Interfacial Heterogeneity is Essential to Water Extraction into Organic Solvents

24 September 2018, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Liquid/liquid extraction (LLE) is one of the most industrially relevant separations methods, successfully leveraging the variable solubility of solutes (or their complexes) between two immiscible solvents. Independently from the relative solubilities of those solutes and complexes which determine their distribution between phases, the kinetics of phase transfer is impacted by the molecular interactions and structure of those species at the interface. A simple example includes the formation and extraction of water-extractant adducts observed in the ternary water/organic/tri-n-butyl phosphate (TBP) system. Despite its implications for LLE, a detailed description of the structural and dynamic mechanisms by which such adducts are formed at the interface is not established. Describing that process requires connecting the evolving interfacial molecular organization in the presence of surfactants to dynamic surface fluctuations and interfacial heterogeneity. Herein, molecular dynamics simulation is combined with state of the art network theory analysis to reveal features of interfacial structure and their relationship to the extraction of water in the water/n-hexane/TBP system. Surfactant adsorption enhances interfacial roughness which in turn causes directly interfacial water to become less connected through hydrogen bonding to subjacent layers, particularly upon formation of the water bridged TBP dimer adduct. Further, heterogeneity within the interface itself is enhanced by surfactant adsorption, and serves as the basis for the formation of protrusions of water into the organic phase at the extremes of surface fluctuations. These features disproportionately incorporate the water bridged TBP dimer and are the primary means by which water is transferred to the organic phase. This work presents for the first time a holistic understanding of how interfacial heterogeneity and spatial fluctuations become amplified in the presence of surfactants, enabling water extraction into the organic phase. It further affords the opportunity to study how solution conditions can control interfacial behavior to create more efficient solvent extraction systems.

Keywords

solvent extraction
molecular dynamics
liquid-liquid interfaces

Supplementary materials

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