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Chemical Separations

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Chemical Separations
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Chemical Separations



• What is a chemical separation?

• Examples:

• Filtration

• Precipitations

• Crystallizations

• Distillation

• HPLC

• GC

• Solvent Extraction

• Zone Melting

• Electrophoresis

• Mass Spectroscopy



1

Chemical Separations







• What is the object of the separation.

• Collection of a pure product

• Isolation for subsequent analysis for either quantification or

identification

– Analysis

» How Much?

» What is it?









2

Chemical Separations



• Major Industries



– Petroleum Distillation



– Distilled Spirits









3

4

Chemical Separations



• Petroleum is a mixture of hydrocarbons.



– The larger the molecular weight the less volatile.



– So we must separate into various molecular weight

fractions (different boiling points)



– The results are still complex mixtures







5

Chemical Separations













6

Distillation



• As heat is added to the system the lower

volatility compounds will boil away and can be

collected.

– In the spirits industry the low boilers are call foreshots

(~75% EtOH)

– The high boilers are called feints

– Congeners - Chemical compounds produced during

fermentation and maturation. Congeners include

esters, acids, aldehydes and higher alcohols. Strictly

speaking they are impurities, but they give whisk(e)y

its flavour. Their presence in the final spirit must be

carefully judged; too many would make it undrinkable.

7

Distillation





• What is whiskey?



• What is brandy?









8

Interesting Facts



• Bourbon - US whiskey made from at least 51% corn,

distilled to a maximum of 80% abv (160 proof) and put

into charred new oak barrels at a strength of no more

than 62.5% abv.



• Organic whisk(e)y - That made from grain grown without

chemical fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides.



• Tennessee whiskey - As bourbon, but filtered through a

minimum of 10 feet of sugar-maple charcoal. This is not

a legal requirement, but is the method by which

Tennessee whiskies are currently produced.



9

Interesting Facts



• Malt whisky - Whisky made purely from malted

barley.

• Angels' share - A certain amount of whisk(e)y

stored in the barrel evaporates through the

wood: this is known as the angels' share.

Roughly two per cent of each barrel is lost this

way, most of which is alcohol.



• http://www.whisky-world.com/words/index.php









10

Extraction



• Liquid – Solid



• Liquid - Liquid









11

Liquid Solid Extraction (Soxhlet)

whale.wheelock.edu/ bwcontaminants/analysis.html









12

Liquid Solid Extractor (Bunn)









13

Solvent Extraction (Liquid-Liquid)



• We want to partition a solute between two

immiscible phases.

– Oil and vinegar

– Ethyl ether and water

– Hexane water

– Octanol and water.

• The two solvent should have low miscibility

• Have different densities – avoid emulsion

formation.



14

http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/02sab/background/products/media/chroma1.html



15

Solvent Extraction









16

Replace concentration with moles over volume

and let q equal the fraction in the aqueous phase.

m will be the moles of solute in the entire system









17

Define a new term for the ratio of the

volumes of the phases









18

We can do a little algebra and find an

expression for q









19

If it does not end up in the aqueous phase it must

be in the organic phase.



• p is the term for the fraction in the organic

• p+q = 1



• Giving









20

Sample Problem



• You have 100.0 mL of an aqueous solution that

is 100.0 mM in compound C. This solution is

extracted with 50.0 mL of diethyl ether and the

aqueous phase is assayed and it is found that

the concentration of compound C that remains is

20.0 mM. What is the equilibrium constant for

this extraction system.









21

Solution









22

We can do multiple extraction from the

aqueous phase.

• We end up with the following expression for what is

left in the aqueous phase.









23

Example



• How many extractions would be required to remove

99.99% of aspirin from an aqueous solution with an

equal volume of n-octanol?



• Since 99.99% must be removed the decimal fraction

equivalent of this is 0.9999. This leaves 0.0001 in the

aqueous phase. Since we have equal volumes then Vr

is 1.00.



• We are able to find from the Interactive Analysis Web

site that K for Aspirin is 35.5. We plug these values into

the q equation and the power is the unknown.



24

Solution









25

What if our compound can dissociate or

participate in some other equilibrium?



• A compound such as aspirin is a carboxylic

acid. We can represent this as HA.



• Do we expect the ion A - to be very soluble in

the organic phase???









26

Dissociation





• So if we have dissociation then less will go

into the organic phase.



• Kp is the ratio of concentration of aspirin (in

the un-dissociated form) in each phase. This

ratio will always be the same.



• How do we account for the ion formation?



27

Distribution Coefficient







• Where C is the formal

concentration of the

species.

• Ca = [HA] + [A-]

• Dc will vary with

conditions

• For this compound what

is that condition?





28

Dc





• Since the ion is not very

soluble in the organic

phase then we may

assume that the

dissociation will not

happen in that phase.



• This gives us the

expression to the right.





29

Acid Equilibria





• What is the equilibrium?

• Ka









30

With a little algebra





• So if you know Kd and Ka

then you can determine D c

as a function of H+ (pH)



• However if [H+] is much

larger than Ka then Dc will

equal Kd. If the [H+] is close

in value to Ka then D will be

related to the pH



• Plotting this we get.





31

32

So What, Why is this useful.

• Well we can now move a solute (analyte) from one phase to

another. This can be very useful when extracting a compound that has

significant chemical differences from other compounds in solution. As

a matter of fact this has been used as an interview question for

prospective co-ops when I worked in industry.

• The question would go like this. You have carried out a series of

reactions and it is now time to work up the product which currently sits

in an organic solution (methylene chloride). Your expected product is a

primary amine. Which of the following solutions would you extract this

methylene chloride solution with to isolate your amine.



Your choices are:

A) Toluene.

B) 0.1 N NaOH (aq)

C) 0.1 N HCl (aq)

D) I never wanted to work here anyhow.







33

Separation





• So far we can tell how one compound moves

from one phase to another. What if we are try

to separate two compounds, A and B



• Well we might just suspect that if we find a

solvent system that has different values of D c

for each compound we could end up with

most of one compound in one phase and the

other compound in the opposite phase. It is

not that simple.

34

Example





• System I

• Da = 32 Db = 0.032 (A ratio of 1000)

• Vr= 1

• Let's recall our equations

• q (fraction in aqueous) = 1 / (DVr + 1)

• p (fraction in organic) = DVr / (DVr + 1)

• Vr (volume ratio) = Vo / V a



35

Case I





• pa = 32*1 / (32*1 + 1) = 0.97

• pb = 0.032*1/ (0.032*1 + 1) = 0.03

• If we assume that we have equal moles of A

and B to start then what is the purity of A in

the Organic Phase?

• Purity = moles A / (moles A + moles B)

• Purity = 0.97 / (0.97 + 0.03) = 0.97 or 97 %





36

Case II





• Da = 1000 Db = 1 VR = 1 (Ratio is still 1000)

• pa = 1000*1 / (1000*1 + 1*1) = 1000/1001 = 0.999

• Aha! we got more a into the organic, as we would expect with a

higher D value.

• Now

• pb = 1*1 / ( 1*1 +1) = 1/2 = 0.5

• oh-oh

• What do we get for purity of compound a now?

• purity = 0.999 / (0.999 + 0.50) = 0.666

• Yuck!





37

How can we get around this issue?







• Once we have selected the solvent and pH, then there is little

that we can do to change D. What else do we have in our

control?????



• Let's look

• p = DVr / (DVr + 1)

• Not much here except Vr and in fact that is the key to this

problem. Is there an optimum Vr value for the values of D that

we have? Yes!

• Our equation for this is V r(opt) = (Da*Db)-0.5





38

Revisit the two cases





• So let us look at our two cases and see which

will give us the optimum values.

• Case I

• Da = 32 and Db = 0.032



• V r(opt) = (32 * 0.032)-0.5 = ( 1 )-0.5 = 1

• So we were already at the optimum.





39

Case II Revisited





• Case II

• Da = 1000 and Db = 1

• Vr (opt) = (1000*1)-0.5 = 1000-0.5 = 0.032

• Which mean that when we do our extraction

we will extract _______ mL of organic for

each _______ mL of aqueous.







40

Purity for Case II





• What is our purity for this system?

• pa = 1000*0.032 / (1000*0.032 + 1) = 32/33 = 0.97

• and

• pb = 1*0.032 / (1*0.032 + 1) = 0.032/1.032 = 0.03



• Purity of a then is 0.97/ (0.97 + 0.03)



• Which will give us the 97% purity we had for Case I with with the Vr of

1.









41

Can we improve this purity?

• If we were to extract again then we would just

remove the same proportions. We would get

more compound extracted but it would be the

same purity.



• What if we were to take the organic phase

and extract it with fresh aqueous phase. We

know that one of the two compounds will end

up mostly in that aqueous phase so we

should enhance the purity of the other

compound in the organic phase.



42

Back Extraction





• Called that since you are extracting back into

the original phase.









43

Back Extraction

Case I Example



• Let's look at the numbers.

• Da = 32

Db = 0.032

Vr = 1



• pa = 0.97

pb = 0.03



qa = 0.03

qb = 0.97





• Let’s prepare a table.

44

Initial conditions

prior to starting back extraction









.

Before Shaking Amount A Amount B

Organic Phase 0.97 0.03

Fresh Aqueous Phase 0 0









45

Now we extract – shake shake shake





• How much goes to the Aqueous phase

• q which is 0.03 for A and 0.97 for B



• How much goes to the Organic phase

• p which is 0.97 for A and 0.03 for B









After Shaking Amount A Amount B

Organic Phase (0.97)(0.97) (0.03)(0.03)

Aqueous Phase (0.97)(0.03) (0.03)(0.97) 46

Now what is the purity for A in the organic phase???









• Purity = Amount A / (Amount A + Amount B) =



• 0.97*0.97 / (0.97*0.97 + 0.03*0.03) =



• 0.94/(0.94 + 0.0009) = 99.9%







• What is the yield of A (fraction of the total amount that we

started with)









47

Let’s do it again – Can we improve purity

even more?



After second Back Extraction Amount A Amount B

Organic Phase 0.94*0.97 0.0009*0.03

Aqueous Phase 0.94*0.03 0.0009*0.97







Purity A = 0.913 / (0.913 + 0.000027) = 99.997%

But our yield has dropped to 91.3%, there is a price to pay for the added purity.









48

Can We Expand This?

Why Would We Want to?

• Such multiple extraction systems have been

developed.

• Still a viable option for preparative work.

• For separations it has been replaced by HPLC



• Called Craig Counter Current Extraction.

• Special glassware is used.







49

50

Craig CCE









• Equal amounts of organic (red) and

aqueous (blue) solvents with the

analyte(s) are added to the A arm of

the tube via port O. Fresh Aqueous

Solvent is added to each of the tubes

down the apparatus.

51

Craig CCE



• Rock the system

back and forth and

to establish

equilibrium.

• Allow the system to

stand for the layers

to separate.



• Rotate the

apparatus counter

clockwise about

90o to 100o.



52

Craig CCE



• Rotate Back to Horizontal









53

Starting Conditions



Tube# 0 1 2 3 4

Organic

0

Phase

Aqueous

1 0 0 0 0

Phase



After One Equilibrium



Tube# 0 1 2 3 4

Organic Phase p

Aqueous Phase q 0 0 0 0



Transfer Step 1



Tube# 0 1 2 3 4

Organic Phase 0 p

Aqueous Phase q 0 0 0 0

54

Now here is what is in each tube/phase after equilibrium is reached.



Tube# 0 1 2 3 4

Organic

pq pp

Phase

Aqueous

qq qp 0 0 0

Phase





Now we do Transfer 2







Tube# 0 1 2 3 4

Organic Phase 0 pq pp

Aqueous Phase q2 pq 0 0 0





55

Now here is what we have in each tube after the next equilibrium.

The total in each tube times either p or q as appropriate.









Tube# 0 1 2 3 4

Organic

pq2 p*2pq p3

Phase

Aqueous

q3 q*2pq qp2 0 0

Phase







We transfer again.





Transfer Step 3



Tube# 0 1 2 3 4

Organic Phase 0 pq2 2p2q p3

Aqueous Phase q3 2pq2 p 2q 0 0

56

Shake Again Equilibrium 4









Tube# 0 1 2 3 4

Organic

pq3 p*3pq2 p*3p2q p4

Phase

Aqueous

q4 q*3pq2 q*3p2q q*p3 0

Phase



Transfer 4







Tube# 0 1 2 3 4



Organic Phase 0 pq3 3p2q2 3p3q p4



Aqueous Phase q4 q*3pq 2 3p2q2 p 3q 0





See a trend???? 57

Craig CCE



• How about a binomial expansion?

• (q + p)n = 1



• Powers of the two terms in each tube will add up to n

• Coefficients will be found from Pascal Triangle

1

1 1

1 2 1

1 3 3 1

1 4 6 4 1

1 5 10 10 5 1

1 6 15 20 15 6 1

1 7 21 35 35 21 7 1



58

Craig CCE



• Or the formula



• Fr,n = n!/((n-r)!r!) pr q(n-r)



• n is the number of transfer and r is the tube

number. You start counting at zero!









59

Craig CCE



• Let's look at and example for a four tube system.

• Da = 3 p = 0.75 q = 0.25

• Db = 0.333 p = 0.25 q = 0.75



• What would be the purity and yield of Compound A if collected from

the last in our above example.



• Amount of A p4 or 0.754 = 0.3164

Amount of B p4 or 0.254 = 0.0039

• Purity of A 0.3164 / (0.3164 + 0.0039) = 0.9878 or 98.78%



Yield of A We collect a fraction of 0.3164 or 31.64%



• Horrible Yield!



60

Craig CCE



• What if we collect the last two tubes??

• Amount of A p4 and 4p3q or 0.754

+ 4*(0.75)3(0.25) = 0.3164 + 0.4219 = 0.7383

Amount of B p4 and 4p3q or 0.254

+ 4*(0.25)3(0.75) = 0.0039 + 0.0469 = 0.0508

• Purity of A (0.3164 + 0.4219) / (0.3164 + 0.4219 +

0.0039 + 0.0469 ) = 0.9356 or 93.56%



• Yield of A We collect a fraction of

0.3164 + 0.4219 = 0.7383 or 73.83 %

• Purity still ok and yield is much better.

61

Craig system n= 200 transfers.

Da of 2.0 and Db of 4.0

pa of 0.666 pb of 0.800.









62

Final Formulas(1)



• rmax = np = nDVr/(DVr +1)

• To find the separation between two peaks we

would use.

Drmax = (rmax)a - (rmax)b = n(pa-pb)



• The Gaussian distribution approximation for our

binomial expansion would be (when n>24)

• Fr,n = (2p)-0.5(npq)-0.5 exp-[((np-r)^2)/2npq]





63

Final Formulas(2)



• The width of the distribution through the system

would be:

• w = 4s = 4(npq)0.5

• Resolution would be

• R = Drmax/w = Drmax/4s

• or

• R = nDp/(4(npq)0.5) = n0.5 Dp / 4(pq)0.5







64

Demo Site



• http://www.chem.uoa.gr/applets/AppletCraig/App

l_Craig2.html









65


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