Synthesis of protic ionic liquids. Challenges and solutions for the synthesis of pure compounds.
Licentiate thesis, 2022

The urgent need to diversify our energy matrix is responsible for a renewed interest in fuel cell technology, which can use hydrogen gas, a renewable green fuel, as an energy source. This technology is currently a commercially available option, however, it still requires technological improvements before it can be widely used for different applications. One way this technology could potentially be improved is by increasing its temperature range of operation by developing new, anhydrous proton conducting materials. Protic ionic liquids, which are organic salts with low melting temperatures, are interesting candidates for this application, since they can conduct protons in the operational conditions of fuel cells and without the need of water. These compounds can be synthesized by a simple acid-base neutralization reaction, but certain considerations must be taken in order to obtain high quality (dry and pure) protic ionic liquids. In this thesis, a series of triazolium and imidazolium based protic ionic liquids were synthesized using a solvent-free method designed to address several limitations encountered with other commonly used methods. Using this method, pure (98-99% m/m) and dry (128-553 ppm of water) protic ionic liquids were synthesized (in a laboratory scale) without the need for purification methods that require heating the ionic liquid, hence avoiding the common issue of thermal decomposition. This method was also designed to allow for the accurate measurement of acid and base, and for the controlled mixing of both compounds, which is essential to avoid producing impure protic ionic liquids with excess of either acid or base. The system is consists of only glass and chemically resistant polymer(PTFE and PVDF) parts, which avoids other contaminants that can result from unwanted reactions involving the reagents with common laboratory tools (metallic objects, paper, plastic, etc.). The resulting ionic liquids were carefully analyzed by spectroscopic and thermal analysis methods designed to avoid water absorption, which is known to affect their properties. To complement this experimental characterization, computational chemistry tools were used to assess the ionic liquids’ properties, as well as to assign vibrational modes.

Protic ionic liquids

Fuel cells

Synthesis

DFT

Pater Noster, Kemigården 4, Chalmers.
Opponent: Prof. Jerker Mårtensson, Chalmers University of Technology

Author

Eduardo Maurina Morais

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories

Physical Chemistry

Materials Chemistry

Other Chemistry Topics

Theoretical Chemistry

Chemical Sciences

Organic Chemistry

Roots

Basic sciences

Infrastructure

C3SE (Chalmers Centre for Computational Science and Engineering)

Areas of Advance

Materials Science

Licentiatuppsatser vid Institutionen för kemi och kemiteknik, Chalmers tekniska högskola: 2022:07

Publisher

Chalmers

Pater Noster, Kemigården 4, Chalmers.

Online

Opponent: Prof. Jerker Mårtensson, Chalmers University of Technology

More information

Latest update

6/15/2022