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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Recent advances on ionic liquid uses in separation techniques
María-josé Ruíz-angelAlain BerthodSamuel Carda-brochsubject
Deep eutectic solventSpectrometry Mass Electrospray IonizationChromatography Gasgas chromatographydeep eutectic solventLiquid chromatographyIonic bonding02 engineering and technologyTrace anion detection01 natural sciencesBiochemistryAnalytical Chemistryionic liquidschemistry.chemical_compoundCountercurrent chromatographyCapillary electrophoresistrace anion detection[CHIM.ANAL]Chemical Sciences/Analytical chemistryliquid chromatographyCountercurrent DistributionGas chromatographyChromatographyViscosity010401 analytical chemistryOrganic ChemistryElectrophoresis CapillaryGeneral Medicine021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyIonic liquids0104 chemical sciencesDeep eutectic solventBoiling pointchemistryIonic liquidSolventsMelting pointGases0210 nano-technologyChromatography LiquidElectrochemical windowdescription
International audience; The molten organic salts with melting point below 100°C, commonly called ionic liquids (ILs) have found numerous uses in separation sciences due to their exceptional properties as non molecular solvents, namely, a negligible vapor pressure, a high thermal stability, and unique solvating properties due to polarity and their ionic character of molten salts. Other properties, such as viscosity, boiling point, water solubility, and electrochemical window, are adjustable playing with which anion is associated with which cation. This review focuses on recent development of the uses of ILs in separation techniques actualizing our 2008 article (same authors, J. Chromatogr. A, 1184 (2008) 6-18) focusing on alkyl methylimidazolium salts. These developments include the use of ILs in nuclear waste reprocessing, highly thermally stable ILs that allowed for the introduction of polar gas chromatography capillary columns able to work at temperature never seen before (passing 300°C), the use of ILs in liquid chromatography and capillary electrophoresis, and the introduction of tailor-made ILs for mass spectrometry detection of trace anions at the few femtogram level. The recently introduced deep eutectic solvents are not exactly ILs, they are related enough so that their properties and uses in countercurrent chromatography are presented.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-07-01 | Journal of Chromatography A |