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1.
Stabilization of oil-in-water emulsion films from PEO-PPO-PEO triblock copolymers is described in terms of interaction surface forces. Results on emulsion films from four Pluronic surfactants, namely F108, F68, P104 and P65 obtained with the Thin Film Pressure Balance Technique are summarized. It is found that film stabilization is due to DLVO (electrostatic) and non-DLVO (steric in origin) repulsive forces. The charging of the oil/water film interfaces is related to preferential adsorption of OH(-) ions. This is confirmed by pH-dependent measurements of the equivalent film thickness (h(w)) at both constant capillary pressure and ionic strength. With reducing pH in the acidic region, a critical value (pH(cr,st)) corresponding to an isoelectric state of the oil/water film surfaces is found where the electrostatic interaction in the films is eliminated. At pH≤pH(cr,st), the emulsion films are stabilized only by steric forces due to interaction between the polymer adsorption layers. Disjoining pressure (Π) isotherms measured for emulsion films from all the four Pluronic surfactants used at pH相似文献   

2.
The interaction forces in emulsion films stabilized using hydrophobically modified inulin (INUTEC SP1) were investigated by measuring the disjoining pressure of a microscopic horizontal film between two macroscopic emulsion drops of isoparaffinic oil (Isopar M). A special measuring cell was used for this purpose whereby the disjoining pressure Pi was measured as a function of the equivalent film thickness hw. The latter was determined using an interferometric method. In this way Pi-hw curves were established at a constant INUTEC SP1 concentration of 2x10(-5) mol.dm-3 and at various NaCl concentrations. At a constant disjoining pressure of 36 Pa, a constant temperature of 22 degrees C, and a film radius of 100 microm, hw decreased with an increase in the NaCl concentration, Cel, and reached a constant value of 11 nm at Cel=5x10(-2) mol.dm-3. This reduction in film thickness is due to the compression of the electrical double layer, and at the above critical NaCl concentration any electrostatic repulsion is removed and only steric interaction remains. This critical electrolyte concentration represents the transition from electrostatic to steric interaction. At a NaCl concentration of 2x10(-4) mol.dm-3 the Pi-hw isotherms showed a gradual decrease in hw with an increase in capillary pressure, after which there was a jump in hw from approximately 30 to approximately 7.2 nm when Pi reached a high value of 2-5.5 kPa. This jump is due to the formation of a Newton black film (NBF), giving a layer thickness of the polyfructose loops of approximately 3.6 nm. The film thickness did not change further when the pressure reached 45 kPa, indicating the high stability of the film. Pi-hw isotherms were obtained at various NaCl concentrations, namely, 5x10(-2), 5x10(-1), 1.0, and 2.0 mol.dm-3. The initial thicknesses are within the range 9-11 nm, after which a transition zone starts, corresponding to a pressure of about 0.5 kPa. In this zone all films transform to an NBF with a jump, after which the thickness remains constant with a further increase in the disjoining pressure up to 45 kPa, with no film rupture. This indicates the very high stability of the NBF in the presence of high electrolyte concentrations. The high emulsion film stability (due to strong steric repulsions between the strongly hydrated loops of polyfructose) is correlated with the bulk emulsion stability.  相似文献   

3.
A nonionic-methylated branched hydrocarbon surfactant, octa(ethylene glycol) 2,6,8-trimethyl-4-nonyl ether (5b-C12E8) emulsifies up to 90% CO2 in water with polyhedral cells smaller than 10 microm, as characterized by optical microscopy. The stability of these concentrated CO2/water (C/W) emulsions increases with pressure and in some cases exceeds 24 h. An increase in pressure weakens the attractive van der Waals interactions between the CO2 cells across water and raises the disjoining pressure. It also enhances the solution of the surfactant tail and drives the surfactant from water towards the water-CO2 interface, as characterized by the change in emulsion phase behavior and the decrease in interfacial tension (gamma) to 2.1 mN/m. As the surfactant adsorption increases, the greater tendency for ion adsorption is likely to increase the electrostatic repulsion in the thin lamellae and raise the disjoining pressure. As pressure increases, the increase in disjoining pressure and decrease in the capillary pressure (due to the decrease in gamma) each favor greater stability of the lamellae against rupture. The electrical conductivity is predicted successfully as a function of Bruggeman's model for concentrated emulsions. Significant differences in the stability are observed for concentrated C/W emulsions at elevated pressure versus air/W or C/W foams at atmospheric pressure.  相似文献   

4.
Foam and wetting films from PEO-PPO-PEO triblock copolymers Synperonic P85 and F108 are studied under the identical conditions, using microinterference method. The range of background electrolyte concentration, where DLVO (electrostatic and van der Waals) forces and non-DLVO (steric) forces act in the films, is determined. From the dependence of the film thickness on pH, it is unambiguously shown that electrostatic interactions (i.e., the potential and surface charge) in the foam and wetting films caused by the presence of nonionic polymer surfactants arise due to the preferential adsorption of OH ions at the solution-air interface. The films obtained below the critical pH values are sterically stabilized; i.e., a decrease in pH induces a transition from electrostatic to steric stabilization. Three-layer models are designed for both types of films that allow to calculate electrostatic disjoining pressure Πel. The values of ϕ0 potential of the foam film are used to calculate Πel in wetting films. A relation between the isoelectric state of foam and wetting films and their stability is found to exist in the range of pH corresponding to electrostatic stabilization. Metastable films, film rupture, or the transition to sterically stabilized films were also found. The text was submitted by the authors in English.  相似文献   

5.
6.
用微干涉测量技术直接测定楔压等温线,研究了电解质浓度对阳离子表面活性剂TTAB在浓度大于cmc时形成黑膜厚度的影响及膜表面张力与溶液表面张力之间的差别.结果显示,黑膜厚度取决于楔压和电解质浓度,随着楔压的增加,液膜厚度减少至一定程度后几乎保持不变,表明黑膜类型的转化是阶跃式的,而电解质屏蔽了液膜两个表面电荷层间的排斥作用,故电解质浓度增加,液膜厚度变小.由楔压等温线得出的膜表面张力的结果说明一般黑膜的表面张力与溶液的表面张力并无明显差别.  相似文献   

7.
Experimental results are presented about the effects of ionic strength and pH on the mean drop-size after emulsification and on the coalescence stability of emulsions, stabilized by a globular protein beta-lactoglobulin (BLG). The mean drop-size is determined by optical microscopy, whereas the coalescence stability is characterized by centrifugation. In parallel experiments, the zeta-potential and protein adsorption on drop surface are determined. The experiments are performed at two different BLG concentrations, 0.02 and 0.1 wt%. The electrolyte concentration in the aqueous phase, C(EL), is varied between 1.5 mM and 1 M, and pH is varied between 4.0 and 7.0. The experiments show that the mean drop-size after emulsification depends slightly on C(EL), at fixed protein concentration and natural pH = 6.2. When pH is varied, the mean drop-size passes through a maximum at fixed protein and electrolyte concentrations. A monolayer protein adsorption is registered in the studied ranges of C(EL) and pH at low BLG concentration of 0.02 wt%. In contrast, a protein multilayer is formed at higher BLG concentration, 0.1 wt%, above a certain electrolyte concentration (C(EL) > 100 mM, natural pH). The experimental results for the emulsion coalescence stability are analyzed by considering the surface forces acting between the emulsion drops. The electrostatic, van der Waals, and steric interactions are taken into account to calculate the barriers in the disjoining pressure isotherm at the various experimental conditions studied. The comparison of the theoretically calculated and the experimentally determined coalescence barriers shows that three qualitatively different cases can be distinguished. (1) Electrostatically stabilized emulsions, with monolayer protein adsorption, whose stability can be described by the DLVO theory. (2) Sterically stabilized emulsions, in which the drop-drop repulsion is created mainly by overlapping protein adsorption multilayers. A simple theoretical model is shown to describe emulsion stability in these systems. (3) Sterically stabilized emulsions with a monolayer adsorption on drop surface.  相似文献   

8.
Some aspects of DLVO and non-DLVO forces in colloidal systems are over-viewed. The influence of long range interactions on some kinetic properties of dispersions, as Brownian diffusion, is discussed. It is shown, both theoretically and experimentally, that the electrostatic repulsion increases the collective diffusivity. The film stratification and oscillatory structure forces in colloidal suspensions are considered within the framework of an uniform approach The presence of small colloidal species (e. g. micelles or polymer molecules) may lead to several maxima and minima in the disjoining pressure isotherm. The particular case of interacting emulsion droplets is examined accounting for the interfacial deformability. The droplet deformation acts as a soft repulsion but affects also the remaining contributions to the interaction energy due to changes of the droplet shape. A general procedure for calculating the inter-droplet interaction energy, as well as the equilibrium film radius and thickness in a doublet of droplets, is suggested. The energy of interaction between charged colloidal particles, due to correlations of the density fluctuations in the electric double layer is also studied. It is found that this effect may lead to attraction greater than the van der Waals contribution, especially when multivale counter ions are present.  相似文献   

9.
Evaporation rates of water from concentrated oil-in-water emulsions   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
We have investigated the rate of water evaporation from concentrated oil-in-water (o/w) emulsions containing an involatile oil. Evaporation of the water continuous phase causes compression of the emulsion with progressive distortion of the oil drops and thinning of the water films separating them. Theoretically, the vapor pressure of water is sensitive to the interdroplet interactions, which are a function of the film thickness. Three main possible situations are considered. First, under conditions when the evaporation rate is controlled by mass transfer across the stagnant vapor phase, model calculations show that evaporation can, in principle, be slowed by repulsive interdroplet interactions. However, significant retardation requires very strong repulsive forces acting over large separations for typical emulsion drop sizes. Second, water evaporation may be limited by diffusion in the network of water films within the emulsion. In this situation, water loss by evaporation from the emulsion surface leads to a gradient in the water concentration (and in the water film thickness). Third, compression of the drops may lead to coalescence of the emulsion drops and the formation of a macroscopic oil film at the emulsion surface, which serves to prevent further water evaporation. Water mass-loss curves have been measured for silicone o/w emulsions stabilized by the anionic surfactant SDS as a function of the water content, the thickness of the stagnant vapor-phase layer, and the concentration of electrolyte in the aqueous phase, and the results are discussed in terms of the three possible scenarios just described. In systems with added salt, water evaporation virtually ceases before all the water present is lost, probably as a result of oil-drop coalescence resulting in the formation of a water-impermeable oil film at the emulsion surface.  相似文献   

10.
Further studies of the hydrophobic force in foam films were carried out, including the effect of added inorganic electrolyte. We used a thin film balance of Scheludko-Exerowa type to obtain the disjoining pressure isotherms of the foam films stabilized by 10(-4) M sodium dodecyl sulfate in varying concentrations of sodium chloride. The results were compared with the disjoining pressure isotherms predicted from the extended Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek theory, which considers contributions from hydrophobic force in addition to those from double layer and van der Waals dispersion forces. The double layer forces were calculated from the surface potentials (psi s) obtained using the Gibbs adsorption equation and corrected for the counterion binding effect, while the dispersion forces were calculated using the Hamaker constant (A232) of 3.7 x 10(-20) J. The hydrophobic forces were calculated from the equilibrium film thickness as described previously. The predicted disjoining pressure isotherms were in good agreement with the experimental ones. It was found that the hydrophobic force is dampened substantially by the added electrolyte.  相似文献   

11.
When supercritical carbon dioxide (scCO(2)) is injected into deep subsurface reservoirs, much of the affected volume consists of pores containing both water and scCO(2), with water films remaining as the mineral-wetting phase. Although water films can affect multiphase flow and mediate reactions at mineral surfaces, little is known about how film thicknesses depend on system properties. Here, the thicknesses of water films were estimated on the basis of considerations of capillary pressure needed for the entry of CO(2) and disjoining pressures in films resulting from van der Waals and electric double-layer interactions. Depth-dependent CO(2) and water properties were used to estimate Hamaker constants for water films on silica and smectite surfaces under CO(2) confinement. Dispersion interactions were combined with approximate solutions to the electric double layer film thickness-pressure relationship in a Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (DLVO) analysis, with CO(2) as the confining fluid. Under conditions of elevated pressure, temperature, and salinity commonly associated with CO(2) sequestration, adsorbed water films in reservoir rock surfaces are typically predicted to be less than 10 nm in thickness. Decreased surface charge of silica under the acidic pH of CO(2)-equilibrated water and elevated salinity is predicted to compress the electric double layer substantially, such that the dispersion contribution to the film thickness is dominant. Relative to silica, smectite surfaces are predicted to support thicker water films under CO(2) confinement because of greater electrostatic and dispersion stabilization.  相似文献   

12.
Properties of single foam films prepared with tetraethylammonium perfluorooctane-sulfonate (TAPOS) were studied. Film thickness was measured as a function of NH4Cl concentration in the film forming solution. The dependence of the film disjoining pressure versus the film thickness (disjoining pressure isotherms) and the mean lifetime of the films were studied. The dependence of the film thickness on the electrolyte concentration showed the presence of an electrostatic double layer at the film surfaces. The electrostatic double layer component of the disjoining pressure was screened at a NH4Cl concentration higher than 0.2 M where Newton black films (NBFs) of 6 nm thickness were formed. These films are bilayers of amphiphile molecules and contain almost no free water. The disjoining pressure isotherms of the foam films formed with 0.001 M TAPOS were measured at two different NH4Cl concentrations (0.005 and 0.0005 M). The Deryaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (DLVO) theory describes well the isotherms with an electrostatic double layer potential of ∼140 mV. The mean lifetime, a measure of the stability of the NBFs, was measured depending on surfactant concentrations. The observation of NBF was possible above a minimum TAPOS concentration of 9.4 × 10−5 M. Above this concentration, the lifetime increases exponentially. The dependence of the film lifetime on surfactant concentration is explained by the theory for NBF-rupture by nucleation mechanism of formation of microscopic holes.  相似文献   

13.
The elasticity of open and closed thin foam films is analyzed. The elasticity modulus of a closed film is shown to be additive with respect to contributions from Gibbs elasticity and disjoining pressure. A detailed expression for the film elasticity modulus explains the pronounced maxima of foaminess and foam stability near the critical micelle concentration observed earlier in many experiments. A theory of transversal elasticity of thin foam films is formulated under conditions excluding the action of Gibbs elasticity. Near the critical micelle concentration, the theory predicts maxima of the transversal elasticity modulus and of the films thickness as functions of concentration at a given disjoining pressure. The prediction has been verified experimentally by measuring the film thickness in equilibrium foam as a function of height.  相似文献   

14.
We have developed a methodology that can be used to determine disjoining pressures (Π) in both stable and unstable wetting films from the spatial and temporal profiles of dynamic wetting films. The results show that wetting films drain initially by the capillary pressure created by the changes in curvature at the air/water interface and subsequently by the disjoining pressure created by surface forces. The drainage rate of the film formed on a gold surface with a receding contact angle (θ(r)) of 17° decreases with film thickness due to a corresponding increase in positive Π, resulting in the formation of a stable film. The wetting film formed on a hydrophobic gold with θ(r)=81° drains much faster due to the presence of negative Π in the film, resulting in film rupture. Analysis of the experimental data using the Frumkin-Derjaguin isotherm suggests that short-range hydrophobic forces are responsible for film rupture and long-range hydrophobic forces accelerate film thinning.  相似文献   

15.
16.
We develop a unique film holder combining a thin-film balance with AC impedance spectroscopy to measure disjoining pressure, film conductance, and film thickness simultaneously. Foam films stabilized by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) are investigated with and without added sodium chloride (NaCl) electrolyte. Classical colloidal theory, Derjaguin, Landau, Verwey, and Overbeek (DLVO) theory, is tested rigorously over a wide range of solution conditions by comparing the surface charge densities fit to disjoining-pressure isotherms with those estimated independently from film-conductance and surface-tension data. Film-conductance measurements strongly suggest that the adsorbed anionic surfactant is partially complexed with counterions. Therefore, to reconcile the different values of charge densities calculated from surface tension and film conductance with those from disjoining pressure, we propose a simple ion-binding electrostatic model. The ion-complexation framework predicts increased ion complexing with increasing solution ionic strength, in agreement with surface-tension and film-conductance data. Unfortunately, it is not possible to describe similarly the trends of the measured disjoining-pressure isotherms because the diffuse-layer charge density increases, or equivalently, the ion complexation decreases with increasing ionic strength. Accordingly, the ion-binding extension of classical DLVO theory does not permit agreement between theory and independent experimental data from surface tension, disjoining pressure, and film conductance.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of steric interactions on the stability of oil-in-water emulsions is studied here by means of emulsion stability simulations (ESS). For this purpose, a new steric potential based on a modification of the one formerly proposed by Vincent et. al. is employed. The parameters of the calculation correspond to hexadecane in water emulsions stabilized with nonylphenol ethoxylated surfactants of different chain lengths (NPEm). Stability ratios (W) were calculated using the half life time of the number of drops per unit volume of these systems. A functional relationship between W and the repulsive potential barrier, (DeltaV), similar to the one previously found by Prieve and Ruckenstein for electrostatically stabilized suspensions was obtained. However, according to our simulations there exists a threshold for the stability of emulsions with respect to coalescence which is approximately located around 12.7 k(B)T.  相似文献   

18.
The interaction forces in emulsion films stabilized using hydrophobically modified inulin (INUTEC SP1) were investigated as a function of concentrations of electrolytes of different types (NaCl, Na2SO4, and MgSO4). At a constant disjoining pressure of 36 kPa, a constant temperature of 22 degrees C, and a film radius of 100 microm, the film thickness, hw, decreased with an increase in electrolyte concentration until a critical value, Cel,cr, was reached above which hw remained constant. Cel,cr decreased with an increase in electrolyte valency (Cel,cr = 5 x 10(-2) mol.dm(-3) for NaCl and 1 x 10(-2) mol.dm(-3) for Na2SO4 and MgSO4). The reduction in film thickness below Cel,cr could be accounted for by the compression of the electrical double layer. The Pi-hw isotherms below Cel,cr could be fitted using the Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (DLVO) theory (constant charge and constant potential cases were considered). At a certain pressure, the film jumped to a Newton black film. The pressure at the jump decreased with an increase in electrolyte valency as a result of the reduction of the electrostatic barrier. At electrolyte (NaCl, Na2SO4, or MgSO4) concentrations higher than Cel,cr, the jump occurred at a low pressure that was independent of the electrolyte type. The thickness of the Newton black film was independent of both the concentration and nature of the electrolytes studied. The results show clearly that the polyfructose loops and tails remain strongly hydrated both in water and in high concentrations of electrolytes of different types, and these results explain the high INUTEC SP1 emulsion stability against coalescence of emulsions prepared under such conditions.  相似文献   

19.
Small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) was used to investigate the interparticle interactions in concentrated dispersions of colloidal silica stabilized either by steric or by electrostatic repulsive interactions. In 10 mM NaCl, an adsorbed PEO layer is required to prevent flocculation, and particles are stabilized by steric repulsions. The adsorbed layer was made invisible to neutrons by contrast matching with the aqueous continuous phase. Dispersions of the same particles at the same concentrations but in the absence of added salt and adsorbed PEO were also studied. In both cases, the SANS spectra of concentrated dispersions show a peak at low Q, which is due to interparticle interactions: a structure factor. The SANS data can be described rather well by a homogeneous spherical form factor and a structure factor based on the Hayter-Penfold/Yukawa potential model. The steric potential was compared to the electrostatic potential obtained by fitting the SANS data of the bare silica dispersions. The steric potential shows a greater dependence on the particle volume fraction, which we ascribe to the penetration and compression of the adsorbed PEO layer as the particles approach.  相似文献   

20.
Foam films stabilized by a sugar-based nonionic surfactant, beta-dodecyl maltoside, are investigated. The film thickness and the film contact angle (which is formed at the transition between the film and the bulk solution) are measured as a function of NaCl concentration, surfactant concentration, and temperature. The film thickness measurements provide information about the balance of the surface forces in the film whereas the contact angle measurements provide information about the specific film interaction free energy. The use of the glass ring cell and the thin film pressure balance methods enables studies under a large variety of conditions. Thick foam films are formed at low electrolyte concentration. The film thickness decreases (respectively the absolute value of the interaction film free energy increases) with the increase of the electrolyte concentration according to the classical DLVO theory. This indicates the existence of a repulsive double layer electrostatic component of the disjoining pressure. An electrostatic double layer potential of 16 mV was calculated from the data. A decrease of the film thickness on increase of the surfactant concentration in the solution is observed. The results are interpreted on the basis of the assumption that the surface double layer potential originates in the adsorption of hydroxyl ions at the film surfaces. These ions are expelled from the surface at higher surfactant concentration.  相似文献   

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