of cellulose in molten salt hydrates, summarized in
Table 4.3, was reviewed in [90, 91], where the solvents were also used as reaction
media for carboxymethylation and for acetylation of the dissolved cellulose.
Conventional deep eutectic solvents have also been tested as pretreatment agents
of cellulose for various processes. Glyceline pretreatment was more effective than
the use of Reline or the choline acetate/glycerol eutectic for subsequent enzymatic
hydrolysis [91]. Reline was used, however, for studying the dissolution of cellulose
fibers or their chemical derivatization [92]. Hydrothermal pretreatment of date palm
residues served for the reduction of the recalcitrance of this biomass for dissolution
in Glyceline and subsequent enzymatic digestion [93]. Microwave assistance was
useful for the fractionation of lignocellulose in choline chloride/lactic acid deep
eutectic solvent [94]. Lignin could be solubilized in a deep eutectic solvent con-
sisting of betaine/lactic acid and be subsequently transformed into uniform
nanoparticles [95]. Lignocellulosic biomass processing was tested with some deep
eutectic solvents, such as those using betaine or choline chloride as the hydrogen
bond accepting components and lactic, malic, oxalic, and other acids as the
hydrogen bond donating components [96–98]. Of these, only the 1:2 betaine/lactic
acid and 1:10 choline chloride/lactic acid were markedly effective, and only lignin
but not starch nor cellulose were dissolved. In a two-stage process, using choline
4.2 Biomass and Biodiesel Processes 119
chloride/oxalic acid in the first stage and Reline in the second, rice straw was
effectively pretreated for enzymatic hydrolysis [99].
Biodiesel, referring to diesel fuel based on vegetable oil or animal fat, consists of
methyl, ethyl, or propyl esters of long-chain alkyl carboxylic acids. It is typically
made by chemically reacting lipids, such as vegetable oil, soybean oil, or animal fat
(tallow), in a suitable solvent with an alcohol. A by-product of such reactions is
glycerol that should be separated from the fuel, and deep eutectic solvents have
been proposed for this task. The 1:1 mixtures of glycerol with choline chloride (i.e.,
not Glyceline, the 1:2 mixture), chloroethyltrimethylammonium chloride, and
ethylammonium chloride were effective for the removal of the glycerol on biodiesel
production from soybean and rapeseed oils [100]. Glyceline was tested for this
purpose for biodiesel produced from palm oil [101]. More effective than Glyceline
for this purpose were Ethaline and the choline chloride/trifluoroacetamide deep
eutectic solvents [102] or those based on methyltriphenylphosphonium bromide
with ethylene glycol or triethylene glycol [103]. Artificial neuron networks were
employed in order to predict the efficiency of the removal of glycerol from the
produced biodiesel and showed that phosphonium-based solvents were superior in
this respect to ammonium-based ones [104]. Indeed, allyltriphenylphosphonium
bromide/p-toluenesulfonic acid was the preferred medium for the esterification of
oleic acid with glycerol to produce di- and triclycerides [105].
120 4 Applications of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Another aspect of biodiesel production is the catalyst used for the esterification
reaction. The same phosphonium solvent, namely, allyltriphenylphosphonium
bromide/p-toluenesulfonic acid served well as a catalyst for the production of the
methyl ester from crude palm oil [106]. Low-grade crude palm oil with a high fatty
acid content could be effectively processed in diethylethanolammonium chloride/p-
toluenesulfonic acid deep eutectic that acted both as solvent and as catalyst for the
transesterification [107]. Whereas the glycerol-based deep eutectic solvents,
Glyceline and methyltriphenylphosphonium bromide/glycerol, were not very
effective for the elimination of glycerol from the biodiesel [101–103], they proved
effective for the removal of the residual potassium hydroxide catalyst employed for
the transesterification reaction [108].
Most of these reports dealt with biodiesel production from crude palm oil, but
there are, of course, many other vegetable oil and animal fat sources for biodiesel
fuel production. It ought to be mentioned that the waste glycerol from the biodiesel
production is valuable as a component of deep eutectic solvents [109]. Rapeseed oil
was treated in Glyceline as the solvent with a calcium oxide [110] or with sodium
hydroxide catalyst [111] for the production of biodiesel. The oil from the Indian
beech tree Pongamia pinnata was trans-esterified by methanol in the presence of
sodium hydroxide catalyst in the 1:2 choline chloride/oxalic acid deep eutectic
solvent [112]. Soybean oil was used for biodiesel preparation by transesterification
with propanol or butanol, rather than the commonly used methanol, in choline
chloride/glycerol and /ethylene glycol solvents at various compositions and with
sodium alkoxide catalysis [113]. The 1:2 choline chloride/zinc chloride mixture is
liquid at 25 °C and is an effective solvent for the preparation of biodiesel from
soybean oil [114]. The high Lewis acidity of the mixture is conducive for the
transesterification reaction. The influence of the type and purification of animal fat
on the quality of the biodiesel produced from it in Ethaline was studied in [115].
Enzymatic catalysis was also applied to biodiesel production in deep eutectic
solvents. Millettia pinnata seed oil was treated in a choline acetate/glycerol deep
eutectic solvent with a suitable enzyme as the catalyst to produce biodiesel [116]
the acetate eutectic being more effective than the commonly used chloride one. This
was not the case for the enzymatic preparation of biodiesel from soybean oils,
where the chloride eutectic was more efficient than the acetate one [117]. Both
rapeseed oil and used acidic cooking oil were the sources for the enzymatic syn-
thesis of biodiesel in Reline and Glyceline as solvents [118]. Yellow horn seed oil
was the source for enzyme-catalyzed preparation of biodiesel in deep eutectic
solvents, assisted by microwave irradiation, Glyceline proving to be the most
efficient among the choline chloride-based solvents tested [119].
A microalgal biomass could be pretreated with aqueous choline chloride/oxalic
acid (40 vol% water) or aqueous Ethaline (24 vol% water) to recover the lipid
content for subsequent conversion to biodiesel [120]. The role of the water was to
reduce the viscosity of the deep eutectic solvent. The same biomass was treated in a
1:3 choline chloride/acetic acid eutectic solvent to extract the lipid and convert it to
diesel oil in a one-step process [121], this composition being more effective than
those with formic, oxalic, and malonic acids.
4.2 Biomass and Biodiesel Processes 121
The use of deep eutectic solvents for biodiesel production was reviewed in [122]
and more recently in [123] and the results are summarized in Table 4.4.
From their earliest use as solvents, the deep eutectic fluids were found to dissolve
metal oxides (see Sect. 4.1), and then the route to their use as electrolytes for metal
electroplating was opened. Two deep eutectic solvents, now commercially available
but readily prepared from their ingredients: Reline and Ethaline, have by far found
the widest applications, as shown in Tables 4.5 and 4.6.
Electrochemical methods of investigation, cyclic voltammetry, and chronoam-
perometry have been extensively used for studying the electrodeposition of metals
from deep eutectic solvents. The rate of nucleation is one aspect that has been
studied, and its effect on the morphology of the deposited metals has been
determined.
122 4 Applications of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Table 4.5 Metals, metal alloys, and metal composites electrodeposition from Reline
Metal(s) Additional features Ref.
Ag Mechanism of nucleation [318]
Thin film, nanoparticles [129]
Comparison with aqueous process [124]
Underpotential deposition [130]
Au Thin film, nanoparticles [318]
Shape-controlled nanocrystals [131]
Au–Mn Spectroscopic characterization [319]
Co, Co–Sm Magnetic deposits [143]
Co–Pt Magnetic film [144]
Co–Sm Magnetic film, nanowires [132]
Cu Also Al2O3, SiC composites [152]
Cu(I) stabilization in solution [297, 320]
Nanoporous film [133]
Dissolution of CuO [321]
Underpotential deposition [322]
Structural characterization [164]
Cu–Ga Precursor for CuGaS2 [147, 148]
Precursor for Cu(InGa)S2 [149]
Cu–Ga–In Precursor for Cu(InGa)S2 [150, 323]
Cu–In Precursor for CuInSe2 [324]
Cu–Sn–Zn Precursor for CZTS solar cells [151]
Cu–Zn Dissolution of CuO, ZnO [325]
Alloy film [134]
Ga Electrodeposition [147]
In Subsequent phosphoridation to InP [326, 327]
Ni Nanostructures [135]
Electrodeposition [328]
Electrodeposition [173]
Electrodeposition of nanostructures [329]
Pb Dissolution of PbO, submicrometer wires, powder [330, 331]
Dissolution of PbO, PbO2, PbSO4 [155]
Nanoparticle aggregation [332]
Pd Nanoparticles [136]
Nanoparticles, thin film [129]
Shape control of deposited crystals [333]
Pt Nanoflowers for catalysis [137]
Nanocrystals [138]
Sm Electrodeposition [143]
Sn Electrodeposition [163]
Zn Metal nucleation [334]
(continued)
4.3 Metal Electrodeposition and Electropolishing 123
Table 4.6 Metals, metal alloys, and metal composites electrodeposition from Ethaline
Metal(s) Additional features Ref.
Ag Application of quartz microbalance [343]
Thin film, nanoparticles [129]
Underpotential deposition [130]
Composites with Al2O3 and SiC [153]
Iodine-assisted extracted from ores [125]
Nanoparticles on a glassy carbon support [187]
Ag–Co Magnetic multilayers [145]
As Electrodeposition [344]
Au Thin film, nanoparticles [297]
Iodine-assisted extracted from ores [125]
Au+ speciation [181]
Bi From chlorometalate salts [345]
Bi–Sn From chlorometalate salts [345]
Effect of boric acid [346]
Cd–Zn Coatings [347]
Co–Cr Structure, corrosion resistance [348]
Co–Fe Magnetic films [146]
Co–Fe–Ni Films [139]
Co–Ni Concentration dependence [349]
Co–Ni–Sn Microstructure, use as cathode [349]
Co–Sm Films [350]
Co–Sn Microstructure, use as cathode [351]
Enhanced corrosion resistance [352]
Cu Composites with Al2O3 and SiC [152]
Dissolution of CuO [321]
(continued)
124 4 Applications of Deep Eutectic Solvents
Silver nanoparticles, of narrow size distribution around 4.5 nm, were prepared
and dispersed in Reline by laser ablation of a metallic silver plate [188]. Reports on
other non-electrochemical nanostructured metals dealt with gold. Shape-controlled
(star-shaped) gold nanoparticles were prepared in Reline by reduction of HAuCl4
with ascorbic acid at room temperature [189]. A low energy sputter deposition of
gold in Reline resulted in spherical gold nanoparticles of 5 nm diameter that tended
to self-assemble at the surface of the liquid and in the bulk as well [190]. The
self-assembly of the gold nanoparticles in Reline was also studied in [191, 192].
Gold microparticles with surface roughness of controlled monodisperse diameters
of 1–5 lm were prepared in the Maline deep eutectic solvent by reduction of
HAuCl4 with ascorbic acid at 50 °C [53]. High-index facetted gold nanocrystals
with enhanced electrocatalytic activities were produced in Reline [193]. Gold
nanowire networks with average widths of 17 and 23 nm were prepared by
reduction of HAuCl4 with NaBH4 in Reline and in Ethaline [52]. Gum Arabic was
used to stabilize gold nanosheets [194] and nanoparticles [195], the deep eutectic
solvent in the latter study consisting of 4:1:1 choline chloride, glycerol, and gallic
acid (3,4,5-trihydroxybenzoic acid) and HAuCl4 was the source of the gold. Gold
nanofoams were produced in Ethaline by reduction of HAuCl4 on a zinc foil [55].
Gold nanoparticles supported on functionalized nanosilica were produced in Reline
for use as an electrochemical enzymatic glucose biosensor [196]. Titania-supported
gold nanoparticles were prepared in 2:3 choline chloride/urea mixtures (not the 1:2
mixture, Reline) [54]. Gold–palladium core–shell nanoparticles were prepared on a
graphite rod in a deep eutectic solvent [197]. Most of the applications of the gold
nanoparticles described in this paragraph were in catalysis, although in one case, the
gum Arabic stabilized nanoparticles, were used as an X-ray contrast agent [195].
Carbon nanotube-supported platinum–cobalt nanocrystallites were prepared in
Ethaline, which showed enhanced methanol electrooxidation performance [198].
High-index facetted platinum concave nanocubes were grown on multi-walled
carbon nanotubes in Reline [199]. Self-supported films consisting of nickel–
molybdenum microspheres were produced electrochemically in Ethaline [200].
The preparation of inorganic oxide nanostructures in deep eutectic solvents has
received an extensive amount of work. Mesoporous silica spheres, useful as
packing materials in size-exclusion chromatography, were prepared in deep eutectic
solvents consisting of Reline (with possible presence of arginine) [201] and in 1:1
ammonium fluoride as the hydrogen bond accepting component and ethylene
glycol, 1,2-butanediol, or glycerol as the hydrogen bond donating one [202].
Self-organized titania “nanobamboos” were prepared in a deep eutectic solvent
consisting of 1:1 choline chloride and succinic acid by anodic dissolution of tita-
nium. The “nanobamboos” are nanotubes decorated with periodic exterior rings
[203]. Titania nanosized powder was produced by anodization of titanium in Reline
or in Ethaline in the presence of tetrabutylammonium bromide and ethanol [204].
The synthesis of nanostructured titania in deep eutectic solvents as well as in room
temperature ionic liquids was recently reviewed in [205]. The synthesis of
128 4 Applications of Deep Eutectic Solvents
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Chapter 5
Deep Eutectic Solvents in Extraction
and Sorption Technology
Deep eutectic solvents have been used extensively for the extraction and separation
of a great variety of substances from diverse media. Several review papers deal with
the development of deep eutectic solvents for using them for extraction purposes
[1–3]. Deep eutectic solvents have been tailor-made for extractive purposes by
combining choline chloride, betaine, or proline with glycerol or sucrose, forming
sustainable and effective extraction media [4]. Solid-phase extraction media were
produced on silica supports by chloroethyltrimethylammonium chloride (chloro-
choline)/urea [5] and by choline chloride with various commonly used hydrogen
bond donating agents modifying graphene and graphene oxide [6]. Special tech-
niques have been used for extraction with deep eutectic solvents, namely, dispersive
microextraction and anti-extraction. In the former of these, the deep eutectic solvent
was water-immiscible 1:2 choline chloride/4-chlorophenol, which was injected by
aid of a dispersive agent (acetonitrile) into the aqueous solution from which the
analytes were extracted into the centrifugally sedimented layer of the cloudy
mixture produced [7]. The other method involved choline chloride, tetramethy-
lammonium chloride, or tetraethylammonium chloride with phenol to first extract
phenolic compounds from neutral oil, but the entrained oil in the deep eutectic
solvent was subsequently removed by an alkane (hexane) anti-solvent [8].
Biphasic aqueous/immiscible solvent extraction systems involving deep eutectic
solvents have been proposed in several publications. Hydrophobic deep eutectic
solvents have been prepared for this purpose, for instance, one based on menthol
with a carboxylic (acetic, pyruvic, lactic, or lauric) acid [9]. Tetraalkylammonium
chlorides (alkyl: butyl, heptyl, octyl), tetraoctylammonium bromide, and methyl-
trioctylammonium chloride or bromide form with decanoic acid hydrophobic deep
eutectic solvents that can be used in biphasic extraction [10]. The water-immiscible
deep eutectic solvent phase is produced in situ when choline chloride and
4-chlorophenol at a 1:2 molar ratio are dissolved in the aqueous medium and
heated. This phase separates out from the cloudy mixture and contains the analytes
to be separated [11]. Polypropylene glycol with a mean molar mass of 400 g mol−1
(PPG-400) has been used with the otherwise hydrophilic deep eutectic solvents
© Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2019 153
Y. Marcus, Deep Eutectic Solvents,
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-00608-2_5
154 5 Deep Eutectic Solvents in Extraction and Sorption Technology
composed of choline chloride with urea, acetic, glycolic, lactic, or citric acid to
produce the water-immiscible phase in a biphasic extraction system [12]. Aqueous
biphasic systems involving deep eutectic solvents based on choline chloride with
urea, ethylene glycol, glycerol, and lactic acid and on betaine with urea are men-
tioned as analytical applications in [13] and that based on choline chloride with
sugars is mentioned in [14], in spite of the hydrophilic nature of the components.
The solute (vanillin, b-ionone, or tocopherol) partitioning in biphasic systems based
on choline chloride/or betaine/levulinic acid deep eutectic solvents and on mixtures
of heptane and an alkanol or acetonitrile, using the predictive thermodynamic
model COSMO-RS, was described in [15].
The performance of a polyethylene sulfone ultrafiltration membrane was
improved by impregnation of it with a 1:2 tetrabutylammonium chloride/decanoic
acid deep eutectic solvent [16].
The desulfurization of liquid fuels and oils is a major area of investigation to which
deep eutectic solvents have been turned. The removal of sulfur compounds, in
particular, thiophene and dibenzothiophene from model and simulated hydrocarbon
fuels, was studied in [17–26]. Liquid fuel modeled by n-heptane containing thio-
phene was extracted by deep eutectic solvents comprising tetrabutylammonium
bromide with 1:4 ethylene glycol or triethylene glycol and with 1:7 sulfolane and
by methyltriphenylphosphonium bromide with 1:4 ethylene glycol. The
sulfolane-containing mixture proved to be the most efficient for the removal of the
thiophene [17]. Liquid fuel modeled by n-octane containing thiophene, benzoth-
iophene, or dibenzothiophene was extracted by deep eutectic solvents comprising
1:1 tetrabutylammonium bromide with formic, acetic, propanoic, oxalic, malonic,
or adipic acids, of which the one involving formic acid proved to be the most
efficient for the removal of the sulfur compounds [18]. Dibenzothiophene was
extracted from a liquid fuel modeled by a mixture of i-octane, n-decane, c-hexane,
and toluene by the deep eutectic solvent 1:2 tetrabutylammonium bromide/
polyethyleneglycol PEG-200 [19]. Extraction of dibenzothiophene from model oil
simulated by n-octane was achieved with a deep eutectic solvent consisting of
choline chloride/trifluoromethanesulfonic acid at various molar ratios [20].
Extraction of benzothiophene and/or methylthiophene from model oil simulated by
n-octane was studied with deep eutectic solvents in which tetrabutylammonium,
tetramethylammonium, or choline chlorides served as the hydrogen bond accepting
components and ethylene glycol, tetraethylene glycol, polyethylene glycol (un-
specified molar mass), glycerol, and malonic acid as the hydrogen bond donating
components [21, 22]. The combination of tetrabutylammonium chloride with
ethylene glycol [21] or with polyethylene glycol [22] was the most efficient
extractant. Glyceline or 2:3 choline acetate/glycerol featured in a microextraction
study of the removal of dibenzothiophene from liquid fuels modeled by n-octane or
5.1 Desulfurization and Denitrification of Fuels 155
n-dodecane [23]. Choline chloride analogs with butyl, octyl, dodecyl, and benzyl
groups replacing one methyl group attached to the nitrogen combined with 1:1 iron
(III) chloride were used as deep eutectic solvents for the desulfurization of the
model fuel n-octane [24]. Deep eutectic solvents consisting of 1:2 tetrahexylam-
monium bromide with ethylene glycol or glycerol were used for the extraction of
thiophene from hexane and octane, and the results were correlated by means of the
nonrandom two liquid (NRTL) model [25]. Glyceline was used with dodecane and
biodiesel to extract dibenzothiophene and its oxidation product, and the spent deep
eutectic solvent was regenerated for further extraction cycles [26]. Nonconventional
deep eutectic solvents, composed of 1:2 tetrabutylphosphonium bromide and
anhydrous iron(III) chloride (tm = 15.7 °C), were used for desulfurization of n-
octane as well as of commercial diesel fuels [27, 28]. A commercial gasoline was
desulfurized by means of extraction with N-butylpyridinium bromide/malonic acid
deep eutectic solvent. Other dicarboxylic acids, succinic, glutaric, and adipic acids,
were also tested as the hydrogen bond donation agents, but were less efficient [29].
Oxidative/extractive desulfurization processes were described in [26, 30–37].
Choline or tetrabutylammonium chlorides with p-toluenesulfonic acid deep eutectic
solvents were used to remove benzothiophene from n-octane and real fuels after
oxidation with hydrogen peroxide [30]. Deep eutectic solvents comprising 1:2
choline chloride/carboxylic acids (formic to pentanoic) were used with a model oil
(unspecified) to remove thiophene derivatives by photochemical air oxidation
catalyzed by isobutanal [31]. Deep eutectic solvents comprising 1:2 choline
chloride/polyols as well as Reline and Maline were used with hydrogen peroxide
and phosphotungstic acid catalysis to remove thiophene derivatives from n-octane,
the PEG 200 hydrogen bond donating (HBD) agent [32] or the glycerol HBD [26]
being the most effective. Ethaline was the deep eutectic solvent used with hydrogen
peroxide oxidative extraction using a vanadium substituted phosphotungstate cat-
alyst for the desulfurization of a model fuel composed of isooctane and toluene
[33]. An unconventional deep eutectic solvent, consisting of zinc chloride as the
hydrogen bond accepting component and phenylpropanoic acid as the HBD com-
ponent, and hydrogen peroxide were used for the oxidative extractive desulfur-
ization of n-octane as the model fuel with no additional catalyst being required [34].
A deep eutectic solvent consisting of 1:2 tetrabutylammonium chloride and oxalic
acid proved to be a useful extractant for the oxidative desulfurization of diesel oil
with hydrogen peroxide with practical recycling of the extractant [35]. Another
deep eutectic solvent consisting of 1:2 zinc chloride and propanoic acid was used
for the oxidative extraction with hydrogen peroxide of dibenzothiophene from
octane as the model oil, with good results even after five cycles of use [36]. Still
another extractant consisted of 1:2 proline with p-toluenesulfonic acid for the
hydrogen peroxide oxidative desulfurization of model diesel oil with recycling of
the extractant [37].
Catalytic oxidative desulfurization of liquid fuels, using polyoxometalate cata-
lysts and extraction with deep eutectic solvents, was studied in [38–40]. Tris[tri-
ethyl(3-propylsulfonic acid)ammonium)] phosphotungstae, [Et3(C3H7SO3H)
N+]3PW12O403−, was the catalyst in 1:2 choline chloride/acetic acid deep eutectic
156 5 Deep Eutectic Solvents in Extraction and Sorption Technology
solvent for the oxidative desulfurization of diesel oil with hydrogen peroxide [38].
A cholinium-sodium polymolybdate catalyst/solvent was used for the oxidative
desulfurization of fuel oils with oxygen [39]. A different cholinium-alkali metal
iodo-polymolybdate catalyst was prepared in Reline and was used for the oxidative
desulfurization of octane model diesel oil with hydrogen peroxide and extraction
with 1-butyl- or 1-octyl-3-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate [40].
Polymer-based deep eutectic solvents consisting of 1:2 tetrabutylammonium
chloride/polyethylene glycols PEG 200 and PEG 600 were effective for the
desulfurization of a simulated diesel fuel consisting of c-hexane, i-octane, n-decane,
and toluene [41]. Magnetic deep eutectic solvents consisting of 1:2:1 choline
chloride/phenol/iron(III) chloride or 1:4:1 choline chloride/ethylene glycol/iron(III)
chloride were used for ultrasonic-assisted microextraction of thiophene from n-
heptane, the former solvent being nearly 100% effective [42].
The extractive denitrification of liquid fuels by deep eutectic solvents has been
studied considerably less than their desulfurization. The nitrogen compounds
studied in [43] included “basic” or five-membered rings: pyrole, indole, indoline,
carbazole, and benzocarbazole, and “non-basic” or six-membered rings: pyridine,
quinoline, and benzoquinoline. A large variety of deep eutectic solvents (a total of
94) were tested for extraction capacity and selectivity. Ammonium-based solvents
had higher selectivity but lower capacity than phosphonium-based ones that had
lower selectivities but larger capacities. The denitrification of n-hexadecane as a
model fuel was subsequently studied in greater detail, using 1:2 tetrabutylammo-
nium and tetrabutylphosphonium bromides/ethylene glycol as the solvents [44].
Both deep eutectic solvents were effective extractants, but the phosphonium-based
one was somewhat better. A deep eutectic solvent comprising 1:2 choline chloride/
phenylacetic acid was also very effective for removing cyclic organo-nitrogen
compounds from n-heptane [45].
The variety of deep eutectic solvents used for the desulfurization of liquid fuels
or for the extraction of thiophene and its derivatives (mainly dibenzothiophene)
from alkanes simulating such fuels is summarized in Table 5.1.
Table 5.1 Deep eutectic solvents used for the desulfurization of liquid fuels
Hydrogen bond accepting Hydrogen bond donating (HBD Ref.
(HBA) component component
Choline chloride 1,2-ethanediol (Ethaline) [33, 42]
Gycerol (Glyceline) [30]
Polyethylene glycol [23, 26]
Carboxylic acids [31, 38,
45]
Urea, malonic acid [32]
Trifluoromethanesulfonic acid [20]
p-toluenesulfonic acid [21]
Choline acetate Glycerol [23]
(continued)
5.2 Extraction of/from Hydrocarbons and Oils 157
The removal of phenol and phenolic compounds from oils by means of deep
eutectic solvents has received some attention. Deep eutectic solvents based on
choline chloride with various hydrogen bond donating components as well as a
nonionic ternary solvent, 1:1:1 glucose/fructose/sucrose, were differently effective
for the extraction of the phenolic compounds tyrosol, hydroxytyrosol, oleacein, and
oleocanthal from virgin olive oil [46]. The extraction of phenol itself from
hydrocarbon fuels was accomplished by in situ conversion of the phenol with a
quaternary ammonium salt to a deep eutectic solvent immiscible with the fuel. The
salts that were effective were choline, tetramethylammonium, and tetraethylam-
monium chlorides [47, 48]. With toluene simulating the fuel, the phase equilibria
were studied in [47] and the mass transfer dynamics of the process were studied in
[48]. Deep eutectic solvents based on 1:3 betaine/phenol and carnitine
(3-hydroxy-4-trimethylaminobutanoic acid)/phenol extracted phenol from toluene
as a model oil [49]. The extraction of various phenolic compounds from vegetable
sources was reviewed in [50]. On the other hand, deep eutectic solvents having 2:1
mixtures of phenols (phenol, chlorophenol, and resorcinol) as the hydrogen bond
donating agent with choline chloride sorbed on magnetic bucky gels were used for
the microextraction of aromatic hydrocarbons from water and urine samples [51].
The phenolic content of model oil (toluene and phenol) or of coal tar oil was
158 5 Deep Eutectic Solvents in Extraction and Sorption Technology
Table 5.2 Deep eutectic solvents used for the extraction of hydrocarbons
Hydrogen bond accepting Hydrogen bond donating Ref.
(HBA) component (HBD) component
Choline chloride Urea (Reline) [55, 56, 59, 78]
1,2-ethanediol (Ethaline) [57, 58, 62, 66–68,
73]
1,2-propanediol [75]
Gycerol (Glyceline) [67, 75, 77]
Aliphatic carboxylic acids [53, 54, 62, 66, 68,
73–75]
Aromatic carboxylic acids [76]
Phenols [51]
Glucose [69]
Benzylcholine chloride Levulinic acid [74]
Tetraethylammonium chloride 1,2-ethanediol [71]
Glycerol [58, 71]
Aromatic carboxylic acids [76]
Phenol [47, 48]
Tetrabutylammonium chloride 1,2-ethanediol [71]
Levulinic acid [74]
Phenol [47, 48]
(continued)
5.2 Extraction of/from Hydrocarbons and Oils 159
Specific pairs of hydrocarbons are dealt with in the following papers. Benzene
and n-hexane are separated by means of extraction of the former by 1:4 or 1:6
methyltriphenylphosphonium bromide/ethylene glycol [59] or by 1:2 choline
chloride/glycerol or lactic acid [62]. The latter paper also deals with mixtures of
ethyl acetate and hexane, from which the former component is extracted into the
deep eutectic solvent. The liquid–liquid equilibrium data for ternary mixtures
involving benzene, hexane, and a deep eutectic solvent are described in [71], the
latter component consisting of tetramethyl-, tetraethyl-, tetrabutyl-, or tetrahexy-
lammonium chloride with ethylene glycol or glycerol. Ethylbenzene was separated
from n-octane by extraction with a deep eutectic solvent composed of tetrabuty-
lammonium bromide with ethylene glycol or pyridine or both [70]. Benzene was
effectively separated from n-hexane by extraction with 1:2 tetrahexylammonium
bromide with either ethylene glycol or glycerol [64]. Benzene was removed effi-
ciently from cyclohexane by extraction with 1:7 tetrabutylammonium bromide/
sulfolane, having been selected by a screening study of 40-deep eutectic solvents
using the COSMO-RS method [73]. Toluene is separated from n-heptane by
extraction with 1:4 deep eutectic solvents consisting of a variety of hydrogen bond
accepting components and lactic acid, ethylene glycol, or triethylene glycol as the
hydrogen bond donating one as well as with Reline and Maline. The selectivity for
toluene is enhanced by short side chains, a small central atom, and a large anion of
the hydrogen bond accepting component [66]. Tetrabutylphosphonium bromide
with levulinic acid was used to separate toluene from its mixtures with n-hexane or
cyclohexane [63]. The extractive separation of ethylbenzene from n-octane was
effectively carried out with a ternary deep eutectic solvent consisting of tetra-
butylammonium bromide with both ethylene glycol and pyridine, whereas with
only ethylene glycol the selectivity was high but the distribution ratio was low and
vice versa with only pyridine [65].
160 5 Deep Eutectic Solvents in Extraction and Sorption Technology
A quite different mode for the use of deep eutectic solvents in extraction applica-
tions is the selective extraction of metal ions, mainly for analytical purposes.
Copper, iron, nickel, and zinc can be determined in fish and other marine biological
samples by digestion with a choline chloride/oxalic acid solvent [80, 81]. Lead and
cadmium in edible oils were pre-concentrated for microextraction by deep eutectic
solvents consisting of Reline, Ethaline, or choline chloride/oxalic acid for subse-
quent analytical determination [82]. Alkali metal ions (Li, Na, K) and transition
metal ions (Mn, Fe, Cu, Ni, Cu, Zn) were extracted by means of the hydrophobic
deep eutectic solvent consisting of lidocaine decanoate/decanoic acid from aqueous
solutions for subsequent analytical determination [83]. Chromium(III) and
(VI) could be selectively extracted from aqueous environmental samples, based on
an ultrasound-assisted emulsification and microextraction method, with deep
eutectic solvents consisting of choline chloride/phenol at several molar ratios, or
tetrabutyl- or methyltrioctylammonium chloride/decanoic acid [84]. Copper was
determined in sediment samples by extraction with Reline or with choline chloride/
oxalic acid deep eutectic solvents [85]. Lead was extracted from blood samples by a
carrier-mediated hollow fiber liquid extraction method using Reline [86]. A deep
eutectic solvent consisting of 1:2 choline chloride/lactic acid was used to leach
metal ions from NdFeB magnets, and Fe and Cu were separated from Nd and Dy in
this solvent by extraction with liquid trioctylmethylammonium thiocyanate in
toluene [87]. A variety of elements could be determined in agricultural soil samples
by extraction with a choline chloride/oxalic acid deep eutectic solvent [88].
Aluminum was determined in water and food samples by ultrasound-assisted
emulsification and microextraction with the 1:4 choline chloride/phenol deep
eutectic solvent [89].
A different use of deep eutectic solvents for the extraction of metal ions is for
recovery rather than analysis. The recovery of cobalt from a choline chloride/lactic
acid deep eutectic solvent for battery recycling by means of extraction with several
organic extractant/diluent systems has been studied [90]. The recovery of cadmium,
cobalt, palladium, rhenium, and zinc in the system comprising of Aliquat 336
[methyl-tri(octyl/decyl)ammonium chloride] in an aromatic diluent + wet choline
chloride/lactic acid was studied as a function of the water content of the deep
eutectic solvent phase [91]. The recovery of lead and zinc from electric arc furnace
dust was described using choline-based solvents [92, 93]. Rare earth elements may
be leached and recovered from coal byproducts (not further specified) by Reline
[94]. These processes have not reached viable industrial use so far.
A further use of deep eutectic solvents is for the removal of toxic metallic
elements from food. Choline chloride-based natural deep eutectic solvents
(NADES) were effective for the removal of cadmium from rice flour, and the best
solvent was the 1:1:2 mixture with tartaric acid and water, combined with 1%
saponin surfactant [95].
162 5 Deep Eutectic Solvents in Extraction and Sorption Technology
A great deal of research has been directed toward the extraction of bioactive species
from natural sources by means of deep eutectic solvents, as recently reviewed [96–
98]. Deep eutectic solvents based on choline chloride, betaine, and proline with
various hydrogen bond donating agents were tested for the extraction of alkaloids
(efficiently) and anthraquinones (less so) from herbal medicines. The extraction of
flavonoids, saponins, and phenolic acids was also tested, and the extractability with
different solvents was correlated with their chemical and physical properties:
hydrogen bonding, polarity, acidity, and viscosity [96]. Choline chloride-based
deep eutectic solvents with various hydrogen bond donating agents were also used
for leaching of alkaloids, flavonoids, and catechins from plant materials (tea leaves)
after mechanochemical treatment [97]. Deep eutectic solvents based on choline
chloride (mainly) were also reviewed regarding their extraction of bioactive com-
pounds, including flavonoids, polysaccharides, proteins, and some other com-
pounds from both plant and animal sources [98].
Many more specific studies regarding the extraction of bioactive molecules from
various sources by means of deep eutectic solvents have also been published.
Natural deep eutectic solvents consisting of choline chloride/sugars or polyols as
well as some others have been used for the extraction of phenolic compounds from
safflower seed oil [99]. Deep eutectic solvents consisting of sugars and polyols as
the hydrogen bond donating agents with choline chloride and some other hydrogen
bond accepting agents were used for the extraction of flavonoids from Chinese
herbs [100]. Reline, Ethaline, Glyceline, and choline chloride/thiourea were the
deep eutectic solvents tested for the extraction of the antimalarial compound
glaucarubinone from the roots of an American tropical tree, the first of these sol-
vents being the most effective [101].
Phenolic compounds were extracted from industrial byproducts involving onions,
olives, tomatoes, and pears with deep eutectic solvents made up from a sugar (glucose
and fructose) and a hydroxycarboxylic acid (lactic and citric) [102]. Polyphenols and
furanocoumarins were extracted from Ficus carica L (fig leaves) by a nonionic deep
eutectic solvent made up from equimolar amounts of d-fructose, xylitol, and glycerol
[103]. Chrysoidine dyes, chrysoidine G, astrazon orange, and astrazon orange R, were
extracted from food samples with choline chloride-based deep eutectic solvents
assisted by ultrasound, the 1:3 choline chloride/ethylene glycol one being the most
efficient [104]. Polygodial was extracted from Pseudowintera colorata (Horopito)
leaves by 1:2 tetrabutylammonium chloride/1-dodecanol, which performed better
than some other deep eutectic solvents tested [105].
Chinese herbs yielding traditional Chinese medicines were subjected to extraction
with deep eutectic solvents in order to separate their active ingredients. The 1:1
choline chloride/1,2-propanediol solvent containing some water was used for the
microwave-assisted extraction of both hydrophilic and hydrophobic compounds from
the roots of Chinese red sage [106]. Choline chloride, betaine, and proline served as
the hydrogen bond accepting component with various hydrogen bond donating agents
5.4 Extraction of Bioactive Materials 163
for the extraction of flavonoid glycosides and aglycones from another kind of Chinese
herb, Platycladi cacumen [107]. The major flavone C-glycosides were extracted from
Cymbidium kanran with several deep eutectic solvents, the 1:4 choline chloride/
dipropylene glycol solvent being the most efficient [108]. The flavonoid quercetin was
extracted from Ginkgo biloba with deep eutectic solvents based on choline chloride
with polyols (1:2 to 1:5 with ethylene glycol, glycerol, and 1,4-butenediol), the one
with 1:3 choline chloride/glycerol being the most efficient [109]. The flavonoid rutin,
occurring in citrus fruit, was extracted from a Chinese medicinal herb with a ternary
deep eutectic solvent consisting of methyltriphenylphosphonium bromide/formic
acid/chalcone (1,3-diphenylprop-2-en-1-one) [110]. Rutin may be made more
bioavailable by its administration as a solution in natural deep eutectic solvents. Those
solvents, based on proline with either choline chloride or glutamic acid proved to be
the most effective, in terms of the solubility of rutin in them, among other solvents
based on amino acids or sugars [111, 112]. Anthraquinones were extracted from
rhubarb root with hydrophobic deep eutectic solvents based on choline chloride,
decyl-, dodecyl-, or tetradecylammonium bromide with highly acidic hexafluoroiso-
propanol as the hydrogen bond donating component from aqueous salt solutions
[113]. Polyprenyl acetates were extracted from Ginkgo biloba leaves by a deep
eutectic solvent comprising 1:2:3 methyltrioctylammonium chloride/1-octanol/
octanoic acid [114]. Bioactive compounds were extracted from Artemisia plants:
artemisinin from Artemisia annua with 1:4 methyltrioctylammonium chloride/
1-butanol [115] and rutin, quercetin, and scoparone from Artemisiae scorpariae with
1:2 choline chloride/formic acid (the most effective form among several other such
solvents) [116].
Catechins were extracted from green tea by a variety of both ionic and nonionic
eutectic solvents, and 4:20:1 betaine/glycerol/glucose proved to be the most
effective one [117]. The harmful ochratoxin A that contaminated wheat and derived
products could be determined effectively by extraction with Reline or Glyceline
[118]. Ferulic, caffeic, and cinnamic acids were subjected to ultrasound-assisted
microextraction with Ethaline or Glyceline from olive, almond, sesame, and cin-
namon oils (simulated by n-hexane) for subsequent HPLC-UV determination [119].
Volatile compounds, such as nicotine and solanone, were isolated from tobacco by
means of microwave-assisted microextraction with Reline or Ethaline [120].
Glyceline was used in a flow method for the extraction of procainamide from
human saliva for spectrofluorimetric determination [121]. Ethaline was used for the
ultrasonic-assisted extraction of sesamol from sesame oils [122].
The hydrophobic deep eutectic solvents tetrabutylammonium chloride or men-
thol with a carboxylic acid (acetic, pyruvic, levulinic, butanoic, hexanoic, octanoic,
and dodecanoic acids) were used in two-phase aqueous extractions to remove
pesticides (acetamprid, imidacloprid, nitenpyram, and thiamethoxam) from aqueous
environments [123]. Volatile carboxylic acids (acetic, propanoic, and butanoic) can
be extracted from aqueous solutions by means of hydrophobic deep eutectic sol-
vents consisting of tetraalkylammonium chloride or bromide (alkyl = butyl, heptyl,
164 5 Deep Eutectic Solvents in Extraction and Sorption Technology
or octyl) with decanoic acid [10]. Maline was tested for the extraction of
2-phenylethanol (fragrance material) from aqueous solutions, but turned out to be
inferior to several room temperature ionic liquids for this purpose [124].
Special techniques, involving solid-phase extraction, were developed for the
extraction of certain solutes using deep eutectic solvents. Ultra-trace analysis of
organochlorine pesticides was accomplished by means of dispersive solid-phase
extraction with deep eutectic solvents based on choline chloride with phenol, acetic
acid, glycerol, or urea sorbed on magnetic multi-walled carbon nanotube composites
[125]. A mixture of choline chloride and itaconic acid (2-methylidenesuccinic acid)
was polymerized and grafted on silica-covered magnetic microspheres and applied
for solid-phase extraction of trypsin [126]. The 1:2 betaine/ethylene glycol deep
eutectic solvent was either sorbed on mesoporous silica or reacted with the monomer
3-aminopropyltriethoxysilane to form the molecularly imprinted polymer, used in
solid-phase extraction and purification of levoflaxin from green bean extracts [127].
Graphene modified by choline chloride-based deep eutectic solvents (Ethaline,
Reline, and Glyceline) was used for solid-phase (imbedded in a pipette tip)
extraction of the drug sulfamerazine from river water [128]. A deep eutectic solvent
as an acceptor phase in a three-phase hollow fiber liquid-phase microextraction was
used for extraction and pre-concentration of steroidal hormones from biological
fluids. The deep eutectic solvents acceptor phase comprised 1:4 choline chloride or
methyltriphenylphosphonium bromide or iodide with ethylene glycol [129].
Low transition temperature mixtures (LTTMs) based on sodium acetate were
used for the extraction of antioxidants from red grape pomace, the most efficient
mixture being the 1:5 sodium acetate/lactic acid mixture [130]. Microwave-assisted
pretreatment of the microalgae Phaeodactylum tricornutum with deep eutectic
solvents composed of choline chloride with carboxylic acids (oxalic or levulinic)
was effective for subsequent extraction of lipids from the algae [131]. Benzoylurea
residuals in water samples were determined by dispersive microextraction based on
freezing temperature control, using 1:1 methyltrioctylammonium chloride/
1-dodecanol deep eutectic solvent [132].
Proteins and other polymeric biomolecules constitute a special class of solutes,
the extraction of which in aqueous two-phase systems (ATPS) by deep eutectic
solvents having been studied. Reline as well as other quaternary ammonium halide/
urea mixtures was used for the extraction of bovine serum albumin from an aqueous
phase containing K2HPO4 [133]. Such an aqueous phase was also used for the
extraction of this protein with Glyceline [134]. Ternary deep eutectic solvents based
on betaine/hydrogen bond donating agent (urea, methylurea, ethylene glycol,
glycerol, sorbitol, and glucose)/water at certain molar ratios were used for ATPS
extraction of bovine serum albumin, trypsin, and ovalbumin [135]. Natural deep
eutectic solvents based on citric acid with choline chloride, betaine, and in par-
ticular with fructose were effective for the extraction of gluten for immunoassay
[136]. Tetrabutylammonium bromide/polyols or PEG 600 (polyethylene glycol
with a mean of 14 –C2H4O– groups) was used in ATPS for the extraction of DNA
[137] and RNA [138]. Magnetic graphene oxide modified with choline
chloride-based deep eutectic solvents (Reline, Ethaline, Glyceline, or with glucose)
5.4 Extraction of Bioactive Materials 165
was used for solid-phase extraction of proteins (bovine serum albumin, ovalbumin,
bovine hemoglobin, and lysozyme) [139, 140].
The variety of deep eutectic solvents that have been used for the extraction of
bioactive solutes from natural materials is summarized in Table 5.3.
Table 5.3 Deep eutectic solvents used for the extraction of bioactive solutes from natural
materials
Hydrogen bond acceptor Hydrogen bond donor Ref.
Choline chloride Urea (Reline) [101, 118, 120, 125, 128, 133, 139, 140]
Thiourea [101]
1,2-ethanediol [101, 104, 119, 120, 122, 128, 139, 140]
(Ethaline)
Gycerol (Glyceline) [101, 118, 119, 121, 125, 128, 134, 139, 140]
Polyols [99, 100, 106, 108]
Sugars [99]
Phenol [125]
Formic acid [116]
Levulinic acid [109, 131]
Oxalic acid [131]
Itaconic acid [126]
Citric acid [136]
Tetrabutylammonium+ Dodecanol [105]
Cl− Carboxylic acids [123]
Tetrabutylammonium+ Polyols, PEG [137, 138]
Br−
MeOc3N+ Cl− Butanol [115]
Dodecanol [132]
Octanol + octanoic acid [114]
Tetradecylammonium+ Hexafluoroisopropanol [113]
Br−
MePh3P+ bromide Formic acid/chalcone [110]
Proline Various [107, 111, 112]
Betaine 1,2-ethanediol [127]
Glycerol, glucose [117]
Citric acid [136]
Various [107, 111, 112, 135]
Menthol Carboxylic acids [122]
Glucose Lactic, citric acid [102]
Fructose Lactic, citric acid [102, 136]
Xylitol + glycerol [103]
Sodium acetate Lactic acid [130]
166 5 Deep Eutectic Solvents in Extraction and Sorption Technology
The capture in liquids of obnoxious gases, such as the main greenhouse gas carbon
dioxide and the pollutant sulfur dioxide, has received much attention in recent years
[141]. Aqueous ethanolamine is employed as an efficient agent for the capture of
carbon dioxide [142] but has several drawbacks. These include corrosion problems,
high solvent volatility, and in particular large costs of its thermal regeneration from
the carbamate generated from the carbon dioxide. Ionic liquids have been proposed
for this purpose too [143], having extremely low volatility, but are costly to
manufacture and generally not ecologically advantageous. Deep eutectic solvents
emerged recently as being free from most of these disadvantages [144]. They are
inferior to aqueous ethanolamine in their carbon dioxide sorption capacity, but have
been claimed to compete with it economically, taking the cyclic process of sorption/
regeneration together.
The capacity of a solvent for the capture of a gas, the mass of the dissolved gas at
equilibrium per unit mass of solvent at a given temperature and partial pressure of
the gas, is a key quantity to be reported. The capacity may be expressed as the
molality of the gas in the deep eutectic solvent: moles of gas per 1 kg solvent, at a
given temperature and gas pressure. Further characterizing quantities that have been
reported are the Henry law constant (the lower it is, the higher the solubility) and
the molar enthalpy of dissolution of the gas. The quantities expressing the solubility
of gases in solvents have been dealt with in more detail in Sect. 3.6.5.
The first report on the dissolution of a gas in a deep eutectic solvent, Glyceline,
just stated that when carbon dioxide at 50 bar pressure is dissolved and the pressure
is released, vigorous degassing takes place, but this phenomenon was not further
quantified [145]. The first quantitative study of the solubility of a gas in a deep
eutectic solvent was that of Li et al. [146], who measured the solubility of carbon
dioxide in Reline. The results of this and similar studies were recorded as g gas/g
solvent, converted to molality, mgas = mol gas/kg solvent, to mol gas/mol solvent,
or to the mole fraction xgas(P, T) in the saturated solution at the employed gas partial
pressure P and temperature T.
Ali et al. [147] have recently analyzed the operating conditions for an industrial
process for the capture of carbon dioxide in a deep eutectic solvent and its sub-
sequent release and compared it advantageously with the current industrial process
[142]. The solubility of carbon dioxide in a deep eutectic solvent diminishes as the
temperature is raised, and therefore the release of the carbon dioxide and the
regeneration of the solvent for a further cycle are affected by a definite temperature
swing.
The solubility of carbon dioxide in a variety of deep eutectic solvents is pre-
sented in Table 5.4 in terms of the Henry’s law constants on the molality basis,
kH(m) at 40 °C for choline chloride-based solvents (there not being sufficient
comparative data at 25 °C, although these are all liquid, some rather viscous, at this
temperature) and at 25 °C for solvents based on other quaternary ammonium salts
or phosphonium salts. The 40 °C temperature is characteristic for the process of the
Table 5.4 H’s law constants for the solubility of carbon dioxide in deep eutectic solvents, at 40°C for choline chloride-based solvents and at 25°C for the
other solvents
Hydrogen bond acceptor Hydrogen bond donor Ratio kH(m) (MPa kg mol−1) –DsolH (kJ mol−1) Ref.
a
Choline chloride Urea 1:2 0.245 17.2 [146]
0.578a 14.9 [157]
0.334 17.0 [174]
0.393 [163]
0.439 [156]
1,2-ethanediol 1:2 0.271 19.4 [175, 176]
0.390 [163]
5.5 Sorption of Obnoxious Gases
Hydrogen bond acceptor Hydrogen bond donor Ratio kH(m) (MPa kg mol−1) –DsolH (kJ mol−1) Ref.
a
Lactic acid 1:2 0.95 15.5 [150]
0.400 [175]
1.29 15.50 [181]
1:1 0.643i [152]
Citric acid 1:1 0.576i [152]
Levulinic acid 1:2 0.145 4.9 [167]
1:3 0.262 15.35 [180]
Tetramethylammonium Cl Acetic acid 1:4 2.45 [173]
Lactic acid 1:2 9.90g [173]
Triethylmethylammonium Cl Acetic acid 1:2 2.44 [173]
1,2-ethanediol 1:2 2.23 [173]
Glycerol 1:2 8.82 [173]
Lactic acid 1:2 3.04 [173]
Levulinic acid 1:2 2.39 [173]
Tetraethylammonium Cl Acetic acid 1:2 1.95 [173]
Lactic acid 1:2 9.62g [173]
Levulinic acid 1:3 2.04h [173]
Tetraethylammonium Br Levulinic acid 1:3 2.36h [173]
Triethylbutylammonium AcO Water 1:1 8.89d [173]
Triethylbutylammonium Malc Water 1:6 4.67d [173]
Tetrabutylammonium Cl Lactic acid 1:2 7.23g [173]
Levulinic acid 1:3 1.85h [173]
Tetrabutylammonium Br Acetic acid 1:2 2.83 [173]
(continued)
5 Deep Eutectic Solvents in Extraction and Sorption Technology
Table 5.4 (continued)
Hydrogen bond acceptor Hydrogen bond donor Ratio kH(m) (MPa kg mol−1) –DsolH (kJ mol−1) Ref.
h
Levulinic acid 1:3 2.10 [173]
Benzyltriethylammonium Cl Acetic acid 1:2 2.56 [173]
BenzyldiethylEtOHNc Cl Acetic acid 1:2 3.28 [173]
Acetylcholine Cl Levulinic acid 1:3 1.79h [173]
Choline prolinate PEG200 1:1 1.80f [173]
Methyltriphenylphosphonium Br 1,2-propanediol 1:4 10.0 [173]
Glycerol 1:4 17.9 [173]
5.5 Sorption of Obnoxious Gases
capture of carbon dioxide from flue gases. The saturation molalities are related to
the Henry’s law constants as m =0.1 MPa/kH(m), the partial pressure of the carbon
dioxide being 0.1 MPa (1 bar, *1 atm). The molar enthalpies of solution for the
gas dissolution process are also shown in Table 5.4 when available, serving for the
evaluation of the solubility at other temperatures.
Considerably less information is available regarding the solubility of sulfur
dioxide in deep eutectic solvents. Although the sorption of sulfur dioxide in these
solvents is linear with its partial pressure [148], the lines do not pass through the
origin, and hence Henry’s law appears not to be valid at the large concentrations of
sulfur dioxide that were found. Therefore, the data are reported in Table 5.5 as
saturation molalities at 1 bar (0.1 MPa) partial pressure rather than as Henry’s law
constants.
Deep eutectic solvents have been proposed for the purpose of separation of
mixtures of gases, but there is hardly any information related to the solubilities of
gases other than carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide in these solvents. The solubility
of nitrogen in 1:2, 1:3, and 1:4 choline chloride/phenylacetic acid has been reported
Table 5.5 Solubility of sulfur dioxide in deep eutectic solvents at 1 bar pressure and 40 °C
HBA HBD Ratio m (mol kg−1) Ref.
Choline chloride Urea 1:2 4.50 [159]
Thiourea 1:1 8.76 [159]
1,2-ethanediol 1:2 6.22 [159]
Glycerol 1:2 4.00 [148]
Glycerol 1:1 10.05a [153]
Malonic acid 1:1 4.31 [159]
Levulinic acid 1:3 4.45 [185]
Acetylcholine chloride Levulinic acid 1:3 4.84 [185]
Tetraethylammonium Cl Levulinic acid 1:3 5.67 [185]
Tetraethylammonium Br Levulinic acid 1:3 5.78 [185]
Tetrabutylammonium Cl Levulinic acid 1:3 4.63 [185]
Tetrabutylammonium Br Levulinic acid 1:3 5.19 [185]
Caprolactam 1:1 3.93 [186]
Trimethylaminoacetate 1,2-ethanediol 1:1 5.71 [161]
Trimethylamino-2-OH- butyrate 1,2-ethanediol 1:1 5.70 [161]
Imidazole Glycerol 1:2 2.52 [187]
2-Et-3-Me-imidazolium Cl 1,2-ethanediol 1:2 18.0b [188]
Ammonium thiocyanate Urea 2:3 4.40 [189]
Acetamide 1:3 5.32 [189]
Caprolactam 1:3 5.79 [189]
Potassium thiocyanate Acetamide 1:3 5.73 [189]
Caprolactam 1:3 6.60 [189]
a
At t =77 °C
b
At t =20 °C
5.5 Sorption of Obnoxious Gases 171
[149]. The interpolated saturation molality in the 1:2 mixture (eutectic) at 40 °C and
0.1 MPa partial pressure is 0.106 mol kg−1, the Henry law constant is
0.943 MPa kg mol−1, and the molar enthalpy of solution is −5.63 kJ mol−1, the
solubility of sulfur dioxide being *50% larger than the values for carbon dioxide,
Table 5.4. Ammonia was absorbed by deep eutectic solvents based on 1:3:5 choline
chloride/resorcinol/glycerol, reaching 10.6 mol/kg solvent at 20 °C, reduced to
7.5 mol/kg solvent at 40 °C [150]. Ethaline was used in a thin layer on the electrode
in an amperometric device for monitoring oxygen contents in atmospheres, at 2.0–
26.5 °C [151]. Whereas nitrogen dioxide was reduced at a similar potential as
oxygen, no interference by N2, CO, CO2, NO, SO2, and H2S was observed. No
implications regarding the solubilities of these gases in the deep eutectic solvent
were reported, however. The solubility of CO2, CH4, H2, CO, and N2 in Reline
deep eutectic solvent was predicted—although in many cases unsatisfactorily—
using NRTL and COSMO-RS models [151]. The absorption of nitrogen, besides
carbon dioxide, in the natural deep eutectic solvents (NADES) consisting of 1:1
choline chloride with fructose, and malic, citric, or lactic acids at 25–55 °C is
reported in [152], where molecular dynamics simulations were used to model the
absorption.
The solubility of the gases that were studied in the deep eutectic solvents
diminishes as the temperature is increased, manifested by the negative molar
enthalpies of solution of the gas, Table 5.4. The pressure dependence of the satu-
ration capacities of the gas in the various deep eutectic solvents is linear up to
moderate pressures, 30 MPa. Therefore, absorption of the gas in the deep eutectic
solvents at a relatively low temperature permits its subsequent release at a higher
temperature by diminishing the pressure or, in the case of sulfur dioxide, by bub-
bling of nitrogen [153] for recycling the solvent.
In some cases, the gas solubility has been studied with regard to the composition
of the solvent, in terms of the ratios of the hydrogen bond accepting and hydrogen
bond donating components that do not correspond to the eutectic, but no general-
ization can be deduced from the published data. The solubility of carbon dioxide in
the non-eutectic 1:3 choline chloride/phenylacetic acid mixture is *50% larger
than in the eutectic 1:2 mixture, but no such difference was noted for the solubility
of nitrogen [151]. In a molecular dynamics study, the solubility of sulfur dioxide in
the non-eutectic 1:1 choline chloride/glycerol mixture was stated to be larger than in
the eutectic [153].
Deep eutectic solvents based on triethylbutylammonium acetate, propionate,
butyrate, malonate, succinate, phthalate, malate, and citrate as the hydrogen bond
acceptor and water as the hydrogen bond donor at mole ratios from 1:1 to 1:6 that
exhibit very low glass transition temperatures (<−49 °C) have been used to absorb
carbon dioxide [154]. Guanidinium malate (prepared from the carbonate with malic
acid)/ethylene glycol deep eutectic solvent was used in [155] for the capture of
carbon dioxide and addition of arginine improving the absorption ability. The
sorption of carbon dioxide at 25 °C in, for example, 1:1 triethylbutylammonium
butyrate/H2O is 1.32 mol carbon dioxide per kg of solvent at 0.044 MPa partial
172 5 Deep Eutectic Solvents in Extraction and Sorption Technology
pressure. The carbon dioxide reacted with the water to form the bicarbonate anion.
However, no information on release of the carbon dioxide and recycling the solvent
was provided.
On the other hand, the effect of water on the sorption of carbon dioxide by
conventional deep eutectic solvents is deleterious, water serving as an anti-solvent,
inducing the release of the gas. Water has the beneficial effect of decreasing the
viscosity in the case of Reline, permitting faster absorption, but it reduces the
equilibrium solubility. For instance, the saturation mole fraction of carbon dioxide
in this solvent at 35 °C and 2.5 MPa pressure diminishes from 0.120 to 0.110 to
0.097 as the mass fraction of water increases from 0.0185 to 0.0910 to 0.183 [156].
In another report, at this temperature and at 0.1 MPa pressure, the saturation mole
fraction of carbon dioxide in the solvent diminishes from 0.0030 to 0.0020 to
0.0011 as the mass fraction of water increases from 0.0106 to 0.0909 to 0.308
[157]. At the same temperature and with a mass fraction of water of 0.200, the
saturation molality of carbon dioxide in Ethaline and Glyceline diminishes by 4.5
and 1.5%, respectively [158].
The mechanism of the dissolution of carbon dioxide in the deep eutectic solvent
is generally regarded as being physical absorption of the nonpolar but highly
polarizable gas in interstices in the hydrogen-bonded structure of the liquid solvent.
This is manifested by the ready removal of the carbon dioxide as the pressure on the
gas-saturated solvent is diminished and the temperature is increased. Bubbling
nitrogen through the loaded solvent can also be used, since although at the lower
temperature carbon dioxide is absorbed slightly better than nitrogen, this is reversed
at a somewhat higher temperature [152]. This mechanism contrasts with the car-
bamate formation that takes place in aqueous ethanolamine that is the present
industrial practice, which is energetically expensive for its reversal and for regen-
eration of the solvent.
In the case of the dissolution of sulfur dioxide in deep eutectic solvents, there is
some evidence that the solute may interact specifically with molecular groups in the
solvent. Nevertheless, the sulfur dioxide can be displaced from choline
chloride-based solvents by nitrogen bubbling [159] and 1H NMR analysis indicated
that the sorption process in the caprolactam/acetamide deep eutectic solvent is of
physical nature [160]. However, with solvents based on betaines as hydrogen bond
accepting components (trimethylglycine or l-carnitine) and 1,2-ethanediol as the
hydrogen bond donating component, 1H and 13C NMR spectra indicated interaction
of the sulfur dioxide with the –CO2− group of the solvent [161].
The solubility of carbon dioxide in deep eutectic solvents was modeled by means
of the Peng–Robinson equation of state [162] for a variety of such solvents or by a
modification of it [163] for Reline and Ethaline. The perturbed-chain statistical
associated fluid theory (PC-SAFT) was applied for the modeling [164] of solvents
composed of tetraalkylammonium chloride/lactic acid (alkyl = methyl, ethyl,
butyl). This method was also employed for modeling the carbon dioxide solubility
in tetraoctylammonium chloride (or bromide) with decanoic acid (or perfluorode-
canoic acid) forming hydrophobic deep eutectic solvents [165]. Molecular
dynamics simulations were used for the study of the interfacial properties of
5.5 Sorption of Obnoxious Gases 173
systems involving Reline, Glyceline, and Maline as the solvents and carbon dioxide
and sulfur dioxide as the dissolving gases [166] and in a study of the liquid/vapor
interface on dissolution of carbon dioxide in the choline chloride/levulinic acid
deep eutectic solvent [167]. The dissolution of sulfur dioxide in deep eutectic
solvents was modeled using the cubic plus association equations of state and the
nonrandom two liquid (NRTL) and UNIQUAC models [168].
The physicochemical properties and the gas separation applications of deep
eutectic solvents have been recently reviewed [169], as have the solubilities of the
gases [170, 171]. The value of these solvents as “green” solvents and attractive
media for the capture of carbon dioxide was reviewed in [172], and their screening
for this purpose was reviewed in [173].
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Chapter 6
Trends and Prospects for Deep
Eutectic Solvents
The trends regarding the chemical industry for the twenty-first century are along
several paths [1]. One trend is the replacement of fossil raw materials (oil, natural
gas) or mined minerals with renewable sources, such as biomass or recycled wastes.
Sustainable processes for the valorization of waste biomass by its conversion to
biofuels (biodiesel) via green processes are currently in the forefront of research.
Trends in the minimization of industrial wastes and their treatment for a sustainable
environment are also currently of importance [2]. The advent of neoteric solvents
has been an important step in this direction, deep eutectic solvents playing a major
role in this process. Another trend is the replacement of stoichiometric processes by
catalytic ones, in particular, those involving enzymes, and heterogeneous catalysis
replacing homogeneous one for the purpose of recycling the catalyst. Deep eutectic
solvents are involved in this trend too. The use of mechano-chemistry, ultrasound,
and microwaves as energy inputs rather than the application of external heat is
another trend used in the synthesis of organic materials [3].
Deep eutectic solvents, also called low-transition temperature mixtures, have
been deemed to be “the organic reaction medium of the century” [4]. These solvents
may play the role of an active catalyst besides serving as the solvent for the
reaction. For example, the deep eutectic solvents formed between choline chloride
and zinc chloride or trimethylcyclohexylammonium methanesulfonate and
p-toluenesulfonic acid use their acidic natures for the catalysis of the esterification
of long-chain and aromatic carboxylic acids with alkanols. These are illustrations of
one of the many organic reactions that have been and can be carried out in deep
eutectic solvents, including alkylation, cyclization, condensation, redox, and
organometallic reactions [4]. A large portion of the publications dealing with deep
eutectic solvents pertain to a choline salt as one of the components. The application
of such salts in organic transformations has been recently reviewed [5], including
reactions catalyzed by choline (cholinium) chloride without or with metallic Lewis
eutectic solvents so that the biomass can be fractionated. Degradation of the cel-
lulose to 5-hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF) is a target of an application described in
detail [12].
On a quite different level is the relation of natural deep eutectic solvents to
biochemical and physiological processes. Such solvents (NADES) can act as
cryoprotective agents, preventing the formation of ice crystals in cells. In some
insects and even in a vertebrate living thing (frog), their intervention is useful. An
example is the combination urea/glucose/amino acids in frogs [13]. The formation
of non-water-soluble compounds, such as rutin, quercetin, cinnamic acid, cartha-
min, taxol, ginkgolide B, and 1,8-dihydroxyanthaquinone in plants has been
explained by the role that natural deep eutectic solvents play in their formation and
transport [14]. This unexpected activity/stability is explained by the large and
strong hydrogen bond network formed in such solvent mixtures. These eutectic
mixtures may also explain the holding of water in plants against its evaporation in
very arid areas. Molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) are of increasing interest
due to their specific binding sites and molecular recognition ability. Their pro-
duction in deep eutectic solvents has been compared with that in room temperature
ionic liquids in [15].
The use of deep eutectic solvents for biocatalysis has recently been reviewed
[16]. These solvents may have a significant effect on selectivity, stability, and
activity of enzymes through their H-bond basicity, ion kosmotropicity,
amphiphilicity, hydrophobicity, polarity, and viscosity. “In particular, the combi-
nation of reaction and separation will be of interest in the future as here the potential
of deep eutectic solvents can be exploited to full extent.” Deep eutectic solvents
“have been used as media, solvents/cosolvents or as catalysts for various biological
processes, it seems clear that they possess enormous potential for beneficial
applications in the future” [17]. This quote is taken from a recent review of the
applications in biotechnology and bioengineering—promises and challenges,
where, however, it is stressed that the safety (toxicity) concern of these mixtures
must be sufficiently addressed.
The many applications described in Sect. 4.4 point to the expected development
foreseen for the use of deep eutectic solvents in the field of nanotechnology. Novel
materials or materials with novel properties produced in deep eutectic solvents for
their use in heterogeneous catalytic activities are one aspect of the emerging trends.
These new nanomaterials, gold nanowire networks, are good candidates for future
applications in catalysis [18]. The high viscosity of the Ethaline deep eutectic solvent
helps the synthesis of gold nanofoams, “a synthetic strategy that may open a new
avenue to the DES-assisted synthesis of inorganic nanofoams and functional devices”
[19]. Turning from metals to oxides, it was suggested that “as a burgeoning field, the
development of DESs assisted routes for the synthesis of TiO2 nanomaterials offers
188 6 Trends and Prospects for Deep Eutectic Solvents
There are many prospects for natural deep eutectic solvents in analytical chemistry,
where they may be used for sample preparation as solvents, as extracting agents, or
as reaction media [28], and may further be used in liquid chromatography. Gluten
may be extracted from foods for its subsequent determination by using natural deep
eutectic solvents, such as the water-diluted citric acid/fructose combination with
sonification [29]. Environmentally friendly and nonpolluting solvent pretreatment
of palm oil samples for polyphenol analysis using choline chloride based deep
eutectic solvents [30] and speciation, pre-concentration and determination of sele-
nium (IV) and (VI) species in water and food samples with choline chloride/phenol
6.3 Analytical Chemistry, Sorption and Extraction 189
[31] are other examples of the emerging use of such solvents in analytical chem-
istry. The present applications of deep eutectic solvents in analytical chemistry and
trends in these applications are reviewed in [32].
Indirect applications of deep eutectic solvents for a sustainable environment,
which may show trends in future applications, are illustrated by the use of such
solvents for the preparation of efficient sponges for selective removal of oils from
water. Hydrophobic, super-absorbing aerogels result from cellulose nanofibrils
pretreated by Reline and then silylated, which have the desired properties [33].
Deep eutectic solvents were expected to play a major role in the extraction of
bioactive compounds from various sources for analytical purposes [34]. An overview
as well as challenges and opportunities regarding the application of deep eutectic
solvents for the extraction of phenolic compounds extraction are presented in [35].
The capture of carbon dioxide in deep eutectic solvents as alternatives to the
capture in organic amines or in room temperature ionic liquids is gaining attention.
It is possible to develop novel deep eutectic solvents with promising absorption
capacity, but more studies are needed to determine the absorption mechanism and
to clarify how these sorbents can be adjusted and fine-tuned to be best tailored as
optimized media for carbon dioxide capture [36].
Most of the studies regarding the use of deep eutectic solvents heretofore have used
conventional combinations of a hydrogen bond accepting salt (such as choline
chloride, tetrabutylammonium chloride, or methyltriphenylphosphonium bromide)
and an organic hydrogen bond donating agent (such as urea, ethylene glycol,
glycerol, or malonic acid), and some such solvents are commercially available
(Reline, Ethaline, Glyceline, Maline). Their applications have been described in
Chaps. 4 and 5, and trends regarding these applications are presented above.
More recently, nonconventional deep eutectic solvents that need not be ionic
have been added to the tool kit of reaction media and extractants. These include
natural deep eutectic solvents (NADES) based on zwitterionic amino acids (betaine,
proline), solvents based on lidocaine, menthol, or glucose with carboxylic acids, or
mixtures of long-chain carboxylic acids. Deep eutectic solvents based on water as
the hydrogen bond donating agents with N-alkyl heterocyclic salts or with inorganic
salt hydrates as the accepting agents have also been introduced, and their appli-
cations are promising but still pending.
However, a deep eutectic solvent based on betaine with polypropylene glycol
400 has recently been introduced for aqueous biphasic extraction systems used in
pigment partitioning [37]. The use of the deep eutectic solvent formed by menthol
with dodecanoic acid for the extraction of the lower alkanols from aqueous solu-
tions has recently been proposed [38]. Deep eutectic solvents comprising mixtures
of two long-chain carboxylic acids have recently been promoted as hydrophobic
extracting agents [39].
190 6 Trends and Prospects for Deep Eutectic Solvents
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References 191
Haghbakhsi, 72, 94, 100, 103, 173, 182 Kareem, 60, 68, 78, 84, 85, 93, 101, 102, 106,
Hammond, 87, 101, 128, 143, 144, 188, 190 109, 158–160, 176
Hammons, 122, 123, 125, 126, 139, 142, 149 Karimi, 128, 129, 143–145, 161, 177, 188, 191
Hao, 155, 157, 175 Kataei, 164, 180
Hard, 56, 99 Kaur, 87, 101, 127, 143, 188, 190
Hardacre, 87, 101 Khandelwal, 113, 134, 186, 190
Harifi-Mood, 66, 88, 102, 108 Khezeli, 153, 163, 165, 175, 179
Hattori, 118, 119, 136 Khodaverdian, 113, 134
Hayyan, 17, 22, 24, 38, 55, 57, 58, 66, 76, 78, Kihlman, 118, 119, 137
83, 93, 96, 97, 100–102, 104–106, 109, Kim, 46, 47, 88, 89, 98, 102
119, 120, 121, 130, 137, 138, 146 Kimura, 32, 40, 99
Henderson, 5, 10, 98 Kleiner, 120, 121, 138
Hillman, 123, 124, 150 Koliya, 162, 165, 178
Hizzaddin, 153, 157–159, 175, 176 Korotkewich, 170, 171, 181
Homan, 120, 121, 138 Krigintsev, 26, 32, 40, 48, 99
Horvath, 5, 10, 98 Krolikiwski, 25, 26, 29–31, 39, 40, 101
Hosa, 130, 145 Kudlak, 23, 24, 26, 38, 98, 99, 105
Hosu, 130, 145 Kuga, 118, 119, 136
Hou, 119, 121, 135, 137, 139, 157, 158–160, Kumar-Krishnan, 127, 142
175, 176, 177 Kurnia, 158, 160, 176
Hu, 24, 25, 27, 35, 39, 56, 63, 71, 74, 99–102
Huang, 113, 120, 121, 129, 138, 144, 148, 161, L
163, 165, 178, 179, 180 Laitinen, 131, 132, 147, 189, 191
Hussey, 23, 38, 99, 100 Lamei, 131, 146
Lappinet-Serani, 2, 10, 98
I Larriba, 158, 160, 176
Islam, 80, 109 Lau, 118, 119, 137
Isono, 72, 108 Leipner, 118, 136
Leron, 53, 54, 57, 58, 64, 83, 94, 99, 101, 103,
J 109, 167, 182
Jablonsky, 83, 109 Letcher, 25, 30, 39, 101
Jahangiri, 160, 177 Leyendekkers, 82, 101
Jang, 154, 174 Li, 22, 31, 35, 38, 41, 67, 69, 70, 77, 78, 82,
Jarvis, 56, 100 94, 95, 99, 101, 103, 122–127, 131,
Jenkins, 73, 100 139, 140, 142, 147, 150, 153, 154–157,
Jeong, 31, 35, 41, 100, 153, 163, 165, 173, 179 164–168, 171, 173, 174, 180–182
Jessop, 4, 10, 98, 166, 181 Liang, 27, 39, 78, 99, 100, 109
Ji, 153, 173, 158, 175 Liao, 122, 125, 127, 140, 142
Jia, 116, 135, 187, 190 Liaw, 5, 11, 98
Jiang, 129, 144, 154–157, 174, 175 Lin, 113, 117, 119, 136, 148, 157, 158, 172,
Jibril, 17, 22, 38, 55, 57, 59, 69, 77, 84, 93, 175, 181
100–102, 105 Linke, 8, 9, 11, 26, 29, 32, 40, 48, 98, 99, 117,
Jindal 136
Joos Liu, 26, 27, 39, 58, 63, 71, 74, 99, 101, 106,
Ju 113, 116, 117, 119, 130, 132, 133, 136,
Juneidi 145, 146, 147, 148, 155, 156, 163–165,
170, 172, 174, 179–182
K Lobo, 114, 115, 148
Kaiser, 2, 10, 98 Lohmeier, 112, 133
Kamaraguru, 123, 125, 140 Long, 120, 121, 138
Kamgar, 94, 103, 171, 181 Loow, 117, 136
Kang, 126, 141 Lopez-Porfiro, 47, 48, 52, 98
196 Author Index
N Q
Nadia, 162, 165, 178 Qin, 48, 99
Naik, 158, 159, 176 Qu, 128, 143
Nam, 29, 34, 40, 101, 162, 165, 178 Querejeta-Fernandez, 129, 144
Author Index 197
B E
Biodiesel production, 117, 119–121 Electropolishing, 126
Biomass processing, 117, 186 Enthalpy of freezing, 52
Boiling point, 50 Enzymatic catalysis, 120, 187
Ethaline, 15, 19, 47, 81, 87–91, 96, 97, 112,
C 113, 116, 119, 131, 155–159, 161–172,
Capacitance, 96 187
Carbon nanotubes, 127, 130 Expansibility, isobaric, 57–68
Cellulose dissolution, 118 Extraction, biphasic aqueous, 153, 154
Compressibility, 63–65
Conductivity, electric, 74–80 F
Conductivity, thermal, 81, 82 Fuel denitrification, 156
Critical temperature, 51, 52 Fuel desulfurization, 154–157
D G
Deep eutectic solvents: see DESs Gas solubility, 92, 94
Density, 57–68 Gas, sorption of, 166–173, 189
DESs, amino acid-based, 28 Glyceline, 17, 19, 20, 47, 81, 87–91, 96–98,
choline-based, 15–19 112, 115–120, 125, 129–131, 154–166,
hydrogen bonding, 13–15 172, 173
low transition temperature mixtures Graphene, 130, 131
(LTTMs), 14 Green solvents, 4, 5, 15, 95, 96, 111, 113, 117,
metal salt-based, 29, 117–119 125, 135, 173, 184, 186, 188
natural (NADES), 13, 19
non-ionic, 34–36 H
phosphonium salts, 23, 26 Heat capacity, 53, 54
preparation, 13 Hydrophobicity, hydrophilicity, 91, 92
I R
Internal pressure, 64, 65 Reaction medium, 111–116
Ionic liquids, room temperature, v, vi, 1, 3, 5, Refractivity, molar, 82–86
6, 23, 27, 65, 75, 86, 89, 94, 96, 127, Reline, 3, 15–17, 46, 81, 85, 87–91, 94, 97,
160, 164, 187–189 112–114, 116, 118–122, 125–132,
Ionothermal reactions, 113 155–173, 188, 189
M S
Maline, 17–19, 47, 53, 81, 87, 98, 112–116, Self-diffusion, 75, 81
127, 132, 155, 158, 159, 164, 173, 189 Separation, aliphatic-aromatic, 162–165, 189
Metal electrodeposition, 121–126 Solvatochromic indices, 88–90
Solvent selection guide, 5
N Structure, liquid, 86–88
Nanofibers, 131, 132 Supercritical fluids, 2, 3, 5
Nanotechnology, 126–132, 187, 188 Surface tension, 51, 54–56
Susceptibility, magnetic, 85
O Sustainable chemistry, 185–187
Oils, treatment of, 157–159
T
P Toxicity, 96–98
Permittivity, dielectric, 85
Phase diagram, 6–9 V
differential scanning calorimetry, 7 Vapor pressure, 50
eutectic distance, 7 Viscosity, 65–74
solid-liquid, 6–9, 45–49
Potential window, electrochemical, 94, 95