Abstract

A hybrid, potentially green solvent system composed of tetraethylene glycol (TEG) and the ionic liquid 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate ([bmim][PF(6)]) was investigated across all mole fractions with regard to the solvent properties of the mixture. For this purpose, a suite of absorbance- and fluorescence-based solvatochromic probes were utilized to explore solute-solvent and solvent-solvent interactions existing within the [bmim][PF(6)] + TEG system. These studies revealed an interesting and unusual synergistic solvent effect. In particular, a remarkable "hyperpolarity" was observed in which the E(T) value, comprising dipolarity/polarizability and hydrogen bond donor (HBD) acidity contributions, at intermediate mole fractions of the binary mixture well exceeded that of the most polar pure component (i.e., [bmim][PF(6)]). Independently determined dipolarity/polarizability (pi*) and HBD acidity (alpha) Kamlet-Taft values for the [bmim][PF(6)] + TEG mixtures were also observed to be anomalously high at intermediate mole fractions, whereas hydrogen bond acceptor (HBA) basicities (beta values) were much more in line with the ideal arithmetic values predicted on a mole fraction basis. Two well-established fluorescent polarity probes (pyrene and pyrene-1-carboxaldehyde) further illustrated notable hyperpolarity within [bmim][PF(6)] + TEG mixtures. Moreover, the steady-state fluorescence anisotropy of the molecular rotor rhodamine 6G and the excimer-to-monomer fluorescence ratio exhibited by the fluidity probe 1,3-bis-(1-pyrenyl)propane demonstrated that solute rotation and microfluidity within the [bmim][PF(6)] + TEG mixture were significantly reduced compared with expectations based on simple solvent mixing. A solvent ordering via formation of HBD/HBA complexes involving the C-2 proton of the [bmim(+)] cation and oxygen atoms of TEG, as well as interactions between [PF(6)(-)] and the terminal hydroxyl groups of TEG, is proposed to account for the observed behavior. Further spectroscopic evidence of strong intersolvent interactions occurring within the [bmim][PF(6)] + TEG mixture was provided, inter alia, by substantial frequency shifts in the [PF(6)(-)] asymmetric stretching mode observed in the infrared spectra as TEG was incrementally added to [bmim][PF(6)]. Overall, our observations contribute to a growing literature advocating the notion that ionic liquids and certain organic solvents form ordered, nanostructured, or microsegregated phases upon mixing.

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