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1.
Microemulsions form in mixtures of polar, nonpolar, and amphiphilic molecules. Typical microemulsions employ water as the polar phase. However, microemulsions can form with a polar phase other than water, which hold promise to diversify the range of properties, and hence utility, of microemulsions. Here microemulsions formed by using a room‐temperature ionic liquid (RTIL) as the polar phase were created and characterized by using multinuclear NMR spectroscopy. 1H, 11B, and 19F NMR spectroscopy was applied to explore differences between microemulsions formed by using 1‐butyl‐3‐methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate ([bmim][BF4]) as the polar phase with a cationic surfactant, benzylhexadecyldimethylammonium chloride (BHDC), and a nonionic surfactant, Triton X‐100 (TX‐100). NMR spectroscopy showed distinct differences in the behavior of the RTIL as the charge of the surfactant head group varies in the different microemulsion environments. Minor changes in the chemical shifts were observed for [bmim]+ and [BF4]? in the presence of TX‐100 suggesting that the surfactant and the ionic liquid are separated in the microemulsion. The large changes in spectroscopic parameters observed are consistent with microstructure formation with layering of [bmim]+ and [BF4]? and migration of Cl? within the BHDC microemulsions. Comparisons with NMR results for related ionic compounds in organic and aqueous environments as well as literature studies assisted the development of a simple organizational model for these microstructures.  相似文献   

2.
Ionic liquids (ILs), 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate (bmimBF4), were substituted for polar water and formed nonaqueous microemulsions with toluene by the aid of nonionic surfactant TX-100. The phase behavior of the ternary system was investigated, and microregions of bmimBF4-in-toluene (IL/O), bicontinuous, and toluene-in-bmimBF4 (O/IL) were identified by traditional electrical conductivity measurements. Dynamic light scattering (DLS) revealed the formation of the IL microemulsions. The micropolarities of the IL/O microemulsions were investigated by the UV-vis spectroscopy using the methyl orange (MO) and methylene blue (MB) as absorption probes. The results indicated that the polarity of the IL/O microemulsion increased only before the IL pools were formed, whereas a relatively fixed polar microenvironment was obtained in the IL pools of the microemulsions. Moreover, UV-vis spectroscopy has also shown that ionic salt compounds such as Ni(NO3)2, CoCl2, CuCl2, and biochemical reagent riboflavin could be solubilized into the IL/O microemulsion droplets, indicating that the IL/O microemulsions have potential application in the production of metallic or semiconductor nanomaterials, and in biological extractions or as solvents for enzymatic reactions. The IL/O microemulsions may have some expected effects due to the unique features of ILs and microemulsions.  相似文献   

3.
This paper begins with a review of the studies dedicated to the electrochemistry of non-polar liquids performed during last century. There is a list of dozens of liquids that have been studied, as well as variety of electrolytes. There is an overview of 13 different experimental methods which have been employed for this task. The theoretical part of the review emphasizes the work done by Onsager, Debye, Fuoss, Kraus, Bjerrum and others in 1920s and 30s. They initiated and justified the fundamental ideas that serve as the scientific basis for modern handbooks on non-aqueous electrochemistry. Many of these papers from 1930s and later are reviewed here.The second part of this paper is dedicated to the electrochemistry of non-polar liquids containing surfactants. These substances can serve as electrolytes if ionic. However, their main function is to enhance the solvation of ions, providing steric stabilization that minimizes ion re-association and ion-pair formation. Consequently, the classical “dissociation model” requires some modification when applied to surfactant solutions. There are also two additional theoretical models suggested specifically for surfactant solutions in non-polar liquids: the “disproportionation model” for dry inverse micelles, and the “fluctuation model” by Eicke, Borkovec, and Das-Gupta for microemulsions. Charged microemulsion droplets can serve as ions, which justifies the inclusion of this theory in this review. In addition, we can study (with a well defined theory) the transition from microemulsion droplet to dry inverse micelle ion by reducing water content. Studying this transition reveals some important features of both systems.We present here these three theories and apply them for interpreting experimental data (mostly conductivity) in four different systems, all of which are non-polar systems containing surfactants: solutions of ionic surfactants, solutions of non-ionic surfactants, microemulsions with ionic surfactants, and microemulsions with non-ionic surfactants.  相似文献   

4.
Microemulsions of nonionic alkyl oligoethyleneoxide (CiEj) surfactants, alkanes, and ethylammonium nitrate (EAN), a room-temperature ionic liquid, have been prepared and characterized. Studies of phase behavior reveal that EAN microemulsions have many features in common with corresponding aqueous systems, the primary difference being that higher surfactant concentrations and longer surfactant tailgroups are required to offset the decreased solvophobicity the surfactant molecules in EAN compared with water. The response of the EAN microemulsions to variation in the length of the alkane, surfactant headgroup, and surfactant tailgroup has been found to parallel that observed in aqueous systems in most instances. EAN microemulsions exhibit a single broad small-angle X-ray scattering peak, like aqueous systems. These are well described by the Teubner-Strey model. A lamellar phase was also observed for surfactants with longer tails at lower temperatures. The scattering peaks of both microemulsion and lamellar phases move to lower wave vector on increasing temperature. This is ascribed to a decrease in the interfacial area of the surfactant layer. Phase behavior, small-angle X-ray scattering, and conductivity experiments have allowed the weakly to strongly structured transition to be identified for EAN systems.  相似文献   

5.
Microemulsions are stable mixtures of a polar solvent, surfactant and an unpolar solvent. Ionic liquids (ILs, i.e. salts with melting points below 100 °C) are a huge class of potentially promising solvents. We discuss here published structural or thermodynamic investigations concerning microemulsions in which one or more of the three classical components are ILs.In microemulsions IL can replace respectively the “oil”, the “surfactant” and the “water” phase. Experimental proofs of the existence and stability of microemulsions are given as well as hints at their microstructure. While the four regimes initially defined by Winsor are all accessible, most of the examples of microemulsions containing ionic liquids belong to the class of “rigid” microemulsions. Since additional solutes have characteristic distribution coefficients for each pseudo phase, IL based microemulsions may provide a useful tool for solubilization (reaction medium) and separation, thus allowing the recovery of a large variety of reaction products, but also waste. Further to a discussion of phase diagrams and thermodynamics, we will show some application examples and propose challenges for future studies, in this vast but only emerging domain.  相似文献   

6.
Microemulsion electrokinetic chromatography (MEEKC) is an electrodriven separation technique. Separations are generally achieved using microemulsions consisting of surfactant-coated nanometer-sized oil droplets suspended in aqueous buffer. A cosurfactant such as a short-chain alcohol is generally used to stabilize the microemulsion. This review summarizes the various microemulsion types and compositions that have been used in MEEKC. The effects of key-operating variables such as surfactant type and concentration, cosurfactant type and concentration, buffer pH and type, oil type and concentration, use of organic solvent and cyclodextrin additions, and temperature are described. Specific examples of water-in-oil microemulsions and chirally selective separations are also covered.  相似文献   

7.
A unique triblock surfactant is reported that allows for the efficient microemulsification of triglycerides. Unlike the results of all previous efforts, these triglyceride microemulsions can be formed without the use of cosurfactants or dilution with co-oils and follow the classical patterns of surfactant phase behavior exhibited by mixtures of water, alkane oils, and nonionic oligoethylene glycol surfactants, i.e., progression from oil/water emulsions to one-phase microemulsions to water/oil emulsions with increasing temperature. Lamellar phases that usually dominate the aqueous phase behavior of surfactant/triglyceride mixtures are suppressed, allowing for the formation of single-phase microemulsions containing equal amounts of triglyceride and water. These isotropic and low-viscous fluids are particularly useful for cleansing and delivery of functional ingredients in skin care products. The effects of mixing a variety of typical skin care ingredients and components of sebum (skin oil) were also explored. Fatty acids significantly reduce the average microemulsion temperature, while other ingredients and oils, which do not partition at the oil/water interface, have less impact on the phase behavior. In all cases, one-phase microemulsions containing equal amounts of oil and water can be formed even at high additive concentrations. Indeed, partial replacement oftriglyceride with any of the additives examined consistently reduced the amount of surfactant necessary to form single-phase microemulsions. However, the greatest boost in surfactant efficiency was found with the addition of medium molecular weight amphiphilic block copolymers.  相似文献   

8.
The conditions to obtain W/0 microemulsions using ionic surfactants and a nonionic cosurfactant, a polyoxyethylene alkyl ether, were investigated. The length of the polyoxyethylene chain was critical to obtain the typical water solubilization maximum

The variation of the W/0 microemulsion region with hydrocarbon content was different from that of the usual type of microemulsions having a medium chain length alcohol as cosurfactant. In the present systems the W/0 microemulsion region was not a direct continuation of the inverse micellar area at zero content of hydrocarbon. Addition of hydrocarbon was necessary for the formation of inverse micelles

The microemulsion regions were sensitive to the kind of hydrocarbon used; a sign of the importance of the nonionic surfactant for the stability of this kind of microemulsions.  相似文献   

9.
Increasing triolein content of oil-in-water microemulsions in the pure C(12)E(4)/water/n-hexadecane/triolein system while maintaining a fixed surfactant concentration and volume fraction of drops raises the temperature of the solubilisation boundary, where excess oil separates, but has only a slight effect on the (higher) cloud point temperature, where excess water appears. Thus, the temperature range of the single-phase microemulsion shrinks and ultimately disappears. When such microemulsions are in equilibrium with excess oil, the hexadecane/triolein ratio is greater in the microemulsion, probably because the larger triolein molecules are unable to penetrate the hydrocarbon chain region of the surfactant films of the microemulsion droplets. Indeed, monolayer studies and calculations based on microemulsion and excess oil compositions indicate that the films have minimal triolein and similar ratios of hexadecane to surfactant. Triolein drops brought into contact with hexadecane-in-water microemulsions first swell as they incorporate hexadecane, then shrink owing to solubilisation. Interfacial tension decreases during this process until it becomes almost constant near 0.01 mN m(-1), suggesting that the drops in the final stages of solubilisation have high hexadecane contents. A microemulsion containing 10 wt% C(12)E(4) and 15 wt% hexadecane was able to remove over 50% of triolein from polyester fabric at 25 degrees C, more than twice that removed by an oil-free solution with the same surfactant concentration in similar experiments.  相似文献   

10.
Some examples of systems including useful ingredients as cosurfactants and cosolventsto furnish suitable microemulsions to be applicated in technological fields such as cosmetics and dermopharmaceuticals, are given For systems with ionic surfactants, the usual cosurfactant (medium chain lenght alcohol) was substituted by more skin compatible ingredients as butyl lactate, or alternatively by oleic acid and a glycol as cosolvent mixed in the aqueous phase of the system. On the other hand, for a system with an alkyl glucoside as nonionic surfactant, temperature - insensitive microemulsions was obtained also with butyl lactate as cosurfactant. Moreover, the influence that the presence of glycols as cosolvents involve on the isotropic liquid regions of such systems has been also evidenced. In conclusion, it is possible to formulate suitable microemulsions to practical applications, overcoming the traditional problems of the most of the conventional microemulsions as are the biological agressivity of the cosurfactant for ionic surfactant systems, and the temperature dependence for nonionic surfactant systems.  相似文献   

11.
Polar/amphiphilic oils, called lipophilic linkers, are sometimes added to oil-water-ionic surfactant microemulsions in order to increase the solubilization of hydrophobic oils. The solubilization increase has been well documented for a number of systems. However, mathematical models to calculate the solubilization increase have been proposed only for optimum microemulsions (i.e., middle phase microemulsions solubilizing equal volumes of oil and water). In this paper we propose a model, which predicts solubilization enhancement for non-optimum microemulsion systems as well. The model is an extension of the net-average curvature model of microemulsion. The net-average curvature model is combined with a surface activity model to account for the increased palisade layer solubilization due to the presence of the polar/amphiphilic oil component. New non-linear mixing rules are also incorporated to account for the optimum salinity and the characteristic length variation of the anionic surfactant microemulsion as a function of the lipophilic linker concentration. The model predicts the effect of the lipophilic linker and the electrolyte concentration on the oil solubilization in accordance with the experimental results.  相似文献   

12.
The formation of CO2-expanded, fluorinated reverse microemulsions is demonstrated for the system of perfluoropolyether (PFPE) surfactant (ClPFPE-NH4, MW = 632) and PFPE oil (PFPE, MW = 580). The phase behavior of this system is examined as a function of temperature (25-45 degrees C), pressure, CO2 concentration, and water to surfactant molar ratios (W0 = 10 and 20). Visual observations of one-phase behavior consistent with reverse microemulsion formation are further supported by spectroscopic measurements that establish the existence of a bulk water environment within the aqueous core. Microemulsion formation is not observed in the absence of CO2 for this PFPE surfactant/PFPE oil system, and a CO2 content greater than 70 mol % is required to induce microemulsion formation. Over the range of water loadings and temperatures investigated, the lowest cloud point pressure is observed at 46 bar (5 wt % ClPFPE-NH4 in PFPE oil, W0 = 20, xCO2 = 0.7, T = 25 degrees C). In the regions where one-phase behavior is observed, the cloud point pressures increase with temperature, water loadings, and CO2 content. The driving forces of microemulsion formation in the CO2-expanded fluorinated solvent are discussed relative to traditional reverse microemulsions and CO2-continuous microemulsions.  相似文献   

13.
An anionic surfactant, synthesized with ricinoleic acid from castor oil, was obtained and its behavior in terms of microemulsion formation (via pseudo-ternary diagram analysis) and liquid-gas surface tension (both for microemulsions and pure surfactant-water systems) was determined as a function of temperature and NaCl concentration in the aqueous phase. Microemulsions were formed by using butanol as co-surfactant and kerosene as the oil phase. Concerning the pseudoternary diagrams, the increase in NaCl concentration resulted in a decrease in the Winsor IV region, which was correlated to a possible occurrence of nonmicellar aggregates, induced by the high concentration of NaCl in the aqueous phase. Surface tension measurements also indicated that at the very high NaCl concentrations used there could be the formation of surfactant aggregates. The oil phase in microemulsionated systems decreased surface tension (but increased CMC): Possible interactions between isolated surfactant molecules and molecules from the oil phase were used to explain these results.  相似文献   

14.
Surfactant ionic liquid-based microemulsions for polymerization   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Surfactants based on imidazolium ionic liquids (ILs), including polymerizable surfactant ILs, have been synthesized and used to stabilize polymerizable microemulsions useful for producing polymer nanoparticles, gels, and open-cell porous materials.  相似文献   

15.
New non-ionic microemulsions consisting of pentaethyleneglycol dodecyl ether, water, and 1-chloroalkanes were prepared, and their phase behavior was studied. A homologous series of five different 1-chloroalkanes from 1-chlorooctane to 1-chlorohexadecane was studied. The phase behavior of the microemulsions was determined by vertical sections through the Gibbs' phase prism ("fish" plots), from which valuable information such as the microemulsion balance temperature (T(0)), efficiency of the surfactant (phi*), temperature extension of the three-body phase (DeltaT), mean temperature (T(m)), and the monomeric solubility in oil (phi(mon,oil)) was obtained. The chlorinated alkanes in the microemulsions shift the balance temperature to about 14 degrees C lower compared with their n-alkane counterparts. This indicates the polar nature of the chlorinated oils and their ability to penetrate the surfactant film. The chlorinated alkanes thus behave as short n-alkane molecules and lower the spontaneous curvature of the microemulsion droplets. The efficiency of the surfactant and the monomeric solubility in oil systematically depend on the alkyl chain length of the oil, with the efficiency and solubility decreasing with increasing alkyl chain length of 1-chloroalkane. The size and shape of the microemulsion droplets in the microemulsion phase were studied by small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). For a surfactant-to-oil volume fraction ratio of 0.80, the droplets can be described by ellipsoidal shapes, and the size of the droplets increased with increasing alkyl chain length.  相似文献   

16.
The factors influencing the formation of water-in-134a-propellant microemulsions using the fluorinated ionic surfactants ammonium perfluorooctanoate, ammonium perfluoroheptanoate, and sodium perfluorooctanoate has been determined. None of the fluorinated ionic surfactants could be used to prepare clear, one-phase systems when used as sole surfactant, but they could be when combined with a short-chain fluoro- or hydrocarbon alcohol in surfactant:cosurfactant weight-mixing ratios (K(m)) in the range 1:2 to 2:1. When hydrocarbon alcohols were used this clear region extended over a wide range of compositions and was confirmed by means of photon correlation spectroscopy (PCS) to contain microemulsion droplets in the propellant-rich part of the phase diagram. PCS studies performed in the presence of the water-soluble drug terbutaline sulfate showed that it was possible to solubilize the drug within water-in-propellant microemulsion droplets. These studies confirm for the first time that it is possible to prepare water-in-propellant 134a microemulsions using fluorinated ionic surfactants and to solubilize water-soluble drugs within these systems.  相似文献   

17.
A variety of quaternary and ternary systems of the type of dodecane/aliphatic alcohols/Na-dodecyl sulphate/water or a water-replacing component (formamide, ethylene glycol, propylene glycol, propylene carbonate, dimethylsulfoxide, acetonitrile) were subjected to a comparative analysis of microemulsification. The compositions of the systems of the type of oil/surfactant/cosurfactant/water or nonaqueous liquid were changed with respect to surfactant (Na-dodecyl sulfate and triton X 114) concentration, cosurfactant (homologous aliphatic alcohols) concentration and mixing ratio of water and water-replacing component. The appertaining phase diagrams were plotted and compared with those of aqueous systems.The experimental results suggest that the phase regions, which are designated as nonaqueous microemulsions, probably represent, not only microemulsions in the usual sense, but a separate kind of mixed phase whose microstructure is examined by special studies. Analogously to aqueous microemulsion systems, transparency and spontaneous formation of homogeneous multicomponent systems cannot serve as the sole criteria for waterless microemulsion formation. But they are important guiding properties of microemulsion formation in multicomponent systems.The variety of components involved in the chemical composition and the current insufficient knowledge do not permit to generally decide whether nonaqueous systems can be assigned to microemulsions or to molecular solutions. For clarifying this problem a detailed examination of the miscibility behavior, especially that of binary systems as a function of temperature, and the role that surfactant and cosurfactant play in the formation of homogeneous systems will be necessary.  相似文献   

18.
The ionic liquid (IL) 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate (bmimBF4) can form nonaqueous microemulsions with benzene by the aid of nonionic surfactant TX-100. The effect of water on ionic liquid-in-oil (IL/O) microemulsions was studied, and it was shown that the addition of small amount of water to the IL microemulsion contributed to the stability of microemulsion and thus increased the amount of solubilized bmimBF4 in the microemulsion. The conductivity measurements also showed that the attractive interactions between IL microdroplets were weakened, that is, the IL/O microemulsion becomes more stable in the present of some water. Fourier transform IR was carried out to analyze the states of the added water, and the result showed that these water molecules mainly behaved as bound water and trapped water, indicating that the water molecules are located in the palisade layers of the IL/O microemulsion. Furthermore, 1H NMR and 19F NMR spectra suggested that the added water molecules built the hydrogen binding network of imidazolium cations and H2O, BF4- anion and H2O, and at the same time the electronegative oxygen atoms of the oxyethylene units of TX-100 and water in the palisade layers, which made the palisade layers more firm and thus increased the stability of the microemulsion. The study can help in further understanding the formation mechanism of microemulsions. In addition, the characteristic solubilization behavior of the added water can provide an aqueous interface film for hydrolysis reactions and therefore may be used as an ideal medium to prepare porous or hollow nanomaterials.  相似文献   

19.
What is so special about aerosol-OT? Part IV. Phenyl-tipped surfactants   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Properties are reported for new phenyl-tipped anionic surfactants, which are aromatic chain relatives of the normal aliphatic aerosol-OT (AOT, sodium bis(2-ethyl-1-hexyl)sulfosuccinate). Variations in chain length and branching with these aromatic surfactants have important effects on aqueous and water-in-oil (w/o) microemulsion phase properties. In dilute aqueous systems, chain structure affects the cmc and surface tension behavior: compared to linear chain analogues, the branched-chain surfactants display lower surface tensions but also reduced packing as measured by molecular area at the cmc a(cmc). Owing to the phenyl-tipped structure, water-in-oil microemulsions were stabilized with aromatic toluene as an oil but not with aliphatic heptane; the latter is commonly used with normal AOT. Contrast variation small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) was used to characterize the microemulsion aggregates and adsorbed films. These SANS data show that water-in-toluene microemulsions stabilized by aromatic-AOTs contain mildly polydisperse spherical nanodroplets of similar structure to those found in systems containing normal AOT. Molecular areas at the air-water and toluene-water interfaces are found to be of similar magnitude and follow a trend that correlates with variations in surfactant chain structure. The new results with aromatic surfactants build on extensive studies of aliphatic AOT analogues (Nave, S.; Eastoe, J.; Penfold, J. Langmuir 2000, 16, 8733. Nave, S.; Eastoe, J.; Heenan, R. K.; Steytler, D.; Grillo, I. Langmuir 2002, 16, 8741. Nave, S.; Eastoe, J.; Heenan, R. K.; Steytler, D.; Grillo, I. 2002, 18, 1505), suggesting that the versatility of normal AOT originates from an optimized head and chain spacer group rather than from any specific effects of the 2-ethyhexyl chain structure.  相似文献   

20.
The ionic liquid (IL) 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate (bmimBF4) forms nonaqueous microemulsions with p-xylene, with the aid of the nonionic surfactant TX-100. The phase behavior of the ternary system is investigated, and three microregions of the microemulsions-ionic liquid-in-oil (IL/O), bicontinuous, and oil-in-ionic liquid (O/IL)-are identified by conductivity measurements, according to percolation theory. On the basis of a phase diagram, a series of IL/O microemulsions are chosen and characterized by dynamic light scattering (DLS). The size of aggregates increases on increasing the amount of added polar component (bmimBF(4)), which is a similar phenomenon to that observed for typical water-in-oil (W/O) microemulsions, suggesting the formation of IL/O microemulsions. The microstructural characteristics of the microemulsions are investigated by FTIR and 1H NMR spectroscopy. The results indicate that the interaction between the electronegative oxygen atoms of the oxyethylene (OE) units in TX-100 and the electropositive imidazolium ring may be the driving force for the solubilization of bmimBF4 into the core of the TX-100 aggregates. In addition, the micropolarity of the microemulsions is investigated by using methyl orange (MO) as a UV/Vis spectroscopic probe. A relatively constant polarity of the microemulsion droplets is obtained in the IL microemulsion. Finally, a plausible structure for the IL/O microemulsion is presented.  相似文献   

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