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A Conventional Surfactant Becomes CO2‐Responsive in the Presence of Switchable Water Additives
Authors:Dr Xin Su  Dr Tobias Robert  Sean M Mercer  Christine Humphries  Prof Dr Michael F Cunningham  Prof Dr Philip G Jessop
Institution:1. Department of Chemistry, Queen's University, 90 Bader Lane, Kingston, ON, K7L 3N6 (Canada), Fax: (+1)?613‐533‐6669;2. Department of Chemical Engineering, Queen's University, 19 Division Street, Kingston, ON, K7L 3N6 (Canada), Fax: (+1)?613‐533‐6637
Abstract:We have developed a new benign means of reversibly breaking emulsions and latexes by using “switchable water”, an aqueous solution of switchable ionic strength. The conventional surfactant sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) is not normally stimuli‐responsive when CO2 is used as the stimulus but becomes CO2‐responsive or “switchable” in the presence of a switchable water additive. In particular, changes in the air/water surface tension and oil/water interfacial tension can be triggered by addition and removal of CO2. A switchable water additive, N,N‐dimethylethanolamine (DMEA), was found to be an effective and efficient additive for the reversible reduction of interfacial tension and can lower the tension of the dodecane/water interface in the presence of SDS surfactant to ultra‐low values at very low additive concentrations. Switchable water was successfully used to reversibly break an emulsion containing SDS as surfactant, and dodecane as organic liquid. Also, the addition of CO2 and switchable water can result in aggregation of polystyrene (PS) latexes; the later removal of CO2 neutralizes the DMEA and decreases the ionic strength allowing for the aggregated PS latex to be redispersed and recovered in its original state.
Keywords:colloids  emulsion  stimuli‐responsive  surface analysis  surfactants
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