Kwon Gibum, Post Ethan R, Kota Arun K, Li Chao, Speer David L, Guenthner Andrew J, Reams Josiah T, Lamison Kevin R, Mabry Joseph M, Tuteja Anish
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, United States.
Biointerfaces Institute, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, United States.
Langmuir. 2021 Nov 23;37(46):13595-13601. doi: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.1c01985. Epub 2021 Nov 9.
Separation operations are critical across a wide variety of manufacturing industries and account for about one-quarter of all in-plant energy consumption in the United States. Conventional liquid-liquid separation operations require either thermal or chemical treatment, both of which have a large environmental impact and carbon footprint. Consequently, there is a great need to develop sustainable, clean methodologies for separation of miscible liquid mixtures. The greatest opportunities to achieve this lie in replacing high-energy separation operations (e.g., distillation) with low-energy alternatives such as liquid-liquid extraction. One of the primary design challenges in liquid-liquid extraction is to maximize the interfacial area between two immiscible (e.g., polar and nonpolar) liquids for efficient mass transfer. However, this often involves energy-intensive methods including ultrasonication, pumping the feed and the extractant through packed columns with high tortuosity, or using a supercritical fluid as an extractant. Emulsifying the feed and the extractant, especially with a surfactant, offers a large interfacial area, but subsequent separation of emulsions can be energy-intensive and expensive. Thus, emulsions are typically avoided in conventional extraction operations. Herein, we discuss a novel, easily scalable, platform separation methodology termed CLEANS (continuous liquid-liquid extraction and in-situ membrane separation). CLEANS integrates emulsion-enhanced extraction with continuous, gravity-driven, membrane-based separation of emulsions into a single unit operation. Our results demonstrate that the addition of a surfactant and emulsification significantly enhance extraction (by >250% in certain cases), even for systems where the best extractants for miscible liquid mixtures are known. Utilizing the CLEANS methodology, we demonstrate continuous separation of a wide range of miscible liquid mixtures, including soluble organic molecules from oils, alcohols from esters, and even azeotropes.
分离操作在众多制造业中至关重要,在美国,其能耗约占工厂内总能耗的四分之一。传统的液 - 液分离操作需要进行热处理或化学处理,这两者都会对环境产生重大影响并带来较大的碳足迹。因此,迫切需要开发可持续、清洁的方法来分离互溶液体混合物。实现这一目标的最大机会在于用低能耗替代方法(如液 - 液萃取)取代高能耗分离操作(如蒸馏)。液 - 液萃取的主要设计挑战之一是最大化两种不互溶(如极性和非极性)液体之间的界面面积,以实现高效传质。然而,这通常涉及高能耗方法,包括超声处理、将进料和萃取剂泵入具有高曲折度的填充柱,或使用超临界流体作为萃取剂。将进料和萃取剂乳化,特别是使用表面活性剂,可提供较大的界面面积,但随后乳液的分离可能耗能大且成本高。因此,在传统萃取操作中通常避免使用乳液。在此,我们讨论一种新颖、易于扩展的平台分离方法,称为 CLEANS(连续液 - 液萃取和原位膜分离)。CLEANS 将乳液增强萃取与连续的、重力驱动的、基于膜的乳液分离整合到一个单元操作中。我们的结果表明,即使对于已知互溶液体混合物最佳萃取剂的体系,添加表面活性剂和乳化也能显著提高萃取率(在某些情况下提高超过 250%)。利用 CLEANS 方法,我们展示了对多种互溶液体混合物的连续分离,包括从油中分离可溶性有机分子、从酯中分离醇,甚至是共沸物。