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Deep Eutectic Solvents: A Review of Fundamentals and Applications

Benworth Hansen, Stephanie Spittle, Brian Chen, Derrick Poe, Yong Zhang, Jeffrey M. Klein, Alexandre Horton, Laxmi Adhikari, Tamar Zelovich, Brian Doherty, Burcu Gurkan, Edward J. Maginn, Arthur J. Ragauskas, Mark Dadmun, Thomas A. Zawodzinski, Gary A. Baker, Mark E. Tuckerman, Robert F. Savinell, Joshua Sangoro

2020Chemical Reviews3,194 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Deep eutectic solvents (DESs) are an emerging class of mixtures characterized by significant depressions in melting points compared to those of the neat constituent components. These materials are promising for applications as inexpensive "designer" solvents exhibiting a host of tunable physicochemical properties. A detailed review of the current literature reveals the lack of predictive understanding of the microscopic mechanisms that govern the structure-property relationships in this class of solvents. Complex hydrogen bonding is postulated as the root cause of their melting point depressions and physicochemical properties; to understand these hydrogen bonded networks, it is imperative to study these systems as dynamic entities using both simulations and experiments. This review emphasizes recent research efforts in order to elucidate the next steps needed to develop a fundamental framework needed for a deeper understanding of DESs. It covers recent developments in DES research, frames outstanding scientific questions, and identifies promising research thrusts aligned with the advancement of the field toward predictive models and fundamental understanding of these solvents.

Topics & Concepts

Eutectic systemChemistryNanotechnologyClass (philosophy)Hydrogen bondField (mathematics)Biochemical engineeringComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceOrganic chemistryMaterials scienceMoleculeEngineeringMathematicsAlloyPure mathematicsIonic liquids properties and applicationsMesoporous Materials and CatalysisCatalysis and Oxidation Reactions