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Cosurfactant and cosolvent effects on surfactant self-assembly in supercritical carbon dioxide
Authors:Chennamsetty Naresh  Bock Henry  Scanu Lauriane F  Siperstein Flor R  Gubbins Keith E
Institution:Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-7905, USA. nchenna@unity.ncsu.edu
Abstract:The impact of alcohol additives on the self-assembly of surfactants in supercritical carbon dioxide is investigated using lattice Monte Carlo simulations. We observe that all studied (model) alcohols reduce the critical micelle concentration. The reduction is stronger the longer the hydrocarbon chain of the alcohol, and the higher the alcohol concentration. Short-chain alcohols are found to concentrate in the surfactant layer of the aggregates, replacing surfactant molecules and leading to a strong decrease of the aggregation number and a large increase of the number of aggregates. On the other hand, only a small number of alcohol molecules with longer chain length are found in the aggregates, leading to a slight increase in the aggregation number. However, structural properties such as size and density profiles of aggregates at the same aggregation number are not influenced markedly. Consequently, short-chain alcohols act as cosurfactants, directly influencing the properties of the aggregates, while alcohols with longer hydrocarbon chains work as cosolvents, altering the properties of the solvent. However, the transition between both extremes is gradual.
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