Abstract
N-Methylmorpholine-N-oxide (NMMO) cannot be completely separated by extraction from mixtures with common 1,3-dialkylimidazolium ionic liquids (ILs) due to strong ionic interactions between the two components. At elevated temperatures, above approx. 90 °C, especially under dry conditions and in the presence of acid, alkylating or acylating agents, remaining NMMO in ILs tends to undergo autocatalytic degradation. This is a highly exothermic, unstoppable process that results in explosions, flames, and complete charring of the reaction mixtures. Thus, caution must be exercised when drying or heating ILs that were in previous contact with NMMO, and the absence of amine oxide must be confirmed to avoid potential danger.
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N-Methylmorpholine-N-oxide (NMMO), as the monohydrate, is well-known as a cellulose solvent and is used industrially in the production of Lyocell. 1-Alkyl-3-methylimidazolium ionic liquids (ILs)—with 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium and 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium being the most prominent representatives—are much newer, and can be seen as a first generation of ionic liquid-based cellulose solvents. NMMO, apart from its beneficial properties regarding interaction with cellulose, is a strong oxidant and tends to undergo side reactions (Rosenau et al. 2001; Bernier et al. 2009). These might manifest themselves by degradation of the solvent, oxidation of dissolved cellulose (Potthast et al. 2006), discoloration during processing, and yellowing of spun fibers (Rosenau et al. 2005a). There are efficient stabilizers for lyocell dopes available that reliably counteract those effects (Wendler et al. 2008; Rosenau et al. 2005b). Most severe and dangerous, however, is the tendency of NMMO to undergo autocatalytic degradation, with carbenium-iminium ions as the central, catalytically active intermediate in this cycle (Rosenau et al. 1999). Once this reaction has started there is no way to stop it again, because of its high exothermicity. Eventually, it will result in complete charring of the mixture, possibly accompanied by explosive degradation, flames, and strong smoke development. Literature accounts describing these effects often use the terms “thermal runaway reaction” or “exothermicity”, which are euphemisms for explosive events that in the best case damage lab equipment or production sites or—much worse—might harm health and wellbeing of workers. The degradation mechanisms of NMMO have been comprehensively reviewed (Rosenau et al. 2001); some of them have even been turned into procedures useful in organic synthesis (Rosenau et al. 2004).
1-Butyl-3-methylimidazolium (BMIm) and 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium (EMIm), mostly as acetate and chloride, were among the first ionic liquids to be described as cellulose solvents (Swatloski et al. 2002). Most 1,3-dialkylimidazolium ILs are of the 1-alkyl-3-methyl type, so in the following the general term XMIm will be used to described these ILs. Initial optimistic claims of seemingly unlimited applications of these solvents in lignocellulose research have given way to a more realistic view of their advantages and drawbacks. In particular, problems with recycling and byproduct accumulation have cast doubts on their general usefulness in biomass fractionation or pulping, as have literature accounts showing that these solvents undergo reactions with cellulose (Köhler et al. 2007; Liebert et al. 2009; Ebner et al. 2008; Zweckmair et al. 2015) and thus lack the inertness that is often claimed as one of benefits of ILs. Also thermal stress causes slow byproduct formation in XMim ionic liquids, mainly imidazole derivatives (Wendler et al. 2012; Liebner et al. 2010; Dorn et al. 2008).
NMMO has been used in combination with amines or polar organic solvents to achieve cellulose dissolution. Also, ILs have been used as the second component in binary NMMO solvent mixtures, and in turn NMMO has been added to ILs in attempts to further boost their dissolution power (Ingildeev et al. 2013). Most frequently, ILs and NMMO were combined in biorefinery approaches, attempting to pretreat or dissolve biomass to make it amenable to facile hydrolysis to monomeric carbohydrates for later fermentation into platform chemicals or biofuels (Acton 2013; Poornejad et al. 2013; Li 2012; Wikandari et al. (2016); Purwandari et al. 2013; Kuo and Lee 2009).
In this note we would like to direct the readers´ attention to the facts that 1-alkyl-3-methylimidazolium ILs (including BMIm and EMIm) retain NMMO which is rendered non-extractable by common organic solvents due to formation of ion pairs, and that the retained NMMO can readily undergo the above-mentioned degradation processes when heated to temperatures above 120 °C—e.g. in purification attempts—especially at low water contents. CAUTION! Such NMMO residues in the ILs may viciously and rapidly decompose, with all the above described dangerous side effects.
XMIm acetate or chloride, as other ionic liquids, are salts that are liquid at room temperature. They consist of isolated cations and anions interacting by Coulomb forces. NMMO is a zwitterion, also containing an isolated positive and negative charge, but in one molecule. It is an often overlooked fact that ILs and NMMO, both ionic, are predestined to interact by strong Coulomb forces. In fact, the phase diagrams of the binary systems of XMIm/NMMO, and even more the ternary system containing water as third component, are rather complex showing the occurrence of several stable complexes of defined stoichiometry with integer ratios: xXMIm-OAc × yNMMO with {x, y ∈ ℕ}. In general, the 1,3-dialkylimidazolinium cation is interacting with the negative charge in NMMO, and the resulting cationic complex binds the acetate (chloride) from the IL as counter anion. An in-depth coverage of this topic would by far exceed the scope of this note, and the reader is referred to an upcoming account dealing with that topic in particular. Conformation analysis of NMMO by evaluating NMR coupling constants might be able to shed more light on its molecular interactions in solvent system (Rosenau et al. 2003).
With regard to degradation hazards, the most important consequence of the ionic interaction between IL and NMMO is that the amine oxide cannot be extracted completely from mixtures with XMIm ILs by organic solvents. Table 1 shows the threshold concentrations of NMMO in the respective IL that can be reached by extraction with common organic solvents, starting from 1:1 (wt) mixtures of IL and NMMO. Even repeated extractions or large extractant amounts will not further decrease the NMMO content in the IL below that threshold. Evidently, a higher polarity of the extractant enables it to remove slightly more NMMO from the mixture with the IL, but the improvements are generally rather small. Chloride ILs retained NMMO slightly better than acetate ILs. Generally, NMMO in binary mixtures with dry XMIm ILs cannot be extracted below contents of 3.5–6% (w/w), depending on the solvent used for extraction.
Much larger than the effects of the organic extraction medium is the effect of the presence of water. Through its presence, the threshold concentration of non-extractable NMMO is increased: higher water concentrations increase the amount of NMMO retained upon extraction. As a rule of thumb, non-extractable NMMO increases to a molar ratio H2O/IL of approx. 2 and stays constant afterwards, largely independent of the IL´s cation (BMIM or EMIM) and anion (chloride or acetate). The non-extractable NMMO in EMIM acetate/NMMO and BMIM chloride/NMMO mixtures in dependence on the water content is shown in Fig. 1 with trichloromethane (chloroform) being two examples of commonly used extractants.
NMMO is well-known to undergo autocatalytic degradation via N-methylmorpholinium ions (carbenium-iminium ions) as catalyst. Cleavage of the energy-rich N–O bond with concomitant release of a proton from the N-methyl group initially forms this intermediate. It then attacks another molecule of NMMO, releasing another catalyst molecule so that the degradation cycle continues (Rosenau et al. 1999). The starting step, cleavage of the N–O bond can be triggered by many reagents, both homolytically (radical reactions) and heterolytically (ionic reactions) (Rosenau et al. 2001). The most important inducers are transition metal ions, as well as alkylating and acylating agents that attack the negatively charged oxygen in NMMO (so-called Polonowski-type reactions) (Rosenau et al. 2002). The residual, non-extractable NMMO in ionic liquids can undergo such reactions as well as pure NMMO does, and grave danger is posed when an IL is erroneously considered to be NMMO-free, and the experimentalist is not aware of the residual NMMO content.
The instability of NMMO in mixtures can be readily tested by the onset temperature, i.e. the temperature at which the autocatalytic degradation starts and becomes uncontrollable. The reaction is usually carried out with volumes of 1–3 cm3 in explosion-proof autoclaves or calorimeters that are heated up at controlled rates. It is surprisingly accurate and repeatable with errors of less than 5 °C, provided that the heating rates are similar. Table 2 lists the onset temperatures of different IL/NMMO mixtures. CAUTION! NMMO in 1-alkyl-3-methylimidazolium ionic liquids cannot be considered safe at temperatures above 90 °C.
Highest stabilities are obtained in pure ILs from which degradation productions had previously been removed (Liebner et al. 2010). Acidic degradation products, such as acetic acid, gluconic acid from cellulose or 2-furancarboxylic acid from xylan, generally destabilize NMMO, whereas basic degradation products, such as 1-methylimidazole from the IL (Liebner et al. 2010) or N-methylmorpholine from NMMO, render it more stable, in complete agreement with general NMMO chemistry. There is one important exception: imidazole has a pronounced destabilizing effect in XMIm acetates (BMIM-OAc, EMIM-OAc). It reacts with the acetate to form small equilibrium amounts of 1-acetylimidazole, which, in turn, is a strong acetyl transfer agent that acylates the amine N-oxide oxygen and induces immediate NMMO decomposition (Zweckmair et al. 2015). This effect is evidently only seen in acetate ILs (and in other ILs with carboxylic acid anions that can form 1-acylimidazoles), but not in chloride ILs.
Interestingly, while the presence of water usually stabilized NMMO, stabilization is much less for IL/NMMO mixtures (see Fig. 2). Addition of water increases the decomposition onset temperature only slightly, and only relatively high water contents cause the degradation to start at significantly higher temperatures—above a molar ratio H2O/IL of approx. 2, by analogy to the above extraction experiments. This means, on the other hand, that drying (water capture) of an IL/NMMO mixture will decrease its overall stability, which is potentially dangerous if the temperature of the mixture is above 90 °C and thus in the range of possible NMMO degradation.
A good demonstration experiment uses a mixture of EMIM-OAc/NMMO/water 90/5/5 (w/w), the IL having been “aged” by thermal treatment at 200 °C over 24 h (see Table 2). At 120 °C, this ternary system is stable over several hours; no water is removed as it is tightly bound by NMMO and IL as “hydrates”. If anhydrous magnesium sulfate—a seemingly “innocent” drying agent—is added (equimolar to the water amount), the mixture will get dark within about 2 min and violently decompose a few seconds later: the protective effect of large water amounts is undone by the MgSO4 drying agent, and the mixture is in the temperature zone above 90 °C that is safe at higher water contents, but unsafe when no water as third component is present.
Special care must be taken to avoid the simultaneous presence of NMMO and acylating agents, e.g. if an acetylation is to be carried out in an IL, while the IL unknowingly contains NMMO as carry-over from previous experiments.
Alkylating agents must also be viewed critically; there have been incidents with NMMO decomposition when NMMO was admixed to freshly prepared (and thus allegedly pure) BMIM IL. Since the IL in fact had still contained traces of butyl halide from its manufacture (quaternization of 1-methylimidazole into BMIM), a pronounced instability of NMMO was triggered. The safest way to prevent such accidents is to ensure the absence of NMMO when heating an IL. Contamination with NMMO cannot be detected by GC (no volatility of both IL and NMMO) or NMR (concentration too low), so that HPLC and CE (capillary electrophoresis) (Potthast et al. 2000) seem to be the methods of choice. NMMO traces, if present, can be easily reduced by aqueous ferrous sulfate or sodium borohydride, giving innocent and readily removable N-methylmorpholine.
We hope that these cautionary remarks will help to increase awareness of the inherent dangers of working with NMMO at elevated temperatures, and to thus prevent any related accidents in laboratories.
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Open access funding provided by University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna (BOKU). The authors thank the Japanese Society for Promotion of Science (JSPS) for support of the work through travel grants.
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Böhmdorfer, S., Hosoya, T., Röder, T. et al. A cautionary note on thermal runaway reactions in mixtures of 1-alkyl-3-methylimidazolium ionic liquids and N-methylmorpholine-N-oxide. Cellulose 24, 1927–1932 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10570-017-1257-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10570-017-1257-2