Abstract
The solubility behavior of SO 2 in 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium acetate ([BMIm][OAc]) was investigated. The solubility of SO 2 in [BMIm][OAc] was measured to be 0.6 in mole fraction at 50 °C in a stream of SO 2 gas. The desorption of SO 2 from [BMIm][OAc] was never completed, until the temperature was raised to 170 °C in a stream of N 2, indicating that the absorption of SO 2 is irreversible at the experimental condition. An in-situ IR study showed that acetate anion in [BMIm][OAc] transformed into acetic acid during the SO 2 absorption. After removing acetic acid at 170 °C by evacuation, the bands at 1210, 1045 and 850 cm −1 appeared in IR spectra. The bands at 1210 and 1047 cm −1 were assigned to S–O stretching mode of HOSO 2 − (an isomer of HSO 3 −) and the band at 885 cm −1 was assigned to the symmetric stretching mode of HO–S. FT-IR study suggested that acetic acid and most plausibly [BMIm][HOSO 2] were generated from the interactions of [BMIm][OAc] with SO 2 and adventitious water in feed gas and/or [BMIm][OAc] during absorption–desorption process. [BMIm][HOSO 2] recovered after removing acetic acid was found to be a new and reversible SO 2 absorbent with the SO 2 absorption capacity of 0.55 in mole fraction.
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