Revisiting the driving force inducing phase separation in PEG-phosphate aqueous biphasic systems.
Sophie BonnassieuxRaj PandyaDhyllan Adan SkibaDamien DegoulangeDorothée PetitPeter SeemRussel P CowburnBetar M GallantAlexis GrimaudPublished in: Faraday discussions (2024)
Liquid phase separation using aqueous biphasic systems (ABS) is widely used in industrial processes for the extraction, separation and purification of macromolecules. Using water as the single solvent, a wide variety of solutes have been used to induce phase separation including polymers, ionic liquids or salts. For each system, polymer-polymer, polymer-ionic liquid, polymer-salt or salt-salt, different driving forces were proposed to induce phase separation. Specifically, for polymer-salt systems, a difference in solvation structure between the polymer-rich and the salt-rich was proposed, while other reports suggested that a large change in enthalpy and entropy accompanied the phase separation. Here, we reinvestigated the PEG/K 2 HPO 4 /H 2 O systems using a combination of liquid-phase nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and high-resolution Raman spectroscopies, coupled with injection microcalorimetry. Both NMR and Raman reveal a decreased water concentration in the PEG-rich phase, with nonetheless no significant differences observed for both 1 H chemical shift or OH stretching vibrations. Hence, both PEG- and salt-rich phases exhibit similar water solvation properties, which is thus not the driving force for phase separation. Furthermore, NMR reveals that PEG interacts with salt ions in the PEG-rich solution, inducing a downfield shift with increasing salt concentration. Injection microcalorimetry measurements were carried out to investigate any effect due to enthalpy change during mixing. Nevertheless, these measurements indicate very small enthalpy changes when mixing PEG- and salt-rich solutions in comparison with that previously recorded for salt-salt systems or associated with mixing of two solvents. Hence, our study discards any large change of enthalpy as the origin for phase separation of PEG/K 2 HPO 4 systems, in addition to large difference in solvation properties.
Keyphrases
- ionic liquid
- magnetic resonance
- high resolution
- drug delivery
- room temperature
- emergency department
- mass spectrometry
- molecular dynamics
- computed tomography
- gene expression
- risk assessment
- wastewater treatment
- solid state
- single molecule
- ultrasound guided
- genome wide
- raman spectroscopy
- liquid chromatography
- clinical evaluation