4.6 Article

Assessing the hydrotropic effect in the presence of electrolytes: competition between solute salting-out and salt-induced hydrotrope aggregation

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 24, Issue 36, Pages 21645-21654

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2cp00749e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. FCT/MEC (PIDDAC) [UIDB/50011/2020, UIDP/50011/2020, LA/P/0006/2020]
  2. National NMR Network [REDE/1517/RMN/2005]
  3. POCI 2010 (FEDER)
  4. FCT [2020.05802.BD]
  5. national funds (OE), through FCT (Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia), I. P.
  6. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [2020.05802.BD] Funding Source: FCT

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This study experimentally explored the impact of salt doping on the hydrotropy phenomenon and revealed the site-specific interactions between the hydrotrope and solute. The results showed that the pre-aggregation of the hydrotrope is detrimental to the hydrotropic effect, indicating that solute-induced clustering of the hydrotrope is the predominant mechanism of hydrotropy.
Water solubility enhancement is a long-standing challenge in a multitude of chemistry-related fields. Hydrotropy is a simple and efficient method to improve the solubility of hydrophobic molecules in aqueous media. However, the mechanism behind this phenomenon remains controversial. Herein the impact of salt doping on the hydrotropy phenomenon is determined experimentally using the ionic liquid (IL) 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride ([C(4)mim]Cl) as a hydrotope and vanillin as a solute. Hydrophobic interactions were found to be central to the aggregation of the hydrotrope around the solute, and seem to drive hydrotropy. Furthermore, H-1-NMR analysis indicates that hydrotrope-solute interactions present a degree of site-specificity. The addition of chloride salts in the presence of higher IL concentrations promotes a greater relative decrease of the vanillin solubility than in the corresponding system without the IL. This was assigned to the negative impact of increased hydrotrope pre-aggregation in the presence of inorganic salts. The results were rationalised using statistical thermodynamics through which hydrotrope aggregation prior to solute addition is shown to be detrimental to the hydrotropic effect, seemingly confirming solute-induced clustering of the hydrotrope to be the predominant mechanism of hydrotropy.

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