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Liquid–liquid extraction

Liquid–liquid extraction (LLE), also known as solvent extraction and partitioning, is a method to separate compounds or metal complexes, based on their relative solubilities in two different immiscible liquids, usually water (polar) and an organic solvent (non-polar). There is a net transfer of one or more species from one liquid into another liquid phase, generally from aqueous to organic. The transfer is driven by chemical potential, i.e. once the transfer is complete, the overall system of chemical components that make up the solutes and the solvents are in a more stable configuration (lower free energy). The solvent that is enriched in solute(s) is called extract. The feed solution that is depleted in solute(s) is called the raffinate. LLE is a basic technique in chemical laboratories, where it is performed using a variety of apparatus, from separatory funnels to countercurrent distribution equipment called as mixer settlers.[not verified in body] This type of process is commonly performed after a chemical reaction as part of the work-up, often including an acidic work-up.

Solvent extraction.

The term partitioning is commonly used to refer to the underlying chemical and physical processes involved in liquid–liquid extraction, but on another reading may be fully synonymous with it. The term solvent extraction can also refer to the separation of a substance from a mixture by preferentially dissolving that substance in a suitable solvent. In that case, a soluble compound is separated from an insoluble compound or a complex matrix.[not verified in body]

From a hydrometallurgical perspective, solvent extraction is exclusively used in separation and purification of uranium and plutonium, zirconium and hafnium, separation of cobalt and nickel, separation and purification of rare earth elements etc., its greatest advantage being its ability to selectively separate out even very similar metals. One obtains high-purity single metal streams on 'stripping' out the metal value from the 'loaded' organic wherein one can precipitate or deposit the metal value. Stripping is the opposite of extraction: Transfer of mass from organic to aqueous phase.

LLE is also widely used in the production of fine organic compounds, the processing of perfumes, the production of vegetable oils and biodiesel, and other industries.[not verified in body] It is among the most common initial separation techniques, though some difficulties result in extracting out closely related functional groups.

Liquid–liquid extraction is possible in non-aqueous systems: In a system consisting of a molten metal in contact with molten salts, metals can be extracted from one phase to the other. This is related to a mercury electrode where a metal can be reduced, the metal will often then dissolve in the mercury to form an amalgam that modifies its electrochemistry greatly. For example, it is possible for sodium cations to be reduced at a mercury cathode to form sodium amalgam, while at an inert electrode (such as platinum) the sodium cations are not reduced. Instead, water is reduced to hydrogen. A detergent or fine solid can be used to stabilize an emulsion, or third phase.[not verified in body]

Measures of effectiveness

Distribution ratio

In solvent extraction, a distribution ratio is often quoted as a measure of how well-extracted a species is. The distribution ratio (Kd) is equal to the concentration of a solute in the organic phase divided by its concentration in the aqueous phase. Depending on the system, the distribution ratio can be a function of temperature, the concentration of chemical species in the system, and a large number of other parameters. Note that D is related to the ΔG of the extraction process[clarification needed].

Sometimes, the distribution ratio is referred to as the partition coefficient, which is often expressed as the logarithm. Note that a distribution ratio for uranium and neptunium between two inorganic solids (zirconolite and perovskite) has been reported.[1] In solvent extraction, two immiscible liquids are shaken together. The more polar solutes dissolve preferentially in the more polar solvent, and the less polar solutes in the less polar solvent. In this experiment, the nonpolar halogens preferentially dissolve in the non-polar mineral oil.[2]

Although the distribution ratio and partition coefficient are often used synonymously, they are not necessarily so. Solutes may exist in more than one form in any particular phase, which would mean that the partition coefficient (Kd) and distribution ratio (D) will have different values. This is an important distinction to make as whilst the partition coefficient has a fixed value for the partitioning of a solute between two phases, the distribution ratio changes with differing conditions in the solvent.[3]

After performing liquid–liquid extraction, a quantitative measure must be taken to determine the ratio of the solution's total concentration in each phase of the extraction. This quantitative measure is known as the distribution ratio or distribution coefficient.[4]

Separation factors

The separation factor is one distribution ratio divided by another; it is a measure of the ability of the system to separate two solutes. For instance, if the distribution ratio for nickel (DNi) is 10 and the distribution ratio for silver (DAg) is 100, then the silver/nickel separation factor (SFAg/Ni) is equal to DAg/DNi = SFAg/Ni = 10.[5]

Decontamination factor

This is used to express the ability of a process to remove a contaminant from a product. For instance, if a process is fed with a mixture of 1:9 cadmium to indium, and the product is a 1:99 mixture of cadmium and indium, then the decontamination factor (for the removal of cadmium) of the process is 0.11 / 0.01 = 11.

Slopes of graphs

The easy way to work out the extraction mechanism is to draw graphs and measure the slopes. If for an extraction system the D value is proportional to the square of the concentration of a reagent (Z) then the slope of the graph of log10(D) against log10([[Z]]) will be two.

Measures of success

Success of liquid–liquid extraction is measured through separation factors and decontamination factors. The best way to understand the success of an extraction column is through the liquid–liquid equilibrium (LLE) data set. The data set can then be converted into a curve to determine the steady state partitioning behavior of the solute between the two phases. The y-axis is the concentration of solute in the extract (solvent) phase, and the x-axis is the concentration of the solute in the raffinate phase. From here, one can determine steps for optimization of the process.[6]

Techniques

Batchwise single stage extractions

This is commonly used on the small scale in chemical labs. It is normal to use a separating funnel. Processes include DLLME and direct organic extraction. After equilibration, the extract phase containing the desired solute is separated out for further processing.

Dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction (DLLME)

A process used to extract small amounts of organic compounds from water samples.[7] This process is done by injecting small amounts of an appropriate extraction solvent (C2Cl4) and a disperser solvent (acetone) into the aqueous solution. The resulting solution is then centrifuged to separate the organic and aqueous layers. This process is useful in extraction organic compounds such as organochloride and organophsophorus pesticides, as well as substituted benzene compounds from water samples.[7]

Direct organic extraction

By mixing partially organic soluble samples in organic solvent (toluene, benzene, xylene), the organic soluble compounds will dissolve into the solvent and can be separated using a separatory funnel. This process is valuable in the extraction of proteins and specifically phosphoprotein and phosphopeptide phosphatases.[8]

Another example of this application is extracting anisole from a mixture of water and 5% acetic acid using ether, then the anisole will enter the organic phase. The two phases would then be separated. The acetic acid can then be scrubbed (removed) from the organic phase by shaking the organic extract with sodium bicarbonate. The acetic acid reacts with the sodium bicarbonate to form sodium acetate, carbon dioxide, and water.

Caffeine can also be extracted from coffee beans and tea leaves using a direct organic extraction. The beans or leaves can be soaked in ethyl acetate which favorably dissolves the caffeine, leaving a majority of the coffee or tea flavor remaining in the initial sample.[9]

Multistage countercurrent continuous processes

 
Coflore continuous countercurrent extractor.

These are commonly used in industry for the processing of metals such as the lanthanides; because the separation factors between the lanthanides are so small many extraction stages are needed.[10] In the multistage processes, the aqueous raffinate from one extraction unit is fed to the next unit as the aqueous feed, while the organic phase is moved in the opposite direction. Hence, in this way, even if the separation between two metals in each stage is small, the overall system can have a higher decontamination factor.

Multistage countercurrent arrays have been used for the separation of lanthanides. For the design of a good process, the distribution ratio should be not too high (>100) or too low (<0.1) in the extraction portion of the process. It is often the case that the process will have a section for scrubbing unwanted metals from the organic phase, and finally a stripping section to obtain the metal back from the organic phase.

Mixer–settlers

Battery of mixer-settlers counter currently interconnected. Each mixer-settler unit provides a single stage of extraction. A mixer settler consists of a first stage that mixes the phases together followed by a quiescent settling stage that allows the phases to separate by gravity.

 
Continuous separation of oil& water mixture

A novel settling device, Sudhin BioSettler, canseparate an oil-water emulsion continuously at a much faster rate than simple gravity settlers. In this photo, an oil-water emulsion, stirred by an impeller in an external reservoir and pumped continuously into the two bottom side ports of BioSettler, is separated very quickly into a clear organic (mineral oil) layer exiting via the top of BioSettler and an aqueous (coloured with a red food dye) layer being pumped out continuously from the bottom of BioSettler.

In the multistage countercurrent process, multiple mixer settlers are installed with mixing and settling chambers located at alternating ends for each stage (since the outlet of the settling sections feed the inlets of the adjacent stage's mixing sections). Mixer-settlers are used when a process requires longer residence times and when the solutions are easily separated by gravity. They require a large facility footprint, but do not require much headspace, and need limited remote maintenance capability for occasional replacement of mixing motors. (Colven, 1956; Davidson, 1957)[11]

 
4 stage battery of mixer-settlers for counter-current extraction.

Centrifugal extractors

Centrifugal extractors mix and separate in one unit. Two liquids will be intensively mixed between the spinning rotor and the stationary housing at speeds up to 6000 RPM. This develops great surfaces for an ideal mass transfer from the aqueous phase into the organic phase. At 200–2000 g, both phases will be separated again. Centrifugal extractors minimize the solvent in the process, optimize the product load in the solvent and extract the aqueous phase completely. Counter current and cross current extractions are easily established.[12]

Extraction without chemical change

Some solutes such as noble gases can be extracted from one phase to another without the need for a chemical reaction (see absorption). This is the simplest type of solvent extraction. When a solvent is extracted, two immiscible liquids are shaken together. The more polar solutes dissolve preferentially in the more polar solvent, and the less polar solutes in the less polar solvent. Some solutes that do not at first sight appear to undergo a reaction during the extraction process do not have distribution ratio that is independent of concentration. A classic example is the extraction of carboxylic acids (HA) into nonpolar media such as benzene. Here, it is often the case that the carboxylic acid will form a dimer in the organic layer so the distribution ratio will change as a function of the acid concentration (measured in either phase).

For this case, the extraction constant k is described by k = [HAorganic]2/[HAaqueous]

Solvation mechanism

Using solvent extraction it is possible to extract uranium, plutonium, thorium and many rare earth elements from acid solutions in a selective way by using the right choice of organic extracting solvent and diluent. One solvent used for this purpose is the organophosphate tributyl phosphate (TBP). The PUREX process that is commonly used in nuclear reprocessing uses a mixture of tri-n-butyl phosphate and an inert hydrocarbon (kerosene), the uranium(VI) are extracted from strong nitric acid and are back-extracted (stripped) using weak nitric acid. An organic soluble uranium complex [UO2(TBP)2(NO3)2] is formed, then the organic layer bearing the uranium is brought into contact with a dilute nitric acid solution; the equilibrium is shifted away from the organic soluble uranium complex and towards the free TBP and uranyl nitrate in dilute nitric acid. The plutonium(IV) forms a similar complex to the uranium(VI), but it is possible to strip the plutonium in more than one way; a reducing agent that converts the plutonium to the trivalent oxidation state can be added. This oxidation state does not form a stable complex with TBP and nitrate unless the nitrate concentration is very high (circa 10 mol/L nitrate is required in the aqueous phase). Another method is to simply use dilute nitric acid as a stripping agent for the plutonium. This PUREX chemistry is a classic example of a solvation extraction. In this case, DU = k [TBP]2[NO3-]2.

Ion exchange mechanism

Another extraction mechanism is known as the ion exchange mechanism. Here, when an ion is transferred from the aqueous phase to the organic phase, another ion is transferred in the other direction to maintain the charge balance. This additional ion is often a hydrogen ion; for ion exchange mechanisms, the distribution ratio is often a function of pH. An example of an ion exchange extraction would be the extraction of americium by a combination of terpyridine and a carboxylic acid in tert-butyl benzene. In this case

DAm = k [terpyridine]1[carboxylic acid]3[H+]−3

Another example is the extraction of zinc, cadmium, or lead by a dialkyl phosphinic acid (R2PO2H) into a nonpolar diluent such as an alkane. A non-polar diluent favours the formation of uncharged non-polar metal complexes.

Some extraction systems are able to extract metals by both the solvation and ion exchange mechanisms; an example of such a system is the americium (and lanthanide) extraction from nitric acid by a combination of 6,6'-bis-(5,6-dipentyl-1,2,4-triazin-3-yl)-2,2'-bipyridine and 2-bromohexanoic acid in tert-butyl benzene. At both high- and low-nitric acid concentrations, the metal distribution ratio is higher than it is for an intermediate nitric acid concentration.

Ion pair extraction

It is possible by careful choice of counterion to extract a metal. For instance, if the nitrate concentration is high, it is possible to extract americium as an anionic nitrate complex if the mixture contains a lipophilic quaternary ammonium salt.

An example that is more likely to be encountered by the 'average' chemist is the use of a phase transfer catalyst. This is a charged species that transfers another ion to the organic phase. The ion reacts and then forms another ion, which is then transferred back to the aqueous phase.

For instance, the 31.1 kJ mol−1 is required to transfer an acetate anion into nitrobenzene,[13] while the energy required to transfer a chloride anion from an aqueous phase to nitrobenzene is 43.8 kJ mol−1.[14] Hence, if the aqueous phase in a reaction is a solution of sodium acetate while the organic phase is a nitrobenzene solution of benzyl chloride, then, when a phase transfer catalyst, the acetate anions can be transferred from the aqueous layer where they react with the benzyl chloride to form benzyl acetate and a chloride anion. The chloride anion is then transferred to the aqueous phase. The transfer energies of the anions contribute to that given out by the reaction.

A 43.8 to 31.1 kJ mol−1 = 12.7 kJ mol−1 of additional energy is given out by the reaction when compared with energy if the reaction had been done in nitrobenzene using one equivalent weight of a tetraalkylammonium acetate.[15]

Types of aqueous two-phase extractions

Polymer–polymer systems. In a Polymer–polymer system, both phases are generated by a dissolved polymer. The heavy phase will generally be a polysaccharide, and the light phase is generally Polyethylene glycol (PEG). Traditionally, the polysaccharide used is dextran. However, dextran is relatively expensive, and research has been exploring using less expensive polysaccharides to generate the heavy phase. If the target compound being separated is a protein or enzyme, it is possible to incorporate a ligand to the target into one of the polymer phases. This improves the target's affinity to that phase, and improves its ability to partition from one phase into the other. This, as well as the absence of solvents or other denaturing agents, makes polymer–polymer extractions an attractive option for purifying proteins. The two phases of a polymer–polymer system often have very similar densities, and very low surface tension between them. Because of this, demixing a polymer–polymer system is often much more difficult than demixing a solvent extraction. Methods to improve the demixing include centrifugation, and application of an electric field.

Polymer–salt systems. Aqueous two-phase systems can also be generated by generating the heavy phase with a concentrated salt solution. The polymer phase used is generally still PEG. Generally, a kosmotropic salt, such as Na3PO4 is used, however PEG–NaCl systems have been documented when the salt concentration is high enough. Since polymer–salt systems demix readily they are easier to use. However, at high salt concentrations, proteins generally either denature, or precipitate from solution. Thus, polymer–salt systems are not as useful for purifying proteins.

Ionic liquids systems. Ionic liquids are ionic compounds with low melting points. While they are not technically aqueous, recent research has experimented with using them in an extraction that does not use organic solvents.

DNA purification

The ability to purify DNA from a sample is important for many modern biotechnology processes. However, samples often contain nucleases that degrade the target DNA before it can be purified. It has been shown that DNA fragments will partition into the light phase of a polymer–salt separation system. If ligands known to bind and deactivate nucleases are incorporated into the polymer phase, the nucleases will then partition into the heavy phase and be deactivated. Thus, this polymer–salt system is a useful tool for purifying DNA from a sample while simultaneously protecting it from nucleases.[citation needed]

Food industry

The PEG–NaCl system has been shown to be effective at partitioning small molecules, such as peptides and nucleic acids. These compounds are often flavorants or odorants. The system could then be used by the food industry to isolate or eliminate particular flavors. Caffeine extraction used to be done using liquid–liquid extraction, specifically direct and indirect liquid–liquid extraction (Swiss Water Method), but has since moved towards super-critical CO2 as it is cheaper and can be done on a commercial scale.[16][17]

Analytical chemistry

Often there are chemical species present or necessary at one stage of sample processing that will interfere with the analysis. For example, some air monitoring is performed by drawing air through a small glass tube filled with sorbent particles that have been coated with a chemical to stabilize or derivatize the analyte of interest. The coating may be of such a concentration or characteristics that it would damage the instrumentation or interfere with the analysis. If the sample can be extracted from the sorbent using a nonpolar solvent (such as toluene or carbon disulfide), and the coating is polar (such as HBr or phosphoric acid) the dissolved coating will partition into the aqueous phase. Clearly the reverse is true as well, using polar extraction solvent and a nonpolar solvent to partition a nonpolar interferent. A small aliquot of the organic phase (or in the latter case, polar phase) can then be injected into the instrument for analysis.

Purification of amines

Amines (analogously to ammonia) have a lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen atom that can form a relatively weak bond to a hydrogen atom. It is therefore the case that under acidic conditions amines are typically protonated, carrying a positive charge and under basic conditions they are typically deprotonated and neutral. Amines of sufficiently low molecular weight are rather polar and can form hydrogen bonds with water and therefore will readily dissolve in aqueous solutions. Deprotonated amines on the other hand, are neutral and have greasy, nonpolar organic substituents, and therefore have a higher affinity for nonpolar inorganic solvents. As such purification steps can be carried out where an aqueous solution of an amine is neutralized with a base such as sodium hydroxide, then shaken in a separatory funnel with a nonpolar solvent that is immiscible with water. The organic phase is then drained off. Subsequent processing can recover the amine by techniques such as recrystallization, evaporation or distillation; subsequent extraction back to a polar phase can be performed by adding HCl and shaking again in a separatory funnel (at which point the ammonium ion could be recovered by adding an insoluble counterion), or in either phase, reactions could be performed as part of a chemical synthesis.

Temperature swing solvent extraction

Temperature swing solvent extraction is an experimental technique for the desalination of drinking water. It has been used to remove up to 98.4% of the salt content in water, and is able to process hypersaline brines that cannot be desalinated using reverse osmosis.[18]

Kinetics of extraction

It is important to investigate the rate at which the solute is transferred between the two phases, in some cases by an alteration of the contact time it is possible to alter the selectivity of the extraction. For instance, the extraction of palladium or nickel can be very slow because the rate of ligand exchange at these metal centers is much lower than the rates for iron or silver complexes.

Aqueous complexing agents

If a complexing agent is present in the aqueous phase then it can lower the distribution ratio. For instance, in the case of iodine being distributed between water and an inert organic solvent such as carbon tetrachloride then the presence of iodide in the aqueous phase can alter the extraction chemistry: instead of   being a constant it becomes

  = k[I2 (organic)]/[I2 (aq)][I (aq)]

This is because the iodine reacts with the iodide to form I3. The I3 anion is an example of a polyhalide anion that is quite common.

Industrial process design

In a typical scenario, an industrial process will use an extraction step in which solutes are transferred from the aqueous phase to the organic phase; this is often followed by a scrubbing stage in which unwanted solutes are removed from the organic phase, then a stripping stage in which the wanted solutes are removed from the organic phase. The organic phase may then be treated to make it ready for use again.[19][20]

After use, the organic phase may be subjected to a cleaning step to remove any degradation products; for instance, in PUREX plants, the used organic phase is washed with sodium carbonate solution to remove any dibutyl hydrogen phosphate or butyl dihydrogen phosphate that might be present.

Liquid-liquid equilibrium calculations

In order to calculate the phase equilibrium, it is necessary to use a thermodynamic model such as NRTL, UNIQUAC, etc. The corresponding parameters of these models can be obtained from literature (e.g. Dechema Chemistry Data Series, Dortmund Data Bank, etc.) or by a correlation process of experimental data.[21][22][23][24]

Equipment

Phase separation during a laboratory scale LLE. The upper organic ether solution of MTBE is being extracted with the lower alkaline aqueous sodium bicarbonate solution to remove benzoic acid as the benzoate anion, leaving a non-acidic organic, benzil, (yellow in color) in the organic phase.

While solvent extraction is often done on a small scale by synthetic lab chemists using a separatory funnel, Craig apparatus or membrane-based techniques,[25] it is normally done on the industrial scale using machines that bring the two liquid phases into contact with each other. Such machines include centrifugal contactors, Thin Layer Extraction, spray columns, pulsed columns, and mixer-settlers.

Extraction of metals

The extraction methods for a range of metals include:[26][27]

Cobalt

The extraction of cobalt from hydrochloric acid using Alamine 336 (tri-octyl/decyl amine) in meta-xylene.[28] Cobalt can be extracted also using Ionquest 290 or Cyanex 272 {bis-(2,4,4-trimethylpentyl) phosphinic acid}.

Copper

Copper can be extracted using hydroxyoximes as extractants, a recent paper describes an extractant that has a good selectivity for copper over cobalt and nickel.[29]

Neodymium

The rare earth element Neodymium is extracted by di(2-ethyl-hexyl)phosphoric acid into hexane by an ion exchange mechanism.[30]

Nickel

Nickel can be extracted using di(2-ethyl-hexyl)phosphoric acid and tributyl phosphate in a hydrocarbon diluent (Shellsol).[31]

Palladium and platinum

Dialkyl sulfides, tributyl phosphate and alkyl amines have been used for extracting palladium and platinum.[32][33]

Polonium

Polonium is produced in reactors from natural 209Bi, bombarded with neutrons, creating 210Bi, which then decays to 210Po via beta-minus decay. The final purification is done pyrochemically followed by liquid-liquid extraction vs sodium hydroxide at 500 deg C.[34]

Zinc and cadmium

Zinc and cadmium are both extracted by an ion exchange process, the N,N,N′,N′-tetrakis(2-pyridylmethyl)ethylenediamine (TPEN) acts as a masking agent for the zinc and an extractant for the cadmium.[35] In the modified Zincex process, zinc is separated from most divalent ions by solvent extraction. D2EHPA (Di (2) ethyl hexyl phosphoric acid) is used for this. A zinc ion replaces the proton from two D2EHPA molecules. To strip the zinc from the D2EHPA, sulfuric acid is used, at a concentration of above 170g/L (typically 240-265g/L).

Lithium

Lithium extraction is more popular due to the high demand of lithium-ion batteries. TBP (Tri-butyl phosphate) and FeCl3 are mostly used to extract lithium from brine (with high Li/Mg ratio).[36] Alternatively, Cyanex 272 was also used to extract lithium. The mechanism of lithium extraction was found differently from other metals, such as cobalt, due to the weak coordinating bonding between lithium ions and extractants.[37]

See also

References

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  33. ^ Giridhar, P.; Venkatesan, K.A.; Srinivasan, T.G.; Vasudeva Rao, P.R. (2006). "Extraction of fission palladium by Aliquat 336 and electrochemical studies on direct recovery from ionic liquid phase". Hydrometallurgy. 81 (1): 30–39. doi:10.1016/j.hydromet.2005.10.001. ISSN 0304-386X.
  34. ^ Schulz, Wallace W.; Schiefelbein, Gary F.; Bruns, Lester E. (1969). "Pyrochemical Extraction of Polonium from Irradiated Bismuth Metal". Ind. Eng. Chem. Process Des. Dev. 8 (4): 508–515. doi:10.1021/i260032a013.
  35. ^ K. Takeshita; K. Watanabe; Y. Nakano; M. Watanabe (2003). "Solvent extraction separation of Cd(II) and Zn(II) with the organophosphorus extractant D2EHPA and the aqueous nitrogen-donor ligand TPEN". Hydrometallurgy. 70 (1–3): 63–71. doi:10.1016/s0304-386x(03)00046-x.
  36. ^ Wesselborg, Tobias; Virolainen, Sami; Sainio, Tuomo (2021-06-01). "Recovery of lithium from leach solutions of battery waste using direct solvent extraction with TBP and FeCl3". Hydrometallurgy. 202: 105593. doi:10.1016/j.hydromet.2021.105593. ISSN 0304-386X. S2CID 233662976.
  37. ^ Lu, Junnan; Stevens, Geoff W.; Mumford, Kathryn A. (2021-12-01). "Development of heterogeneous equilibrium model for lithium solvent extraction using organophosphinic acid". Separation and Purification Technology. 276: 119307. doi:10.1016/j.seppur.2021.119307. ISSN 1383-5866.

Further reading

  • B.L. Karger, 2014, "Separation and Purification: Single-stage versus multistage processes" and "Separation and Purification: Separations Based on Equilibrium", Encyclopædia Britannica, see [1] and [2], accessed 12 May 2014.
  • Gunt Hamburg, 2014, "Thermal Process Engineering: liquid–liquid extraction and solid-liquid extraction", see [3], accessed 12 May 2014.
  • G.W. Stevens, T.C., Lo, & M. H. I. Baird, 2007, "Extraction, liquid–liquid", in Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, doi:10.1002/0471238961.120917211215.a01.pub2, accessed 12 May 2014.
  • Colin Poole & Michael Cooke, 2000, "Extraction", in Encyclopedia of Separation Science, 10 Vols., ISBN 9780122267703, see [4], accessed 12 May 2014.
  • Sikdar, Cole, et al. Aqueous Two-Phase Extractions in Bioseparations: An Assessment. Biotechnology 9:254. 1991
  • Szlag, Giuliano. A Low-Cost Aqueous Two Phase System for Enzyme Extraction. Biotechnology Techniques 2:4:277. 1988
  • Dreyer, Kragl. Ionic Liquids for Aqueous Two-Phase Extraction and Stabilization of Enzymes. Biotechnology and Bioengineering. 99:6:1416. 2008
  • Boland. Aqueous Two-Phase Systems: Methods and Protocols. Pg 259-269
  • Topological Analysis of the Gibbs Energy Function (Liquid-Liquid Equilibrium Correlation Data). Including a Thermodynamic Review and a Graphical User Interface (GUI) for Surfaces/Tie-lines/Hessian matrix analysis - University of Alicante (Reyes-Labarta et al. 2015-18)

liquid, liquid, extraction, this, article, technical, most, readers, understand, please, help, improve, make, understandable, experts, without, removing, technical, details, august, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, also, known, solvent, extr. This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Liquid liquid extraction LLE also known as solvent extraction and partitioning is a method to separate compounds or metal complexes based on their relative solubilities in two different immiscible liquids usually water polar and an organic solvent non polar There is a net transfer of one or more species from one liquid into another liquid phase generally from aqueous to organic The transfer is driven by chemical potential i e once the transfer is complete the overall system of chemical components that make up the solutes and the solvents are in a more stable configuration lower free energy The solvent that is enriched in solute s is called extract The feed solution that is depleted in solute s is called the raffinate LLE is a basic technique in chemical laboratories where it is performed using a variety of apparatus from separatory funnels to countercurrent distribution equipment called as mixer settlers not verified in body This type of process is commonly performed after a chemical reaction as part of the work up often including an acidic work up Solvent extraction The term partitioning is commonly used to refer to the underlying chemical and physical processes involved in liquid liquid extraction but on another reading may be fully synonymous with it The term solvent extraction can also refer to the separation of a substance from a mixture by preferentially dissolving that substance in a suitable solvent In that case a soluble compound is separated from an insoluble compound or a complex matrix not verified in body From a hydrometallurgical perspective solvent extraction is exclusively used in separation and purification of uranium and plutonium zirconium and hafnium separation of cobalt and nickel separation and purification of rare earth elements etc its greatest advantage being its ability to selectively separate out even very similar metals One obtains high purity single metal streams on stripping out the metal value from the loaded organic wherein one can precipitate or deposit the metal value Stripping is the opposite of extraction Transfer of mass from organic to aqueous phase LLE is also widely used in the production of fine organic compounds the processing of perfumes the production of vegetable oils and biodiesel and other industries not verified in body It is among the most common initial separation techniques though some difficulties result in extracting out closely related functional groups Liquid liquid extraction is possible in non aqueous systems In a system consisting of a molten metal in contact with molten salts metals can be extracted from one phase to the other This is related to a mercury electrode where a metal can be reduced the metal will often then dissolve in the mercury to form an amalgam that modifies its electrochemistry greatly For example it is possible for sodium cations to be reduced at a mercury cathode to form sodium amalgam while at an inert electrode such as platinum the sodium cations are not reduced Instead water is reduced to hydrogen A detergent or fine solid can be used to stabilize an emulsion or third phase not verified in body Contents 1 Measures of effectiveness 1 1 Distribution ratio 1 2 Separation factors 1 3 Decontamination factor 1 4 Slopes of graphs 1 5 Measures of success 2 Techniques 2 1 Batchwise single stage extractions 2 1 1 Dispersive liquid liquid microextraction DLLME 2 1 2 Direct organic extraction 2 2 Multistage countercurrent continuous processes 2 2 1 Mixer settlers 2 2 2 Centrifugal extractors 2 3 Extraction without chemical change 2 4 Solvation mechanism 2 5 Ion exchange mechanism 2 6 Ion pair extraction 2 6 1 Types of aqueous two phase extractions 2 6 2 DNA purification 2 6 3 Food industry 2 6 4 Analytical chemistry 2 6 5 Purification of amines 2 7 Temperature swing solvent extraction 3 Kinetics of extraction 4 Aqueous complexing agents 5 Industrial process design 5 1 Liquid liquid equilibrium calculations 6 Equipment 7 Extraction of metals 7 1 Cobalt 7 2 Copper 7 3 Neodymium 7 4 Nickel 7 5 Palladium and platinum 7 6 Polonium 7 7 Zinc and cadmium 7 8 Lithium 8 See also 9 References 10 Further readingMeasures of effectiveness EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Distribution ratio Edit In solvent extraction a distribution ratio is often quoted as a measure of how well extracted a species is The distribution ratio Kd is equal to the concentration of a solute in the organic phase divided by its concentration in the aqueous phase Depending on the system the distribution ratio can be a function of temperature the concentration of chemical species in the system and a large number of other parameters Note that D is related to the DG of the extraction process clarification needed Sometimes the distribution ratio is referred to as the partition coefficient which is often expressed as the logarithm Note that a distribution ratio for uranium and neptunium between two inorganic solids zirconolite and perovskite has been reported 1 In solvent extraction two immiscible liquids are shaken together The more polar solutes dissolve preferentially in the more polar solvent and the less polar solutes in the less polar solvent In this experiment the nonpolar halogens preferentially dissolve in the non polar mineral oil 2 Although the distribution ratio and partition coefficient are often used synonymously they are not necessarily so Solutes may exist in more than one form in any particular phase which would mean that the partition coefficient Kd and distribution ratio D will have different values This is an important distinction to make as whilst the partition coefficient has a fixed value for the partitioning of a solute between two phases the distribution ratio changes with differing conditions in the solvent 3 After performing liquid liquid extraction a quantitative measure must be taken to determine the ratio of the solution s total concentration in each phase of the extraction This quantitative measure is known as the distribution ratio or distribution coefficient 4 Separation factors Edit The separation factor is one distribution ratio divided by another it is a measure of the ability of the system to separate two solutes For instance if the distribution ratio for nickel DNi is 10 and the distribution ratio for silver DAg is 100 then the silver nickel separation factor SFAg Ni is equal to DAg DNi SFAg Ni 10 5 Decontamination factor Edit This is used to express the ability of a process to remove a contaminant from a product For instance if a process is fed with a mixture of 1 9 cadmium to indium and the product is a 1 99 mixture of cadmium and indium then the decontamination factor for the removal of cadmium of the process is 0 11 0 01 11 Slopes of graphs Edit The easy way to work out the extraction mechanism is to draw graphs and measure the slopes If for an extraction system the D value is proportional to the square of the concentration of a reagent Z then the slope of the graph of log10 D against log10 Z will be two Measures of success Edit Success of liquid liquid extraction is measured through separation factors and decontamination factors The best way to understand the success of an extraction column is through the liquid liquid equilibrium LLE data set The data set can then be converted into a curve to determine the steady state partitioning behavior of the solute between the two phases The y axis is the concentration of solute in the extract solvent phase and the x axis is the concentration of the solute in the raffinate phase From here one can determine steps for optimization of the process 6 Techniques EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Batchwise single stage extractions Edit This is commonly used on the small scale in chemical labs It is normal to use a separating funnel Processes include DLLME and direct organic extraction After equilibration the extract phase containing the desired solute is separated out for further processing Dispersive liquid liquid microextraction DLLME Edit A process used to extract small amounts of organic compounds from water samples 7 This process is done by injecting small amounts of an appropriate extraction solvent C2Cl4 and a disperser solvent acetone into the aqueous solution The resulting solution is then centrifuged to separate the organic and aqueous layers This process is useful in extraction organic compounds such as organochloride and organophsophorus pesticides as well as substituted benzene compounds from water samples 7 Direct organic extraction Edit By mixing partially organic soluble samples in organic solvent toluene benzene xylene the organic soluble compounds will dissolve into the solvent and can be separated using a separatory funnel This process is valuable in the extraction of proteins and specifically phosphoprotein and phosphopeptide phosphatases 8 Another example of this application is extracting anisole from a mixture of water and 5 acetic acid using ether then the anisole will enter the organic phase The two phases would then be separated The acetic acid can then be scrubbed removed from the organic phase by shaking the organic extract with sodium bicarbonate The acetic acid reacts with the sodium bicarbonate to form sodium acetate carbon dioxide and water Caffeine can also be extracted from coffee beans and tea leaves using a direct organic extraction The beans or leaves can be soaked in ethyl acetate which favorably dissolves the caffeine leaving a majority of the coffee or tea flavor remaining in the initial sample 9 Multistage countercurrent continuous processes Edit Coflore continuous countercurrent extractor These are commonly used in industry for the processing of metals such as the lanthanides because the separation factors between the lanthanides are so small many extraction stages are needed 10 In the multistage processes the aqueous raffinate from one extraction unit is fed to the next unit as the aqueous feed while the organic phase is moved in the opposite direction Hence in this way even if the separation between two metals in each stage is small the overall system can have a higher decontamination factor Multistage countercurrent arrays have been used for the separation of lanthanides For the design of a good process the distribution ratio should be not too high gt 100 or too low lt 0 1 in the extraction portion of the process It is often the case that the process will have a section for scrubbing unwanted metals from the organic phase and finally a stripping section to obtain the metal back from the organic phase Mixer settlers Edit Battery of mixer settlers counter currently interconnected Each mixer settler unit provides a single stage of extraction A mixer settler consists of a first stage that mixes the phases together followed by a quiescent settling stage that allows the phases to separate by gravity Continuous separation of oil amp water mixture A novel settling device Sudhin BioSettler canseparate an oil water emulsion continuously at a much faster rate than simple gravity settlers In this photo an oil water emulsion stirred by an impeller in an external reservoir and pumped continuously into the two bottom side ports of BioSettler is separated very quickly into a clear organic mineral oil layer exiting via the top of BioSettler and an aqueous coloured with a red food dye layer being pumped out continuously from the bottom of BioSettler In the multistage countercurrent process multiple mixer settlers are installed with mixing and settling chambers located at alternating ends for each stage since the outlet of the settling sections feed the inlets of the adjacent stage s mixing sections Mixer settlers are used when a process requires longer residence times and when the solutions are easily separated by gravity They require a large facility footprint but do not require much headspace and need limited remote maintenance capability for occasional replacement of mixing motors Colven 1956 Davidson 1957 11 4 stage battery of mixer settlers for counter current extraction Centrifugal extractors Edit Centrifugal extractors mix and separate in one unit Two liquids will be intensively mixed between the spinning rotor and the stationary housing at speeds up to 6000 RPM This develops great surfaces for an ideal mass transfer from the aqueous phase into the organic phase At 200 2000 g both phases will be separated again Centrifugal extractors minimize the solvent in the process optimize the product load in the solvent and extract the aqueous phase completely Counter current and cross current extractions are easily established 12 Extraction without chemical change Edit Some solutes such as noble gases can be extracted from one phase to another without the need for a chemical reaction see absorption This is the simplest type of solvent extraction When a solvent is extracted two immiscible liquids are shaken together The more polar solutes dissolve preferentially in the more polar solvent and the less polar solutes in the less polar solvent Some solutes that do not at first sight appear to undergo a reaction during the extraction process do not have distribution ratio that is independent of concentration A classic example is the extraction of carboxylic acids HA into nonpolar media such as benzene Here it is often the case that the carboxylic acid will form a dimer in the organic layer so the distribution ratio will change as a function of the acid concentration measured in either phase For this case the extraction constant k is described by k HAorganic 2 HAaqueous Solvation mechanism Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Using solvent extraction it is possible to extract uranium plutonium thorium and many rare earth elements from acid solutions in a selective way by using the right choice of organic extracting solvent and diluent One solvent used for this purpose is the organophosphate tributyl phosphate TBP The PUREX process that is commonly used in nuclear reprocessing uses a mixture of tri n butyl phosphate and an inert hydrocarbon kerosene the uranium VI are extracted from strong nitric acid and are back extracted stripped using weak nitric acid An organic soluble uranium complex UO2 TBP 2 NO3 2 is formed then the organic layer bearing the uranium is brought into contact with a dilute nitric acid solution the equilibrium is shifted away from the organic soluble uranium complex and towards the free TBP and uranyl nitrate in dilute nitric acid The plutonium IV forms a similar complex to the uranium VI but it is possible to strip the plutonium in more than one way a reducing agent that converts the plutonium to the trivalent oxidation state can be added This oxidation state does not form a stable complex with TBP and nitrate unless the nitrate concentration is very high circa 10 mol L nitrate is required in the aqueous phase Another method is to simply use dilute nitric acid as a stripping agent for the plutonium This PUREX chemistry is a classic example of a solvation extraction In this case DU k TBP 2 NO3 2 Ion exchange mechanism Edit Another extraction mechanism is known as the ion exchange mechanism Here when an ion is transferred from the aqueous phase to the organic phase another ion is transferred in the other direction to maintain the charge balance This additional ion is often a hydrogen ion for ion exchange mechanisms the distribution ratio is often a function of pH An example of an ion exchange extraction would be the extraction of americium by a combination of terpyridine and a carboxylic acid in tert butyl benzene In this case DAm k terpyridine 1 carboxylic acid 3 H 3Another example is the extraction of zinc cadmium or lead by a dialkyl phosphinic acid R2PO2H into a nonpolar diluent such as an alkane A non polar diluent favours the formation of uncharged non polar metal complexes Some extraction systems are able to extract metals by both the solvation and ion exchange mechanisms an example of such a system is the americium and lanthanide extraction from nitric acid by a combination of 6 6 bis 5 6 dipentyl 1 2 4 triazin 3 yl 2 2 bipyridine and 2 bromohexanoic acid in tert butyl benzene At both high and low nitric acid concentrations the metal distribution ratio is higher than it is for an intermediate nitric acid concentration Ion pair extraction Edit It is possible by careful choice of counterion to extract a metal For instance if the nitrate concentration is high it is possible to extract americium as an anionic nitrate complex if the mixture contains a lipophilic quaternary ammonium salt An example that is more likely to be encountered by the average chemist is the use of a phase transfer catalyst This is a charged species that transfers another ion to the organic phase The ion reacts and then forms another ion which is then transferred back to the aqueous phase For instance the 31 1 kJ mol 1 is required to transfer an acetate anion into nitrobenzene 13 while the energy required to transfer a chloride anion from an aqueous phase to nitrobenzene is 43 8 kJ mol 1 14 Hence if the aqueous phase in a reaction is a solution of sodium acetate while the organic phase is a nitrobenzene solution of benzyl chloride then when a phase transfer catalyst the acetate anions can be transferred from the aqueous layer where they react with the benzyl chloride to form benzyl acetate and a chloride anion The chloride anion is then transferred to the aqueous phase The transfer energies of the anions contribute to that given out by the reaction A 43 8 to 31 1 kJ mol 1 12 7 kJ mol 1 of additional energy is given out by the reaction when compared with energy if the reaction had been done in nitrobenzene using one equivalent weight of a tetraalkylammonium acetate 15 Types of aqueous two phase extractions Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Polymer polymer systems In a Polymer polymer system both phases are generated by a dissolved polymer The heavy phase will generally be a polysaccharide and the light phase is generally Polyethylene glycol PEG Traditionally the polysaccharide used is dextran However dextran is relatively expensive and research has been exploring using less expensive polysaccharides to generate the heavy phase If the target compound being separated is a protein or enzyme it is possible to incorporate a ligand to the target into one of the polymer phases This improves the target s affinity to that phase and improves its ability to partition from one phase into the other This as well as the absence of solvents or other denaturing agents makes polymer polymer extractions an attractive option for purifying proteins The two phases of a polymer polymer system often have very similar densities and very low surface tension between them Because of this demixing a polymer polymer system is often much more difficult than demixing a solvent extraction Methods to improve the demixing include centrifugation and application of an electric field Polymer salt systems Aqueous two phase systems can also be generated by generating the heavy phase with a concentrated salt solution The polymer phase used is generally still PEG Generally a kosmotropic salt such as Na3PO4 is used however PEG NaCl systems have been documented when the salt concentration is high enough Since polymer salt systems demix readily they are easier to use However at high salt concentrations proteins generally either denature or precipitate from solution Thus polymer salt systems are not as useful for purifying proteins Ionic liquids systems Ionic liquids are ionic compounds with low melting points While they are not technically aqueous recent research has experimented with using them in an extraction that does not use organic solvents DNA purification Edit Main article DNA extraction The ability to purify DNA from a sample is important for many modern biotechnology processes However samples often contain nucleases that degrade the target DNA before it can be purified It has been shown that DNA fragments will partition into the light phase of a polymer salt separation system If ligands known to bind and deactivate nucleases are incorporated into the polymer phase the nucleases will then partition into the heavy phase and be deactivated Thus this polymer salt system is a useful tool for purifying DNA from a sample while simultaneously protecting it from nucleases citation needed Food industry Edit The PEG NaCl system has been shown to be effective at partitioning small molecules such as peptides and nucleic acids These compounds are often flavorants or odorants The system could then be used by the food industry to isolate or eliminate particular flavors Caffeine extraction used to be done using liquid liquid extraction specifically direct and indirect liquid liquid extraction Swiss Water Method but has since moved towards super critical CO2 as it is cheaper and can be done on a commercial scale 16 17 Analytical chemistry Edit Often there are chemical species present or necessary at one stage of sample processing that will interfere with the analysis For example some air monitoring is performed by drawing air through a small glass tube filled with sorbent particles that have been coated with a chemical to stabilize or derivatize the analyte of interest The coating may be of such a concentration or characteristics that it would damage the instrumentation or interfere with the analysis If the sample can be extracted from the sorbent using a nonpolar solvent such as toluene or carbon disulfide and the coating is polar such as HBr or phosphoric acid the dissolved coating will partition into the aqueous phase Clearly the reverse is true as well using polar extraction solvent and a nonpolar solvent to partition a nonpolar interferent A small aliquot of the organic phase or in the latter case polar phase can then be injected into the instrument for analysis Purification of amines Edit Amines analogously to ammonia have a lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen atom that can form a relatively weak bond to a hydrogen atom It is therefore the case that under acidic conditions amines are typically protonated carrying a positive charge and under basic conditions they are typically deprotonated and neutral Amines of sufficiently low molecular weight are rather polar and can form hydrogen bonds with water and therefore will readily dissolve in aqueous solutions Deprotonated amines on the other hand are neutral and have greasy nonpolar organic substituents and therefore have a higher affinity for nonpolar inorganic solvents As such purification steps can be carried out where an aqueous solution of an amine is neutralized with a base such as sodium hydroxide then shaken in a separatory funnel with a nonpolar solvent that is immiscible with water The organic phase is then drained off Subsequent processing can recover the amine by techniques such as recrystallization evaporation or distillation subsequent extraction back to a polar phase can be performed by adding HCl and shaking again in a separatory funnel at which point the ammonium ion could be recovered by adding an insoluble counterion or in either phase reactions could be performed as part of a chemical synthesis Temperature swing solvent extraction Edit Main article Desalination Temperature swing solvent extraction Temperature swing solvent extraction is an experimental technique for the desalination of drinking water It has been used to remove up to 98 4 of the salt content in water and is able to process hypersaline brines that cannot be desalinated using reverse osmosis 18 Kinetics of extraction EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message It is important to investigate the rate at which the solute is transferred between the two phases in some cases by an alteration of the contact time it is possible to alter the selectivity of the extraction For instance the extraction of palladium or nickel can be very slow because the rate of ligand exchange at these metal centers is much lower than the rates for iron or silver complexes Aqueous complexing agents EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message If a complexing agent is present in the aqueous phase then it can lower the distribution ratio For instance in the case of iodine being distributed between water and an inert organic solvent such as carbon tetrachloride then the presence of iodide in the aqueous phase can alter the extraction chemistry instead of D I 2 displaystyle D mathrm I 2 being a constant it becomes D I 2 displaystyle D mathrm I 2 k I2 organic I2 aq I aq This is because the iodine reacts with the iodide to form I3 The I3 anion is an example of a polyhalide anion that is quite common Industrial process design EditIn a typical scenario an industrial process will use an extraction step in which solutes are transferred from the aqueous phase to the organic phase this is often followed by a scrubbing stage in which unwanted solutes are removed from the organic phase then a stripping stage in which the wanted solutes are removed from the organic phase The organic phase may then be treated to make it ready for use again 19 20 After use the organic phase may be subjected to a cleaning step to remove any degradation products for instance in PUREX plants the used organic phase is washed with sodium carbonate solution to remove any dibutyl hydrogen phosphate or butyl dihydrogen phosphate that might be present Liquid liquid equilibrium calculations Edit In order to calculate the phase equilibrium it is necessary to use a thermodynamic model such as NRTL UNIQUAC etc The corresponding parameters of these models can be obtained from literature e g Dechema Chemistry Data Series Dortmund Data Bank etc or by a correlation process of experimental data 21 22 23 24 Equipment Edit source source source source source source Phase separation during a laboratory scale LLE The upper organic ether solution of MTBE is being extracted with the lower alkaline aqueous sodium bicarbonate solution to remove benzoic acid as the benzoate anion leaving a non acidic organic benzil yellow in color in the organic phase While solvent extraction is often done on a small scale by synthetic lab chemists using a separatory funnel Craig apparatus or membrane based techniques 25 it is normally done on the industrial scale using machines that bring the two liquid phases into contact with each other Such machines include centrifugal contactors Thin Layer Extraction spray columns pulsed columns and mixer settlers Extraction of metals EditThe extraction methods for a range of metals include 26 27 Cobalt Edit The extraction of cobalt from hydrochloric acid using Alamine 336 tri octyl decyl amine in meta xylene 28 Cobalt can be extracted also using Ionquest 290 or Cyanex 272 bis 2 4 4 trimethylpentyl phosphinic acid Copper Edit Copper can be extracted using hydroxyoximes as extractants a recent paper describes an extractant that has a good selectivity for copper over cobalt and nickel 29 Neodymium Edit The rare earth element Neodymium is extracted by di 2 ethyl hexyl phosphoric acid into hexane by an ion exchange mechanism 30 Nickel Edit Nickel can be extracted using di 2 ethyl hexyl phosphoric acid and tributyl phosphate in a hydrocarbon diluent Shellsol 31 Palladium and platinum Edit Dialkyl sulfides tributyl phosphate and alkyl amines have been used for extracting palladium and platinum 32 33 Polonium Edit Polonium is produced in reactors from natural 209Bi bombarded with neutrons creating 210Bi which then decays to 210Po via beta minus decay The final purification is done pyrochemically followed by liquid liquid extraction vs sodium hydroxide at 500 deg C 34 Zinc and cadmium Edit Zinc and cadmium are both extracted by an ion exchange process the N N N N tetrakis 2 pyridylmethyl ethylenediamine TPEN acts as a masking agent for the zinc and an extractant for the cadmium 35 In the modified Zincex process zinc is separated from most divalent ions by solvent extraction D2EHPA Di 2 ethyl hexyl phosphoric acid is used for this A zinc ion replaces the proton from two D2EHPA molecules To strip the zinc from the D2EHPA sulfuric acid is used at a concentration of above 170g L typically 240 265g L Lithium Edit Lithium extraction is more popular due to the high demand of lithium ion batteries TBP Tri butyl phosphate and FeCl3 are mostly used to extract lithium from brine with high Li Mg ratio 36 Alternatively Cyanex 272 was also used to extract lithium The mechanism of lithium extraction was found differently from other metals such as cobalt due to the weak coordinating bonding between lithium ions and extractants 37 See also EditFragrance extraction Dortmund Data Bank Non random two liquid model NRTL model LL Phase Equilibrium Calculation UNIQUAC LL Phase Equilibrium CalculationReferences Edit SSRL Publications amp Reports Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource PDF Archived from the original PDF on March 9 2008 Retrieved January 21 2006 pnjjrose Solvent Extraction Notes 7 7 Liquid Liquid Extractions Chemistry LibreTexts 2013 10 25 Retrieved 2017 03 26 http courses chem psu edu chem36 Experiments PDF s for techniques Liquid Liquid pdf bare URL PDF Basic Technology and Tools in Chemical Engineering Field S Wesley Documents Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 29 Retrieved 2015 09 28 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Rezaee Mohammad Assadi Yaghoub Milani Hosseini Mohammad Reza Aghaee Elham Ahmadi Fardin Berijani Sana 2006 Determination of 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Gomez A Marcilla A 1999 New method for quaternary systems liquid liquid extraction tray to tray design Industrial amp Engineering Chemistry Research 38 8 3083 3095 doi 10 1021 ie9900723 Reyes Labarta J A Grossmann I E 2001 Disjunctive Programming Models for the Optimal Design of Liquid Liquid Multistage Extractors and Separation Sequences AIChE Journal 47 10 2243 2252 doi 10 1002 aic 690471011 Reyes Labarta J A Olaya M M Velasco R Serrano M D Marcilla A 2009 Correlation of the Liquid Liquid Equilibrium Data for Specific Ternary Systems with One or Two Partially Miscible Binary Subsystems Fluid Phase Equilibria 278 1 2 9 14 doi 10 1016 j fluid 2008 12 002 Marcilla A Reyes Labarta J A Serrano M D Olaya M M 2011 GE Models and Algorithms for Condensed Phase Equilibrium Data Regression in Ternary Systems Limitations and Proposals The Open Thermodynamics Journal 5 48 62 doi 10 2174 1874396X01105010048 Marcilla Antonio Reyes Labarta Juan A Olaya M Mar 2017 Should we trust all the published LLE correlation parameters in phase equilibria Necessity of their Assessment Prior to Publication Fluid Phase Equilibria 433 243 252 doi 10 1016 j fluid 2016 11 009 hdl 10045 66521 Labarta Juan A Olaya Maria del Mar Marcilla Antonio 2015 11 27 Graphical User Interface GUI for the analysis of Gibbs Energy surfaces including LL tie lines and Hessian matrix University of Alicante hdl 10045 51725 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Adamo Andrea Heider Patrick L Weeranoppanant Nopphon Jensen Klavs F 2013 Membrane Based Liquid Liquid Separator with Integrated Pressure Control PDF Industrial amp Engineering Chemistry Research 52 31 10802 10808 doi 10 1021 ie401180t hdl 1721 1 92770 ISSN 0888 5885 Mackenzie Murdoch The Solvent Extraction of Some Major Metals PDF Cognis GmbH Archived from the original PDF on 2010 01 04 Retrieved 2008 11 18 Patel Madhav Karamalidis Athanasios K May 2021 Germanium A review of its US demand uses resources chemistry and separation technologies Separation and Purification Technology 275 118981 doi 10 1016 j seppur 2021 118981 ISSN 1383 5866 Filiz M Sayar N A Sayar A A 2006 Extraction of cobalt II from aqueous hydrochloric acid solutions into Alamine 336 m xylene mixtures Hydrometallurgy 81 3 4 167 173 doi 10 1016 j hydromet 2005 12 007 ISSN 0304 386X Baba Yoshinari Iwakuma Minako Nagami Hideto 2002 Extraction Mechanism for Copper II with 2 Hydroxy 4 n octyloxybenzophenone Oxime Industrial amp Engineering Chemistry Research 41 23 5835 5841 doi 10 1021 ie0106736 ISSN 0888 5885 Sanchez J M Hidalgo M Salvado V Valiente M 1999 Extraction of Neodymium III at Trace Level with Di 2 Ethyl Hexyl Phosphoric Acid in Hexane Solvent Extraction and Ion Exchange 17 3 455 474 doi 10 1080 07366299908934623 ISSN 0736 6299 Lee W John A Potential Nickel Cobalt Recovery Process BioMetallurgical Pty Ltd Archived from the original on 2008 09 26 Retrieved 2006 03 31 Precious Metals Refining By Solvent Extraction Halwachs Edelmetallchemie und Verfahrenstechnik Retrieved 2008 11 18 Giridhar P Venkatesan K A Srinivasan T G Vasudeva Rao P R 2006 Extraction of fission palladium by Aliquat 336 and electrochemical studies on direct recovery from ionic liquid phase Hydrometallurgy 81 1 30 39 doi 10 1016 j hydromet 2005 10 001 ISSN 0304 386X Schulz Wallace W Schiefelbein Gary F Bruns Lester E 1969 Pyrochemical Extraction of Polonium from Irradiated Bismuth Metal Ind Eng Chem Process Des Dev 8 4 508 515 doi 10 1021 i260032a013 K Takeshita K Watanabe Y Nakano M Watanabe 2003 Solvent extraction separation of Cd II and Zn II with the organophosphorus extractant D2EHPA and the aqueous nitrogen donor ligand TPEN Hydrometallurgy 70 1 3 63 71 doi 10 1016 s0304 386x 03 00046 x Wesselborg Tobias Virolainen Sami Sainio Tuomo 2021 06 01 Recovery of lithium from leach solutions of battery waste using direct solvent extraction with TBP and FeCl3 Hydrometallurgy 202 105593 doi 10 1016 j hydromet 2021 105593 ISSN 0304 386X S2CID 233662976 Lu Junnan Stevens Geoff W Mumford Kathryn A 2021 12 01 Development of heterogeneous equilibrium model for lithium solvent extraction using organophosphinic acid Separation and Purification Technology 276 119307 doi 10 1016 j seppur 2021 119307 ISSN 1383 5866 Further reading EditB L Karger 2014 Separation and Purification Single stage versus multistage processes and Separation and Purification Separations Based on Equilibrium Encyclopaedia Britannica see 1 and 2 accessed 12 May 2014 Gunt Hamburg 2014 Thermal Process Engineering liquid liquid extraction and solid liquid extraction see 3 accessed 12 May 2014 G W Stevens T C Lo amp M H I Baird 2007 Extraction liquid liquid in Kirk Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology doi 10 1002 0471238961 120917211215 a01 pub2 accessed 12 May 2014 Colin Poole amp Michael Cooke 2000 Extraction in Encyclopedia of Separation Science 10 Vols ISBN 9780122267703 see 4 accessed 12 May 2014 Sikdar Cole et al Aqueous Two Phase Extractions in Bioseparations An Assessment Biotechnology 9 254 1991 Szlag Giuliano A Low Cost Aqueous Two Phase System for Enzyme Extraction Biotechnology Techniques 2 4 277 1988 Dreyer Kragl Ionic Liquids for Aqueous Two Phase Extraction and Stabilization of Enzymes Biotechnology and Bioengineering 99 6 1416 2008 Boland Aqueous Two Phase Systems Methods and Protocols Pg 259 269 https web archive org web 20100702074135 http ull chemistry uakron edu chemsep extraction Topological Analysis of the Gibbs Energy Function Liquid Liquid Equilibrium Correlation Data Including a Thermodynamic Review and a Graphical User Interface GUI for Surfaces Tie lines Hessian matrix analysis University of Alicante Reyes Labarta et al 2015 18 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Liquid liquid extraction amp oldid 1145449168, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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