I have a few questions about this. I'll ask the most important one first, the others are just for the sake of knowledge.
So I'm wondering what other aqueous solvents are good for liquid-liquid extractions? According to the miscibility charts:
water is the only one that is immiscible with a wide range of solvents. Methanol is immiscible with a few of them. If you have a mixture of products, some of them soluble in methanol, some only soluble in hexane, would this not be a good system since methanol can easily be rotavapped off, so you could obtain products from both the organic and aqueous layers? Also, would it be possible to make methanol even less miscible with non polars by saturating it with salt?
DMSO is immiscible with a good few solvents too, and in my experience DMSO dissolves all kinds of compounds, regardless of their polarity so I'm wondering if this can be used to your advantage, in order to wash non polar materials out of your organic phase, while leaving compounds that happen to be insoluble with DMSO. Can these charts be trusted though? I think I tried mixing hexane with DMF before and didn't see any biphase formation. Maybe you just need to give it time to separate into layers though. I've been using DMF a lot lately, and have been using liquid-liquid extractions with water to get rid of the DMF. If DMF is immiscible with things like hexane and pentane, couldn't I just do a DMF-hexane extraction?
Next question: Lets say you're doing a liquid-liquid extraction and you add a less dense solvent like diethyl ether or ethyl acetate to water. What happens if you add say n-Hexane to the mix. Will that simply make the organic layer (top layer in this case) less polar, or are there more complex interactions that occur.
Secondly, what happens if I add a more dense immiscible like chloroform to the mix, will the organic layer just sink to the bottom as it gradually becomes more dense? What happens when the net density reaches 1.0, will an emulsion form?
Thirdly, what happens if you add a miscible solvent like acetone to the mix? Will it cause the two layers to merge? If so, can you add more hexane to make the mixture seperate into 2 layers again? In the labs, someone had an issue when they added THF to their aqueous solution, they thought it was immiscible with water, but it turned out that it didn't separate into two layers. I suggested adding hexane to see if it would split into two layers, and it did. In this case, I'm guessing the partition coefficient will determine how much THF goes into what layer. If he was to then add more THF, would the layers merge together again? If so, would an emulsion form, or would be the THF help solvate the hexane better so that a homogenous solution can be obtained?