4.6 Review

Can the microscopic and macroscopic transport phenomena in deep eutectic solvents be reconciled?

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 23, Issue 40, Pages 22854-22873

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1cp02413b

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Deep eutectic solvents (DESs) have wide industrial and pharmaceutical applications, and ongoing research is exploring their physicochemical properties and microscopic formation. Understanding the transport mechanisms in DESs is crucial for adjusting properties and expanding applications. The role of hydrogen bonding interactions is highlighted, and modulation of these interactions can affect the transport mechanisms.
Deep eutectic solvents (DESs) have become ubiquitous in a variety of industrial and pharmaceutical applications since their discovery. However, the fundamental understanding of their physicochemical properties and their emergence from the microscopic features is still being explored fervently. Particularly, the knowledge of transport mechanisms in DESs is essential to tune their properties, which shall aid in expanding the territory of their applications. This perspective presents the current state of understanding of the bulk/macroscopic transport properties and microscopic relaxation processes in DESs. The dependence of these properties on the components and composition of the DES is explored, highlighting the role of hydrogen bonding (H-bonding) interactions. Modulation of these interactions by water and other additives, and their subsequent effect on the transport mechanisms, is also discussed. Various models (e.g. hole theory, free volume theory, etc.) have been proposed to explain the macroscopic transport phenomena from a microscopic origin. But the formation of H-bond networks and clusters in the DES reveals the insufficiency of these models, and establishes an antecedent for dynamic heterogeneity. Even significantly above the glass transition, the microscopic relaxation processes in DESs are rife with temporal and spatial heterogeneity, which causes a substantial decoupling between the viscosity and microscopic diffusion processes. However, we propose that a thorough understanding of the structural relaxation associated to the H-bond dynamics in DESs will provide the necessary framework to interpret the emergence of bulk transport properties from their microscopic counterparts.

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