Magnetic Ionic Liquids in Analytical Microextraction: A Tutorial Review

J Chromatogr A. 2022 Dec 6:1685:463577. doi: 10.1016/j.chroma.2022.463577. Epub 2022 Oct 21.

Abstract

Magnetic ionic liquids (MILs) are materials of special interest in analytical chemistry and, particularly, in analytical microextraction. These solvents possess several of the properties derived from their inherent nature of ionic liquids, combined with their magnetism, that permits their manipulation with an external magnetic field. This feature allows for performing typical steps of the microextraction procedure in a simpler manner with the aid of a strong magnet. Although there are several important reviews summarizing the most innovative advances in this field, there is a gap of information, as they do not provide useful details and tips related to the experimental set up of these procedures. This tutorial review fills this gap by providing a guide for the proper handling of MILs, their manipulation with magnets, and their proper hyphenation with the most used analytical techniques. Attention is paid to dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction, stir-bar dispersive liquid microextraction, aqueous biphasic systems, and single-drop microextraction, for being the analytical microextraction techniques mostly employed with MILs. This review also introduces a classification of the MILs employed in analytical microextraction in three classes (denoted as A, B, and C) as a function of the MIL nature (metal-containing anion, metal-containing cation, and radical-containing ion), and discuss about the prospect and future trends regarding new MIL families in microextraction together with new directions expected in these procedures.

Keywords: Magnetic ionic liquids; analytical microextraction; magnetic separation; magnetic-assisted procedures; sample preparation.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Ionic Liquids* / chemistry
  • Liquid Phase Microextraction* / methods
  • Magnetic Phenomena
  • Magnetics
  • Solvents / chemistry

Substances

  • Ionic Liquids
  • Solvents