Abstract

The very low vapor pressure of ionic liquids is challenging to measure. At elevated temperatures the liquids might start to decompose, and at relatively low temperatures the vapor pressure becomes too low to be measured by conventional methods. In this work we developed a highly sensitive method for mass loss determination at temperatures starting from 350 K. This technique is based on an alternating current calorimeter equipped with a chip sensor that consists of a free-standing SiNx-membrane (thickness <1 μm) and a measuring area with lateral dimensions of the order of 1 mm. A small droplet (diameter ca. 600 μm) of an ionic liquid is vaporized isothermally from the chip sensor in a vacuum-chamber. The surface-to-volume-ratio of such a droplet is large and the relative mass loss due to evaporation is therefore easy to monitor by the changing heat capacity (J K(-1)) of the remaining liquid. The vapor pressure is determined from the measured mass loss rates using the Langmuir equation. The method was successfully tested for the determination of the vapor pressure and the vaporization enthalpy of an archetypical ionic liquid 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide ([EMIm][NTf2]). The data set created in this way in an extremely broad temperature range from 358 K to 780 K has allowed the estimation of the boiling temperature of [EMIm][NTf2]. The value (1120 ± 50) K should be considered as the first reliable boiling point of the archetypical ionic liquid obtained from experimental vapor pressures measured in the most possible close proximity to the normal boiling temperature.

Highlights

  • We suggest a possible method to measure mass loss rates and vaporization enthalpies indirectly by heat capacity measurements of the sample

  • The ratio of the liquid–vacuum interfacial area to the volume of the sample is increased compared to conventional techniques, e.g. thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), by a factor of 103, yielding large relative mass changes in short time

  • This technique is predestined for vapor pressure measurements of Ionic liquids (ILs) at relatively low temperatures

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Summary

Introduction

At a constant evaporation temperature Tvap the two unknown values, the area of the liquid–vacuum interface ALV of the sample and its heat capacity Cp at each time of the measurement, are required to determine the vapor pressure.

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