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1.
The effect of the micelles on the dynamic surface tension of micellar surfactant solutions is studied experimentally by means of the maximum bubble pressure method. Different frequencies of bubbling ranging approximately between 1 and 30 s–1 are applied. The time dependence of the surface tension is calculated using a dead time correction. Water solutions of two types of surfactants with different concentrations are investigated: sodium dodecyl sulfate and nonylphenol polyglycol ether. The surface tension relaxes more quickly in the presence of micelles. The characteristic times of relaxation of the surface tension seem to be in the millisecond range. The time constants observed experimentally are explained in terms of the theory of surfactant diffusion affected by micellization kinetics.  相似文献   

2.
General (independent of models selected for surfactant molecular aggregates) analytical relations are derived to describe the initial stage of slow relaxation in micellar solutions with spherical micelles. This stage precedes the final stage of the relaxation occurring via an exponential decay of disturbances with time. The relations obtained are applicable throughout the interval of micellar solution concentrations from the first to the second critical micellization concentration. It is shown that the initial stage is characterized by power laws of variations in the concentrations of monomers and micelles with time, these laws being different for the relaxation processes proceeding from above and below toward equilibrium values of micellar solution parameters. Relations are derived for the duration of this stage, and the effect of initial conditions is studied. Characteristic times of the power-law stage are determined and compared with the characteristic time of the final exponent-law relaxation stage. The behavior of these times is investigated at surfactant solution concentrations in the vicinity of, and noticeably above, the first critical micellization concentration. On the basis of the droplet and quasi-droplet thermodynamic models of surfactant molecular aggregates, numerical solutions are found for nonlinearized equations of slow relaxation for the time dependence of surfactant monomer concentrations at all stages of the slow relaxation. Numerical results obtained from the models are compared with the results of a general analytical study.  相似文献   

3.
The characteristic kinetic times of micellization in the solution of a nonionic surfactant: the times of establishment of quasi-equilibrium concentrations of molecular aggregates in micellar, subcritical, and overcritical regions, times of establishment of quasi-equilibrium concentrations of molecular aggregates in the near-critical region of their sizes, the average time between two successive acts of emission of surfactant monomers by a micelle, the average value of micelle lifetime, the time of establishment of quasi-stationary mode of matter exchange between the solution and molecular aggregate, as well as the times of fast and slow relaxation in a solution were analyzed. The hierarchy of these times disclosing complex multistage kinetic process of micelle formation and decomposition and the establishment of equilibrium in the micellar solution was revealed. It was shown that this hierarchy is provided by the small parameters of the kinetic theory. The inverse problem of micellization kinetics was discussed; this problem allows us to find the characteristics of the formation work for micellar aggregate from the experimental data on the relaxation time of micellar solution.  相似文献   

4.
A theoretical model for the dynamic surface tension of an air bubble expanding in micellar surfactant solution is proposed. The model accounts for the effect of expansion of the bubble surface during the adsorption of surfactant molecules (monomers) and the effect of disintegration of polydisperse micelles on the surfactant diffusion. Assuming small deviations from equilibrium and constant rate of expansion analytical expression for the surface tension and the subsurface concentration of monomers as a function of time is derived. The characteristic time of micellization is computed from the experimental data for two surfactants (sodium dodecyl sulfate and nonylphenol polyglycol ether) obtained by the maximum bubble pressure method.  相似文献   

5.
Importance of micellar kinetics in relation to technological processes   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The association of many classes of surface-active molecules into micellar aggregates is a well-known phenomenon. Micelles are in dynamic equilibrium, constantly disintegrating and reforming. This relaxation process is characterized by the slow micellar relaxation time constant, tau(2), which is directly related to the micellar stability. Theories of the kinetics of micelle formation and disintegration have been discussed to identify the gaps in our complete understanding of this kinetic process. The micellar stability of sodium dodecyl sulfate micelles has been shown to significantly influence technological processes involving a rapid increase in interfacial area, such as foaming, wetting, emulsification, solubilization, and detergency. First, the available monomers adsorb onto the freshly created interface. Then, additional monomers must be provided by the breakup of micelles. Especially when the free monomer concentration is low, which is the case for many nonionic surfactant solutions, the micellar breakup time is a rate-limiting step in the supply of monomers. The Center for Surface Science & Engineering at the University of Florida has developed methods using stopped flow and pressure jump with optical detection to determine the slow relaxation time of micelles of nonionic surfactants. The results showed that the ionic surfactants such as SDS exhibit slow relaxation times in the range from milliseconds to seconds, whereas nonionic surfactants exhibit slow relaxation times in the range from seconds (for Triton X-100) to minutes (for polyoxyethylene alkyl ethers). The slow relaxation times are much longer for nonionic surfactants than for ionic surfactants, because of the absence of ionic repulsion between the head groups. The observed relaxation times showed a direct correlation with dynamic surface tension and foaming experiments. In conclusion, relaxation time data of surfactant solutions correlate with the dynamic properties of the micellar solutions. Moreover, the results suggest that appropriate micelles with specific stability or tau(2) can be designed by controlling the surfactant structure, concentration, and physicochemical conditions (e.g., salt concentration, temperature, and pressure). One can also tailor micelles by mixing anionic/cationic or ionic/nonionic surfactants for a desired stability to control various technological processes.  相似文献   

6.
The principle of maximum pressure in a bubble for measurements of dynamic surface tension is realized in a fully automatically operating apparatus. The set-up yields data in the time interval from 1 ms up to several seconds and can be temperature controlled from 5° to 80°C. Experimental data obtained for different surfactants and gelatine in water and/or water/glycerine mixtures at different temperatures are discussed. A direct comparison with results from oscillating jet and inclined plate experiments shows excellent agreement.  相似文献   

7.
Equilibrium and nonequilibrium distributions of molecular aggregates in a solution of a nonionic surfactant are investigated at the total surfactant concentration above the second critical micelle concentration (CMC2). The investigation is not limited by the choice of a specific micellar model. Expressions for the direct and reverse fluxes of molecular aggregates over the potential humps of the aggregation work are derived. These aggregation work humps set up activation barriers for the formation of spherical and cylindrical micelles. With the aid of the expressions for molecular aggregate fluxes, a set of two kinetic equations of micellization is derived. This set, along with the material balance equation, describes the molecular mechanism of the slow relaxation of micellar solution above the CMC2. A realistic situation has been analyzed when the CMC2 exceeds the first critical micelle concentration, CMC1, by an order of magnitude, and the total surfactant concentration varies within the range lying markedly above the CMC2 but not by more than 2 orders of magnitude. For such conditions, an equation relating the parameters of the aggregation work of a cylindrical micelle to the observable ratio of the total surfactant concentration and the monomer concentration is found for an equilibrium solution. For the same conditions, but in the nonequilibrium state of materially isolated surfactant solution, a closed set of linearized relaxation equations for total concentrations of spherical and cylindrical micelles is derived. These equations determine the time development of two modes of slow relaxation in micellar solutions markedly above the CMC2. Solving the set of equations yields two rates and two times of slow relaxation.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Here, based on the theoretical analysis of results for two ionic surfactants, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and dodecyl trimethylammonium bromide (DTAB), we develop a new approach for quantitative interpretation of data from the maximum bubble pressure method. A given tensiometer is characterized by an apparatus function, A(t), and by an apparatus constant. The former represents the time dependence of the bubble surface area, whereas the latter is expressed through integrals of A(t). The experiment indicates that both of them are independent of the surfactant type and concentration. Moreover, if a certain criterion is satisfied, the experimental results depend on the surface dilatation only through the apparatus constant. This makes the data interpretation much easier. The knowledge of the apparatus constant gives a general time scale (universal surface age) that makes the results independent of the specific bubble-pressure setup and produces dynamic surface tension curves that are universal characteristics of the investigated solutions. A new equation for data processing is proposed, which provides excellent fits of the dynamic surface tension. In the case of micellar solutions, the data analysis enables one to identify the kinetic regime of adsorption (among four possible regimes). For the investigated surfactant solutions, the diffusion regime "BC" was identified, for which the fast micellar process is equilibrated, whereas the slow micellar process is negligible. Upgraded with the developed approach for quantitative data interpretation, the bubble-pressure tensiometry could be a useful tool for a detailed analysis of the adsorption processes in more complex systems.  相似文献   

10.
Relaxation processes of surfactant adsorption and surface tension, which are characterized by two specific relaxation times, are theoretically investigated. We are dealing with fluid interfaces and small initial deviations from equilibrium. For surfactant concentrations below the critical micellization concentration (CMC), we consider adsorption under mixed barrier-diffusion control. General analytical expressions are derived, which are convenient for both numerical computations and asymptotic analysis. Series expansions for the short- and long-time limit are derived. The results imply that the short-time asymptotics is controlled by the adsorption barrier, whereas the long-time asymptotics is always dominated by diffusion. Furthermore, for surfactant concentrations above the CMC, adsorption under mixed micellization-diffusion control is considered. Again, a general analytical expression is derived for the relaxation of surfactant adsorption and surface tension, whose long- and short-time asymptotics are deduced. The derived equations show that at the short times the relaxation is completely controlled by the diffusion, whereas the long-time asymptotics is affected by both demicellization and diffusion. The micellar effect is manifested as an exponential (rather than square-root) decay of the perturbation. The derived expressions are applied to process available experimental data for the nonionic surfactant Triton X-100 and to determine the respective demicellization rate constant.  相似文献   

11.
The diffusion-controlled adsorption kinetics of micellar surfactant C12E7 (heptaethylene glycol monododecyl ether) solutions was studied theoretically and experimentally. The corrected diffusion equation, which was used to describe the diffusion of the monomers in the micellar solutions, was solved under the initial and boundary conditions by means of Laplace transformation. The dynamic surface adsorption γ(t) as a function of surface lifetime t, monomer diffusion coefficient D and the demicellization constant was derived. The dynamic surface tensions γ(t) of aqueous submicellar and micellar solutions were measured via maximal bubble pressure method. By analyzing the experimental data, the determined demicellization constant of C12E7 at 25°C was between 100–116 s?1.  相似文献   

12.
A theoretical approach to the diffusion controlled kinetics of adsorption on the expanding interface of surfactant solutions is developed and compared with the experiment. This approach being an analogue of von Karman's approach to the hydrodynamic boundary layer is applicable to both submicellar and micellar surfactant solutions under large deviations from equilibrium. The partial differential equations of the convective diffusion are reduced to a set of ordinary differential equations of first order and algebraic equations. This simplifies the numerical computations and enhances the interpretation of the experimental data. Dynamic surface tension data for solutions of sodium dodecyl sulfate obtained by the maximum bubble pressure method are interpreted. Reasonable results for the diffusivity of monomers and the rate constant of micellar disintegration have been obtained.

A local approach to interfacial rheology is briefly considered. The applicability of this approach to studies of visco-elastic dilational properties of adsorption layers from low molecular surfactants and proteins is demonstrated.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The association of many classes of surface active molecules into micellar aggregates is a well-known phenomenon. Micelles are often drawn as static structures of spherical aggregates of oriented molecules. However, micelles are in dynamic equilibrium with surfactant monomers in the bulk solution constantly being exchanged with the surfactant molecules in the micelles. Additionally, the micelles themselves are continuously disintegrating and reforming. The first process is a fast relaxation process typically referred to as τ1. The latter is a slow relaxation process with relaxation time τ2. Thus, τ2 represents the entire process of the formation or disintegration of a micelle. The slow relaxation time is directly correlated with the average lifetime of a micelle, and hence the molecular packing in the micelle, which in turn relates to the stability of a micelle. It was shown earlier by Shah and coworkers that the stability of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelles plays an important role in various technological processes involving an increase in interfacial area, such as foaming, wetting, emulsification, solubilization and detergency. The slow relaxation time of SDS micelles, as measured by pressure-jump and temperature-jump techniques was in the range of 10−4–101 s depending on the surfactant concentration. A maximum relaxation time and thus a maximum micellar stability was found at 200 mM SDS, corresponding to the least foaming, largest bubble size, longest wetting time of textile, largest emulsion droplet size and the most rapid solubilization of oil. These results are explained in terms of the flux of surfactant monomers from the bulk to the interface, which determines the dynamic surface tension. The more stable micelles lead to less monomer flux and hence to a higher dynamic surface tension. As the SDS concentration increases, the micelles become more rigid and stable as a result of the decrease in intermicellar distance. The smaller the intermicellar distance, the larger the Coulombic repulsive forces between the micelles leading to enhanced stability of micelles (presumably by increased counterion binding to the micelles). The Center for Surface Science & Engineering at the University of Florida has developed methods using stopped-flow and pressure-jump with optical detection to determine the slow relaxation time of micelles of nonionic surfactants. The results show relaxation times τ2 in the range of seconds for Triton X-100 to minutes for polyoxyethylene alkyl ethers. The slow relaxation times are much longer for nonionic surfactants than for ionic surfactants, because of the absence of ionic repulsion between the head groups. The observed relaxation time τ2 was related to dynamic surface tension and foaming experiments. A slow break-up of micelles, (i.e. a long relaxation time τ2) corresponds to a high dynamic surface tension and low foamability, whereas a fast break-up of micelles, leads to a lower dynamic surface tension and higher foamability. In conclusion, micellar stability and thus the micellar break-up time is a key factor in controlling technological processes involving a rapid increase in interfacial area, such as foaming, wetting, emulsification and oil solubilization. First, the available monomers adsorb onto the freshly created interface. Then, additional monomers must be provided by the break-up of micelles. Especially when the free monomer concentration is low, as indicated by a low CMC, the micellar break-up time is a rate limiting step in the supply of monomers, which is the case for many nonionic surfactant solutions. Therefore, relaxation time data of surfactant solutions enables us to predict the performance of a given surfactant solution. Moreover, the results suggest that one can design appropriate micelles with specific stability or τ2 by controlling the surfactant structure, concentration and physico-chemical conditions, as well as by mixing anionic/cationic or ionic/nonionic surfactants for a desired technological application.  相似文献   

15.
An analytical expression has been derived for the quasi-stationary size distribution of surfactant aggregates in a micellar system approaching the final equilibrium state. In contrast to previously known relations, the derived expression takes into account variations in the concentration of monomers during the slow relaxation and enables one to determine the previously unknown fine structure of the linearized mode of slow relaxation, i.e., its dependence on the aggregation numbers in the range between the maximum and minimum of the work of aggregation. This dependence has been reliably confirmed by the numerical solution of the set of linearized Becker–Döering difference equations, which describe the molecular mechanism of the kinetics of micellization and micellar relaxation. In turn, the expression found for the relaxation mode makes it possible to refine the analogous “fine structure” of aggregation rates at different points of the same range between the maximum and minimum of the work of aggregation, in which the aggregation rates appear to be low but exhibit a nonmonotonic behavior. This behavior is also confirmed by the numerical solution of the Becker–Döering difference kinetic equations.  相似文献   

16.
The dependence of the work of the molecular aggregate formation on the aggregation number and surfactant monomer concentration in solution that has the key role for the theory of micellization was studied on the basis of a simple realistic droplet model of spherical aggregate composed of surfactant molecules (the o/w micelle type). Analytical formulas were derived for the coordinates of maximum and minimum of aggregate formation work on the aggregation number axis arising with an increase in the concentration of micellar solution. Model calculations of the thermodynamic characteristics of the kinetics of micellization were performed for premicellar and micellar regions of aggregate sizes within a wide range of solution concentration including the critical micellization concentration.  相似文献   

17.
Kinetics of adsorption from micellar solutions   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Previous studies on surfactant adsorption mostly deal with dilute systems without aggregation in the bulk phase. At the same time, micellar solutions can be more important from the point of view of applications. If one attempts to estimate the equilibrium adsorption, neglecting the influence of micelles can lead to reasonable results. The situation differs for non-equilibrium systems when the adsorption rate can increase by an order of magnitude at the increase of the surfactant concentration beyond the CMC. A critical survey of various models describing the influence of micelles on adsorption kinetics at the liquid-gas interface is given and the theoretical results are compared with existing experimental data. The theories proposed for the case of large deviations from the equilibrium are usually based on some unjustifiable assumptions and can describe the kinetic dependencies of adsorption in only a limited number of situations. Consequently, only rough estimates of the kinetic coefficients of micellization can be obtained from experimental data on dynamic surface tension. More rigorous equations can be derived if the system only deviates slightly from equilibrium. In the latter case, the agreement between theoretical and experimental results is essentially better and measurements of the dynamic surface elasticity of micellar solutions allow us to study the micellization kinetics.  相似文献   

18.
19F NMR chemical shifts and transverse relaxation times T2 were measured as a function of time after quick stopped-flow dilution of aqueous solutions of sodium perfluorooctanoate (NaPFO) with water. Different initial concentrations of micellar solution and different proportions of mixing were tested. Previous stopped-flow studies by time-resolved small-angle X-ray scattering (TR-SAXS) detection indicated a slow (approximately 10 s) micellar relaxation kinetics in NaPFO solutions. In contrast, no evidence of any comparable slow (>100 ms) relaxation process was found in our NMR studies. Possible artifacts of stopped-flow experiments are discussed as well as differences between NMR and SAXS detection methods. Upper bounds on the relative weight of a slow relaxation process are given within existing kinetic theories of micellar dissolution.  相似文献   

19.
One of the essential differences in the design of bubble pressure tensiometers consists in the geometry of the measuring capillaries. To reach extremely short adsorption times of milliseconds and below, the so-called deadtime of the capillaries must be of the order of some 10 ms. In particular, for concentrated surfactant solutions, such as micellar solutions, short deadtimes are needed to minimize the initial surfactant load of the generated bubbles. A theoretical model is derived and confirmed by experiments performed for a wide range of experimental conditions, mainly in respect to variations in deadtime and bubble volume.  相似文献   

20.
A planar or spherical fluid-liquid interface was commonly assumed on studying the surfactant adsorption kinetics for a pendant bubble in surfactant solutions. However, the shape of a pendant bubble deviates from a sphere unless the bubble's capillary constant is close to zero. Up to date, the literature has no report about the shape effect on the relaxation of surface tension due to the shape difference between a pendant bubble and a sphere. The dynamic surface tension (DST), based on the actual shape of a pendant bubble with a needle, of the diffusion-controlled process is simulated using a time-dependent finite element method in this work. The shape effect and the existence of a needle on DST are investigated. This numerical simulation resolves also the time-dependent bulk surfactant concentration. The depth of solution needed to satisfy the classical Ward-Tordai infinite-solution assumption was also studied. For a diffusion-controlled adsorption process, bubble shape and needle size are two major factors affecting the DST. The existence of a needle accelerates the bulk diffusion for a small bubble; however, the shape of a large pendant bubble decelerates the bulk diffusion. An example using this method on the DST data of C12E4 is illustrated at the end of this work.  相似文献   

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