Removal of Pyridine, Quinoline, and Aniline from Oil by Extraction with Aqueous Solution of (Hydroxy)quinolinium and Benzothiazolium Ionic Liquids in Various Ways
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Material and Methods
2.1. Materials and Reagents
2.2. Synthesis of ILs
2.3. Preparation of Simulated Oil for Separation
2.4. Quantitative Analysis
2.5. Denitrogenation Experiments
3. Results
3.1. Identification of Synthesized ILs
3.2. Comparison among ILs
3.2.1. Removal of Pyridine from Simulated Oil
3.2.2. Removal of Quinoline from Simulated Oil
3.2.3. Removal of Aniline from Simulated Oil
4. Discussions
4.1. Separation Conditions
4.1.1. Mass Ratio of IL to Deionized Water
4.1.2. Mass Ratio of IL to Oil
4.1.3. Temperature
4.1.4. Oscillation Speed
4.2. Separation Kinetics
4.3. Denitrogenation of the Mixed Simulated Oils by ILs in Two-Step Extraction
4.4. IL Recovery and Reuse Performance
4.5. N-Removal by the Tablets of Immobilized IL
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Ways | Principles | Advantages | Disadvantages | Denitrifiers | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Extraction | Based on the principle of “like dissolves like”, the purpose of separation and purification is achieved through selective dissolution | Nitrogen compounds can be removed under normal pressure, and the good resistivity and appearance of oil can be achieved | The reduction of hydrocarbon compounds limits the application of oil products, and the extraction efficiency needs to be improved | Furfural, phenol, dimethyl sulfoxide, and dimethyl formamide, etc. | [15,16] |
Acid refining | Strong organic/inorganic acids and basic nitrogen-containing substances form insoluble salts in oil | Low processing cost and loss of oil, which can remove colloid and other impurities in oil | Acids can corrode the equipment and the acidic residue is difficult to treat, which is not friendly to the environment and operators | Inorganic acids, trifluoroacetic acid, oxalic acid and solid acid, etc. | [17,18] |
Complexation separation | Lewis acid-base theory and complexation | The dosage of complexing agent is small and the removal efficiency is high | The complex can dissolve in the oil, and the subsequent separation is difficult | Transition metal halides such as ferric chloride | [19,20] |
Photocatalysis denitrogenation | Most photocatalysts are semiconductor materials. Under light radiation, oil denitrogenation is realized by the redox of nitrides into harmless small molecules by photogenerated electrons and holes of valence bands | Safe, high stability, high catalytic activity and low energy consumption | Photogenerated charge carriers need to migrate to the photocatalyst surface and contact with the adsorbed nitrides before the redox reaction occurs, but their lifetime is only nanosecond | Visible light and photocatalysts such as nanocomposite metal oxide catalysts | [21,22] |
Microwave denitrogenation | Non-thermal effect of electromagnetic field on reactive molecules | Short reaction time, high efficiency and simple process | Special equipment is needed, and the intensity, frequency, modulation mode of microwave and system composition have obvious impact on the denitrogenation results | UHF electromagnetic wave in the range of 0.1–100 cm and 300 MHz-300 GHz | [23] |
Adsorption denitrogenation | Solid adsorbents have strong adsorption on polar nitrogen compounds | Solid-liquid separation is easier | Multiple steps and complex operation | Chalk, silica gel, resins, molecular sieve, etc. | [24,25] |
Biological denitrogenation | The characteristic catalytic ability of microbial cultures or their enzymes is used to selectively remove nitrogen compounds from oils | For high selectivity, microorganisms have no effect on hydrocarbons in oil products, and energy consumption is low | Process is slow; and aldehydes, esters and other substances in oil products affect microbial growth | Various microorganisms such as nitroso bacteria, nitrobacteria, etc. | [26] |
[HHqu][HSO4] | [HBth][HSO4] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Group | Wavenumber | Vibration | Group | Wavenumber | Vibration |
–OH | 3391 | νO–H | –OH | 3400 | νO–H |
=CH | 3024 | ν=CH | =CH | 3080 | ν=CH |
C=C | 1598, 1550 | νC=C | C=C | 1633, 1584 | νC=C |
C–N | 1390 | νC–N | C–N | 1431 | νC-N |
S=O | 1210, 574 | νas S=O, νs S=O | S=O | 1222, 584 | νas S=O, νs S=O |
=CH | 809 | γ=CH | =CH | 825 | γ=CH |
Object | Pseudo-First Model | Pseudo-Second Model | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fitted Equation | k1 (1/min) | R2 | Fitted Equation | k2 (L/mg·min) | R2 | |
Pyridine | y = −0.20x − 2.58 | 0.20 | 0.996 | y = 58.28x + 407.59 | 8.33 | 0.970 |
Quinoline | y = −0.35x − 4.02 | 0.35 | 0.994 | y = 58.99x + 254.55 | 14.17 | 0.974 |
Aniline | y = −0.19x − 3.45 | 0.19 | 0.991 | y = 56.11x + 418.70 | 7.52 | 0.966 |
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Zhang, Z.; Li, Y.; Gao, J.; Yohannes, A.; Song, H.; Yao, S. Removal of Pyridine, Quinoline, and Aniline from Oil by Extraction with Aqueous Solution of (Hydroxy)quinolinium and Benzothiazolium Ionic Liquids in Various Ways. Separations 2021, 8, 216. https://doi.org/10.3390/separations8110216
Zhang Z, Li Y, Gao J, Yohannes A, Song H, Yao S. Removal of Pyridine, Quinoline, and Aniline from Oil by Extraction with Aqueous Solution of (Hydroxy)quinolinium and Benzothiazolium Ionic Liquids in Various Ways. Separations. 2021; 8(11):216. https://doi.org/10.3390/separations8110216
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhang, Zhaojin, Yinan Li, Jing Gao, Alula Yohannes, Hang Song, and Shun Yao. 2021. "Removal of Pyridine, Quinoline, and Aniline from Oil by Extraction with Aqueous Solution of (Hydroxy)quinolinium and Benzothiazolium Ionic Liquids in Various Ways" Separations 8, no. 11: 216. https://doi.org/10.3390/separations8110216
APA StyleZhang, Z., Li, Y., Gao, J., Yohannes, A., Song, H., & Yao, S. (2021). Removal of Pyridine, Quinoline, and Aniline from Oil by Extraction with Aqueous Solution of (Hydroxy)quinolinium and Benzothiazolium Ionic Liquids in Various Ways. Separations, 8(11), 216. https://doi.org/10.3390/separations8110216