Acc. Chem. Res., 40 (11), 12281236 10.1021/ar7001842
Web Release Date: November 3, 2007

Copyright © 2007 American Chemical Society

Parallel Developments in Aprotic and Protic Ionic Liquids: Physical Chemistry and Applications

C. Austen Angell,* Nolene Byrne, and Jean-Philippe Belieres

Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-1604

Received August 9, 2007

Abstract:

This Account covers research dating from the early 1960s in the field of low-melting molten salts and hydrates,which has recently become popular under the rubric of “ionic liquids”. It covers understanding gained in the principal author’s laboratories (initially in Australia, but mostly in the U.S.A.) from spectroscopic, dynamic, and thermodynamic studies and includes recent applications of this understanding in the fields of energy conversion and biopreservation. Both protic and aprotic varieties of ionic liquids are included, but recent studies have focused on the protic class because of the special applications made possible by the highly variable proton activities available in these liquids.

Download the full text: PDF | HTML