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ionic liquids research is rapidly extending its reach at a number of
fronts in polymer science and technology. In the past few years, these
liquids have not only been employed as solvents for various types of
polymerization, but they have also been used to dissolve polymers, to
add functionality to them, and to create new polymer composites.
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IONIC
SPARKLE Versatility of ionic liquids in polymer systems is being
explored by University of Alabama team (seated from left): Holbrey,
undergraduate student Hugh W. Shoff, Ph.D. students Marc A. Klingshirn
and Mustafizur Rahman; (standing from left) Rogers and Brazel.
PHOTO BY PAM WELLS |
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"These applications are really just the tip of the iceberg," according to Robin D. Rogers, professor of chemistry and director of the Center for Green Manufacturing at the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa.
Rogers and Christopher S. Brazel,
assistant professor of chemical and biological engineering at the
university, co-organized a symposium on the topic sponsored by the
Polymer Chemistry Division at last month's national meeting of the
American Chemical Society in Anaheim, Calif.
"The
symposium is, we think, the first international symposium dedicated to
polymers in ionic liquids, and it demonstrates how the field has
changed in a short period of time," Rogers said. "The aim of the
symposium is to look into the range of applications and processes, as
well as to try to determine where the advantages of ionic liquids
outweigh any disadvantages of their use."
Many
common room-temperature ionic liquids consist of nitrogen-containing
organic cations and inorganic anions. Their chemical and physical
properties can be tuned for a range of potential applications by
varying the cations and anions. Over the past few years, the liquids
have generated increasing interest as potential designer solvents for
clean technologies because they generally have no detectable vapor
pressure and are thermally stable, nonflammable, and relatively
undemanding to manufacture.
"Ionic liquids are also
being used to introduce new or modified properties into polymers,
either through the ionic liquid itself or as functional additives
allowed by solution processing of polymers in ionic liquids," Rogers
noted. "Examples include the use of ionic liquids as plasticizers. The
ionic liquid can be solvent and plasticizer, just solvent, or just
plasticizer."
Brazel pointed out that more rapid and
higher molecular weight polymerizations are possible in ionic liquids
compared with traditional solvents. "Living polymerizations that don't
require the often tedious synthesis procedures necessary with other
solvents can be conducted in ionic liquids," he explained.
In
living polymerizations, which can be radical, anionic, or cationic, the
reactive intermediates are generated reversibly so that they are either
active (when monomer is added) or dormant (until more monomer is
added). Irreversible chain termination does not occur (C&EN, Sept. 9, 2002, page 36).
At Monash University, Victoria, Australia, chemistry professor Douglas R. MacFarlane
and Ph.D. student Ranganathan Vijayaraghavan have been investigating
the living nature of cationic polymerizations in ionic liquid solvents [Chem. Commun., 2004, 700].
"In
principle, the ionic liquid should provide a long-lived 'living' state
by stabilizing the carbocation in the polymer backbone," MacFarlane
noted. He has carried out the cationic polymerization of styrene in the
ionic liquid N-butyl-N-methylpyrrolidinium
bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)amide using mild acid catalysts such as
organoborate acids to obtain living polymers of narrow polydispersity.
"THE IONIC POLYMERIZATION
reactions can be carried out under mild conditions because of the
special properties of the ionic liquid," he explained. "The ionic
liquid medium also has the effect of altering the reactivity ratios in
copolymerization reactions--for example, in the case of styrene/methyl
methacrylate copolymerization."
Kevin H. Shaughnessy,
assistant professor of chemistry at the University of Alabama,
Tuscaloosa, observed that ionic liquids are unique among reaction media
in that they are polar yet can also be designed to be noncoordinating.
"We
have hypothesized that polar, noncoordinating ionic liquid solvents
would accelerate certain catalytic processes, in particular those
catalyzed by cationic metal centers with open coordinate sites, by
stabilizing charge-separated catalytic intermediates or transition
states," he said.
Shaughnessy, Rogers, and coworkers
have applied weakly coordinating ionic liquids with weakly coordinating
anions to the copolymerization of styrene and carbon monoxide using
palladium catalysts.
"Ionic liquids provide higher
activities than commonly used organic solvents," Shaughnessy observed.
"The acceleration is strongly anion dependent, with more coordinating
anions decreasing polymerization activity."
Meanwhile,
Jimmy W. Mays, a polymer chemist at the University of Tennessee,
Knoxville, and at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and coworkers have
been comparing radical polymerizations of styrene and methyl
methacrylate in various room-temperature ionic liquids.
In
an initial investigation, Mays, Brazel, Rogers, and coworkers examined
free-radical polymerizations of methyl methacrylate and styrene in the
ionic liquid 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate ([bmim][PF6]) using conventional organic initiators.
"We
showed that conventional free-radical polymerization in this ionic
liquid offers unique advantages in terms of polymerization kinetics in
addition to green chemistry benefits," Mays reported. "Specifically,
polymerization rates are greatly increased--by nearly an order of
magnitude--with a simultaneous increase in molecular weight."
The
Tennessee group then questioned whether these advantages were a general
phenomenon of free-radical polymerization in ionic liquids or specific
to the monomers and ionic liquid used in the original investigation. At
the ACS meeting, Mays summarized the results of testing radical
polymerizations of styrene and methyl methacrylate in a dozen
room-temperature ionic liquids.
"In nearly all
cases, we observed the enhanced polymerization kinetics," he said.
"Thus, the effect is a general one. We attempted to correlate molecular
weight and rates with the viscosity and polarity of the ionic liquids,
but no clear trends are evident."
Mays also
presented results on an "ionic-liquid-assisted, free-radical
polymerization." His group used tris[hexyl(tetradecyl)phosphonium]
bis(2,2,4-trimeth-ylpentyl)phosphinate as the ionic liquid for the
room-temperature polymerization of methyl methacrylate using benzoyl
peroxide as initiator.
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FREE RADICALS Graduate student Hongwei Zhang (left) and Mays have demonstrated advantages of ionic liquids for polymerizations.
PHOTO BY PATRICIA MAYS |
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"NORMALLY, THIS REACTION must be heated to 60 oC
or higher to promote decomposition of the peroxide and onset of
polymerization," he noted. "We believe that this ionic liquid acts as a
reducing agent, in conjunction with benzoyl peroxide--an oxidizing
agent--to create free radicals at room temperature. In other words, it
is a redox initiator system.
"Thus, in this case,
there is the potential for green synthesis, high molecular weights,
rapid rates, and no need to heat the reaction," he continued. "This is
certainly a unique polymerization system."
Brazel
and colleagues at the University of Alabama have been looking into the
use of room-temperature ionic liquids as plasticizers. In recent work,
they compared poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) plasticized with
[bmim][PF6] or its hexyl relative [hmim][PF6]
with PMMA formulated with diethylhexyl phthalate (DEHP), a traditional
plasticizer. Diethylhexyl phthalate is the name recommended by the
International Union of Pure & Applied Chemistry. In the plastics
industry, it is usually referred to as dioctyl phthalate (DOP).
DEHP
is an excellent plasticizer for PMMA and poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC).
However, the use of DEHP in medical plastics and other plastics that
come into contact with humans has led to health concerns. Brazel
pointed out that DEHP migrates from plastic and leaches into saline and
other biological fluids.
"Although DEHP has been
found to bioaccumulate over years of normal human exposure, its
specific and chronic toxicities have not been fully evaluated," he
said. "Much of our work has focused on the use of ionic liquids as
plasticizers that can compete with DEHP in terms of flexibility while
offering greater thermal stability, better low-temperature performance,
and reduced leaching."
Last year, Brazel's group
reported that room-temperature ionic liquids based on imidazolium salts
are "excellent" plasticizers for PMMA [Eur. Polym. J., 39, 1947
(2003)]. They showed that the high-temperature stability of the ionic
liquids tested is higher than that of DEHP. The liquids also have the
ability to reduce glass-transition temperatures to near 0 oC.
More
recently, the group has been examining the leaching and migration
resistance of phosphonium-based and other ionic liquids when used as
PVC plasticizers. The researchers had some success at forming flexible
PVC, though some of the ionic liquids were not as successful at
lowering glass-transition temperatures.
Plasticizer
migration from PVC to other solids was minimal using several of the
ionic liquids, Brazel noted. He added that though leaching into water
was reduced using ionic liquids, it is still a significant challenge.
At
the Center for Green Manufacturing, staff scientist John D. Holbrey,
Rogers, and colleagues have shown that not only many common synthetic
polymers but also biopolymers such as cellulose, dextran, and starches
are soluble in the low-melting ionic liquid [bmim]Cl. The group is
particularly interested in the use of the liquid to dissolve and
derivatize cellulose, a natural polymer that is insoluble in water.
Holbrey
and coworkers have demonstrated that cellulose from pulp, field cotton,
filter paper, or virtually any other source rapidly dissolves in the
ionic liquid when heated gently. They noted that the potential of
cellulose and cellulose products has not been fully exploited for three
main reasons: the historical shift to petroleum-based polymers from the
1940s onward, the difficulty in modifying cellulose properties, and the
limited number of common solvents that readily dissolve cellulose.
"Currently,
cellulose processing and chemistry relies primarily on carbon disulfide
and caustic bases as dissolving solutions," Holbrey pointed out. "The
efficiency of existing methods for dissolving and derivatizing
cellulose can be significantly improved by the availability of suitable
solvents for refined and natural cellulose."
He
explained that solutions of cellulose and ionic liquids such as
[bmim]Cl are amenable to conventional processing techniques for the
formation of cellulose threads, thin films, and beads.
In
Anaheim, Holbrey described work on the use of [bmim]Cl to prepare
functional cellulose materials. Many dyes, as well as complexants for
coordination and binding of metal ions, that have been designed to be
insoluble in water can be readily dissolved in this polar ionic liquid
at high concentration, he noted. In this way, they can be integrated
"into a processed hydrophilic cellulose matrix to obtain materials
suitable for sensing and remediation in aqueous media."
Holbrey
pointed out that this hydrophilicity, or wettability, is potentially
useful in, for example, providing fast transport of water-soluble metal
ions to active sites.
"Because the ionic liquid is
able to dissolve many water-insoluble materials, this also provides a
methodology to entrap or incorporate the materials into the cellulose
matrix in a highly dispersed manner," he added.
The
group has also shown that insoluble macromolecular particles, including
enzymes, and inorganic nanoparticles can be introduced into the
cellulose in ionic liquids to produce disperse particle composites.
"Such
structurally modified cellulose materials are potentially useful in
biocatalysis and magneto-responsive sensing materials," Holbrey said.
"With additives to retard thermal and radiative degradation, they might
also be useful as flame retardants and UV filters, respectively."
In
England, research fellow Neil Winterton and coworkers at the Liverpool
Centre for Materials & Catalysis, University of Liverpool, in
collaboration with chemical engineers at the University of Newcastle,
have prepared a series of composites, some with permanent porosity,
that consist of linear polymers or cross-linked copolymers and
imidazolium ionic liquids [Macromolecules, 36, 4549
(2003)]. One of the aims of the work is to isolate porous polymers from
the composites that can be used in catalytic membrane reactors in which
ionic liquids are employed as catalytic media for the reactions.
"We
have prepared materials with permanent porosity by polymerizing
well-known cross-linkers, such as divinylbenzene and trimethylolpropane
trimethacrylate," Winterton said. "Porosity character- istics are known
to be sensitively dependent on the medium in which polymerization
occurs."
The team found that the porosity of
poly(divinylbenzene) produced in an ionic liquid is different from that
produced in a molecular solvent such as toluene, whereas the porosities
of poly(trimethylolpropane trimethacrylate) are similar, whether
produced in an ionic liquid or a molecular solvent.
"This
phenomenon is known to be related to phase separation, processes of
nucleation and growth, and particle aggregation, although in subtle and
poorly understood ways," Winterton explained.
COMPLETE REMOVAL of
the ionic liquids from isolated polymers is difficult, however. "Our
results on the retention of ionic liquids highlight the need for care
when considering the usefulness of ionic liquids as media for polymer
preparation," Winterton remarked. "It seems to me that those
applications, of which there are several, that exploit the novel
characteristics of the polymer-ionic liquid composite, such as battery
applications, are more likely to find earliest technical application,
compared with those that rely on the isolation of pure polymers
prepared in these media."
He noted that
polymerizations were among the earliest chemical transformations that
were studied in ionic liquids. Those studies "were motivated by
interest in polymer electrolytes for possible use in battery, fuel
cell, and related applications," Winterton observed.
In
recent years, chemistry professor Masayoshi Watanabe at Yokohama
National University, in Japan, has been combining ionic liquids and
polymers to form ion gels for use as polymer electrolytes in fuel
cells, lithium batteries, and dye-sensitized solar cells.
"Conventional
polymer gels normally contain volatile liquids that sometimes limit
their utility and durability at high temperatures and in the open
atmosphere," he said.
Watanabe uses in situ radical
polymerization of common vinyl monomers in ionic liquids to generate
ion gels that exhibit high conductivities at room temperature. An
example is an ion gel consisting of the ionic liquid
1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide
([emim][TFSI]) and a PMMA network polymer.
"The high
conductivities are caused by the self-dissociating and ion-transporting
abilities of the ionic liquids and by decoupling of the ion transport
and polymer segmental motion," he explained. If properties such as
lithium ion conduction and proton conduction are molecularly designed
into the ionic liquids, the range of potential uses of ionic liquids
and ion gels may greatly expand, he added.
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TETHERED IONS Ohno (left) and Ph.D. student Wataru Ogihara have carried out polymerizations with zwitterionic liquids.
PHOTO BY KEISUKE TANIGUCHI |
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Hiroyuki Ohno, a professor in the department of biotechnology at Tokyo
University of Agriculture & Technology, in Japan, pointed out that
the transport of the component ions of ionic liquids in polymer gel
electrolytes along a potential gradient remains a crucial problem.
"These ions are mostly useless as target ions," he noted. "A target ion
is an ion that plays an indispensable role in a device. For example,
the lithium cation is required for the lithium battery. When target
ions, such as lithium ions, protons, or iodide ions, are added to an
ionic liquid, the ions making up the ionic liquid also migrate along
the potential gradient."
Addition
of the target ions--in the form of salts, for example--also induces
increases in the glass-transition temperature and viscosity of the
polymer gel and, as a result, the ionic conductivity of the material is
considerably reduced.
"The liquids turn to solid on
addition of these salts," Ohno explained. "And the target ion transport
number, which is the contribution of the target ion migration to total
current, is very small."
Ohno has been attempting to
solve the problem by polymerizing ionic liquids to form polymeric films
in which only the target ions can migrate. Earlier this year, Ohno and
coworkers reported the preparation of highly ion-conductive,
transparent, and flexible films consisting of ionic liquid-type polymer
brushes [Polymer, 45, 1577 (2004)].
"The
polymerization of ordinary imidazolium ionic liquid monomers results in
a considerable drop in ionic conductivity," Ohno said. "We prepared
films with excellent ion conductivity from polymerizable ionic liquid
monomers--N-vinyl-3-ethylimidazolium TFSI and derivatives--that
have flexible hydrocarbon spacers between the polymerizable vinyl group
and the imidazolium cation ring.
"Such polycationic
systems may be useful for anion transport," he added. "We also showed
that copolymerization of cationic and anionic monomers results in a
polymerized ionic liquid moiety where no ions are inherently mobile.
These materials are interesting for target ion transport after addition
of suitable salts."
Ohno's group has also been
investigating the possibility of improving the transport of target ions
in the polymerized ionic liquids by adding zwitterionic liquids to
them. Zwitterionic compounds mostly have melting points above 100 oC, which is generally higher than those of simple ionic liquids.
"Zwitterionic
liquids are the next generation of ionic liquids," Ohno claims. "They
are molten salts composed of covalently tethered cations and anions."
In
a recent paper, the Tokyo researchers reported the results of a study
of the relationship between structure and properties of zwitterionic
liquids with sulfonate, carboxylate, or dicyanoethenolate anions and
onium cations such as imidazolium ions [Aust. J. Chem., 57,
139 (2004)]. They showed that increasing the length of the hydrocarbon
spacer between cation and anion generally lowered the melting points of
the zwitterions.
The main attraction of zwitterionic
liquids, according to Ohno, is that, like simple ionic liquids, they
can be used as solvents, and because they contain both cations and
anions, they do not migrate along a potential gradient.
"We
have synthesized lots of zwitterionic liquids," Ohno noted. "They have
potential applications as solvents in electrochemical applications and
in organic synthesis."
In Anaheim, Ohno reported the
preparation of novel solid ionic liquid polymer gel electrolytes by
polymerizing a mixture that included an ionic liquid monomer, LiTFSI,
and a zwitterionic liquid. He noted, however, that the ion conduction
of the electrolyte decreased with increasing LiTFSI or zwitterionic
liquid concentrations. The decrease can be attributed, he suggested, to
an increase of the glass-transition temperature.
Even
so, Ohno is optimistic about the potential of zwitterionic liquids,
polymerized ionic liquids, and ionic liquids in general.
"It
is fun to develop a variety of ionic liquids with specific functions
because the design of organic ions has unlimited possibilities," he
concluded. "In the future, we can expect wide-ranging applications of
ionic liquids, not only as solvents for chemical reactions, but also
for electrochemical uses. I suspect that one day we will be surrounded
by functionalized ionic liquids in our daily lives." |