METHOD FOR GREEN CHLORINATION OF SILVER
20230203700 · 2023-06-29
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
C25B1/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C25D11/34
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y02P20/54
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
The present invention relates to a method for chlorination of silver materials in the forms of wire, thick film paste and metallic sheet/disc. The method is environmentally friendly since the process does not produce hazardous chemicals or flammable gas. The electrochemical setup includes position the electrode containing silver materials in the anode and a platinum wire at the cathode. A DC voltage supply between 1 to 5 volts oxidizes the silver surface which receives chloride from imidazolium chloride solution to produce silver chloride on silver wire, film or disc. The imidazolium chloride reagent can be in aqueous solution or polar organic solvents or naturally exists in ionic liquid form. The imidazolium radical cation decomposes to produce a stabilized organic radical and an imidazole molecule. The stabilized radical recombines to produce volatile organic compound that can be recovered by simple distillation. The chlorination reagent can be regenerated by re-introducing the stabilized group at N.sub.1.
Claims
1. An electrochemical setup 10 for chlorination of silver materials comprising a regulated DC supply 11, an inlet and outlet 20 of nitrogen or argon gas ambient, at least one silver material at the anode 14, an electrolyte containing a regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent 15, a platinum cathode 13 which supply electron to oxidize the silver materials 14 to silver cations, the silver cation reacts with chloride in the electrolyte to produce silver chloride layer on top of silver material; and an inert chamber body characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent decompose to form imidazolium cation and chloride ions, the imidazolium cation receives one electron and decomposes to neutral imidazole molecule and a stabilized organic (normally hydrocarbon) radical, the organic radical recombines forming a volatile hydrocarbon by-products in the inert chamber body.
2. The electrochemical setup of claim 1 characterised in that the silver is in metallic wire form.
3. The electrochemical setup of claim 1 characterised in that the silver is in metallic sheet or foil form.
4. The electrochemical setup of claim 1 characterised in that the silver material is a thick film screen printed.
5. The electrochemical setup of claim 4 characterised in that the thick film screen printed is cured in the oven at temperature of 120° C.
6. The electrochemical setup of claim 1 characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent is dissolved in deionized water.
7. The electrochemical setup of claim 1 characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent is dissolved in a mixture of deionized water and high molecular weight alcohols
8. The electrochemical setup of claim 1 characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent is reagent 2 having the following structure; ##STR00006##
9. The electrochemical setup of claim 1 characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent is reagent 3 having the following structure; ##STR00007##
10. The electrochemical setup of claim 1 characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent is reagent 4 having the following structure; ##STR00008##
11. The electrochemical setup of claim 1 characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent is reagent 5 having the following structure; ##STR00009##
12. The electrochemical setup of claim 1 characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent is reagent 6 having the following structure; ##STR00010##
13. The electrochemical setup of claim 1 characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent is reagent 7 having the following structure; ##STR00011##
14. The electrochemical setup of claim 1 characterised in that the volatile hydrocarbon by-products may be removed by a simple distillation process.
15. The electrochemical setup of claim 1 characterised in that the setup is made up of a round-bottom flask that sits on a heating mantle, whereby removal of the hydrocarbon by-products can be carried out without disassembling the setup.
16. The use of silver-silver chloride electrode produced by using setup of claim 1 to make chemical sensors based on ion selective electrode.
17. The use of silver-silver chloride electrode produced by using setup of claim 1 to make reference electrode.
18. A method for preparing silver-silver chloride electrode comprising; screen printing a thick film silver on polymer substrate, curing in an oven at high temperature; screen printing a solder mask paste providing a circular well shape of silver window while covering the rest of the silver materials except on the well and electrical contacts, connecting the electrical contact to an anode of a DC which deliver a constant voltage supply, connecting a platinum wire to a cathode of an electrochemical setup comprising an electrolyte containing a regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent, running the electrochemical setup thereby chlorinating the thick film silver.
19. The method of claim 18 characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium reagent is 2-propenyl-1-ethanol imidazolium chloride.
20. The method of claim 19 characterised in that the reagent is dissolves in deionized water.
21. The method of claim 18 characterised in that the steps are carried out in an inert blanket of a continuous flow of argon or nitrogen gas.
22. The method of claim 18 characterised in that the screen printing a solder mask step is repeated at least five times to provide layer of solder mask paste on top of each other with a total thickness of 0.5 mm.
23. The method of claim 18 characterised in that the electrical contacts is provided by silver pin.
24. The method of claim 18 characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent is reagent 2 having the following structure; ##STR00012##
25. The method of claim 18 characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent is reagent 3 having the following structure; ##STR00013##
26. The method of claim 18 characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent is reagent 4 having the following structure; ##STR00014##
27. The method of claim 18 characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent is reagent 5 having the following structure; ##STR00015##
28. The method of claim 18 characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent is reagent 6 having the following structure; ##STR00016##
29. The method of claim 18 characterised in that the regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent is reagent 7 having the following structure; ##STR00017##
30. A method for preparing silver-silver chloride electrode comprising; roughening the surface of silver wire with sand paper; cleaning the roughened silver wire surface with ethanol or isopropyl alcohol, connecting the silver material to an anode of a DC which delivers a constant voltage supply, connecting a platinum wire to a cathode of an electrochemical setup comprising an electrolyte containing a regenerative imidazolium chloride reagent, running the electrochemical setup thereby chlorinating the silver material.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0019] For a fuller understanding of the nature of the present invention, reference should be made to the following detailed description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings in which:
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0026] In one embodiment the imidazolium reagents present in its un-protected hydrophilic hydroxyl (alcohol) form, dissolved in water or polar solvents. During electrochemical chlorination of silver, the radical cation reactive intermediate releases a stabilized organic radical and generates imidazole molecule. The reagent can be regenerated by re-introducing the stabilized group at N.sub.1.
[0027] A wide range of imidazolium chlorides as illustrated in
[0028] The disclosed environmentally friendly chlorination of silver requires simple, economical and efficient electrochemical setup as illustrated in
[0029] Mechanistic pathway for chlorination of silver materials in environmentally friendly process using regenerative hydrophilic imidazolium chloride is illustrated in Scheme 1.
##STR00002##
[0030] Additional features of the present invention are provided in the following examples, which should not be construed as limiting the claims in any way.
Example 1
Chlorination of Thick Film Silver Paste
Using 2-Propenyl-1-Ethanol Imidazolium Chloride (3)
[0031] Thick film silver is screen printed on 0.3 mm thick polyester substrate followed by oven curing at 120° C. to remove volatile alcohols and to give 20 micrometer of dry silver paste. Solder mask paste was screen printed five times on top of each other to give circular well shape of silver window and total thickness of 0.5 mm, while covering the rest of the silver materials except on the well and electrical contacts. The appropriate silver pin electrical contact is connected to the anode of DC supply in
[0032] Upon completion of chlorination process the silver-silver chloride electrode is connected to ion meter (Orion Thermo 5-Star) and conventional double-junction reference electrode (Orion with potassium nitrate or lithium acetate external solution) is used to complete the circuit. Chloride signal of this setup is monitored in potassium chloride calibration solutions (10.sup.−1 to 10.sup.−5 M). The result of the voltage response versus logarithm of the chloride ion activities is provided in Table 1. The result is plotted as illustrated in
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Chloride response of screen-printed silver-silver chloride electrode versus conventional double- junction reference electrode in KCl solutions. Chloride Ion Activity Response(mV) −5 212.9 −4 171.9 −3 125.4 −2 79.2 −1 34.7
Example 2
Chlorination of Silver Wire Using
3-n-Propyl-1-Ethanol Imidazolium Chloride (2)
[0033] Silver wire (Aldrich Chemical Company) with 0.5 mm was cut into 4-cm long pieces. Each piece is polished evenly with sand paper to roughen the surface and remove oxide impurities. The roughened silver wire is wiped with ethanol or isopropyl alcohol before it is connected to the anode in electrochemical setup described in
[0034] The top end (not roughened) of the silver wire is connected to the anode of DC supply in
[0035] Upon completion of chlorination process the silver-silver chloride wire electrode is connected to ion meter (Orion Thermo 5-Star) and conventional double-junction reference electrode (Orion with potassium nitrate or lithium acetate external solution) is used to complete the circuit. Chloride signal of this setup is monitored in potassium chloride calibration solutions (10.sup.−1 to 10.sup.−5 M). The result of the voltage response versus logarithm of the chloride ion activities is provided in Table 2. The result is plotted as illustrated in
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Chloride response of wire silver-silver chloride electrode versus conventional double-junction reference electrode in KCl solutions. Chloride Ion Activity Response(mV) −5 211.9 −4 169.5 −3 124.2 −2 77.7 −1 33.7
Example 3
Preparation of 1-Ethanol Imidazole (1)
[0036] ##STR00003##
[0037] A 100-mL round-bottom flask, equipped with reflux condenser and magnetic stirrer was flame dried while flushed with nitrogen. Anhydrous tetrahydrofuran (THF) 50 mL was added into the flask via syringe.
[0038] THF solution of 0.5M 9 borabicyclo[3.3.1]nonane (9-BBN) (0.02 mole) was added, followed by 0.021 mole of freshly distilled 1-vinyl imidazole (purchased from Aldrich Chemical Company). The reaction mixture was refluxed for 5 hours. The reaction mixture was gradually cooled to room temperature and 25 mL of 3M sodium hydroxide solution was added. Later 25 mL of 30% hydrogen peroxide was added dropwise into the flask and the mixture was stirred for 5 hours to complete oxidation. The reaction mixture was extracted with 20-mL portions of ethyl ether, and the combined extracts dried with anhydrous magnesium sulfate. Distillation under reduced pressure gave 83% of 1.
Example 4
Preparation of 3-n-Propyl-1-Ethanol Imidazolium Chloride (2) and
3-n-Butyl-1-Ethanol Imidazolium Chloride (6)
[0039] ##STR00004##
[0040] A 50-mL three-necked, round-bottomed flask, equipped with thermometer, nitrogen inlet, addition funnel, magnetic stirrer and reflux condenser was flame dried and flushed with nitrogen. The flask was charged with 25 mL of anhydrous dichloromethane. Freshly distilled 1-ethanol imidazole (1, 0.01 mol) was added into the flask. The flask was chilled with ice-water bath and 1-chloropropane (0.011 mol) in 10 mL of anhydrous dichloromethane was added cautiously into the flask with continuous stirring over 20 minutes. The solution was heated under reflux for 14 hours and then allowed to cool to room temperature. The dichloromethane solvent was removed under vacuum distillation through Vigreaux column to give 81% of imidazolium chloride 2. n-Butyl-1-ethanol imidazolium chloride (6) can be prepared following this procedure from 1-chlorobutane.
Example 5
Preparation of 2-Propenyl-1-Ethanol Imidazolium Chloride (3)
[0041] ##STR00005##
[0042] A 50-mL three-necked, round-bottomed flask, equipped with thermometer, nitrogen inlet, addition funnel, magnetic stirrer and reflux condenser was flame dried and flushed with nitrogen. The flask was charged with 25 mL of anhydrous dichloromethane. Freshly distilled 1-ethanol imidazole 1 (0.01 mol) was added into the flask. The flask was chilled with ice-water bath and 3-chloro-1-propene (0.011 mol) in 15 mL of anhydrous dichloromethane was added cautiously into the flask with continuous stirring over 30 minutes. The solution was heated under reflux for 8 hours and then allowed to cool to room temperature. The dichloromethane solvent was distilled under to give 87% of imidazolium chloride 3.
[0043] Although the preferred embodiments of the present invention have been described herein, the above descriptions are merely illustrative. Further modification of the invention herein disclosed will occur to those skilled in the respective arts and all such modifications are deemed to be within the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.