This study demonstrates the high efficiency and selectivity of p-toluenesulfonic acid-based deep eutectic solvents (DESs) for simultaneous extractive denitrogenation (EDN) and desulfurization (EDS) of model fuel. Three DESs—TBPB:PTSA, TBAB:PTSA, and ChCl:PTSA (1:1 molar ratio)—were synthesized and evaluated for their effectiveness against representative heteroaromatic pollutants: thiophene, dibenzothiophene, pyridine, and carbazole. The phosphonium-based TBPB:PTSA exhibited the highest extraction performance, achieving over 96% removal of nitrogen species and up to 85% removal of sulfur species at 40 °C. Increasing the temperature enhanced desulfurization by reducing viscosity, thereby improving mass transfer kinetics. Additionally, a 3:1 ratio of DES to fuel provided an optimal balance between solvent economy and operational efficiency. Denitrogenation was driven by strong acid–base protonation facilitated by PTSA, while desulfurization was governed by π–π and dispersion interactions, modulated by the hydrophobicity of the cations. The DES achieved nearly quantitative nitrogen removal and satisfactory sulfur extraction after three reuse cycles, while multistage operation enabled complete purification within four extraction steps. 1H NMR analysis confirmed that no DES components were found in the raffinate phase, verifying the immiscibility and stability of the solvent. These results indicate that TBPB:PTSA is a robust, regenerable, and environmentally benign solvent, effectively enabling simultaneous EDN–EDS of hydrocarbon fuels and positioning it as a promising green alternative to traditional hydrogen-based refining methods.
Mokraoui et al. (Sat,) studied this question.