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1.
A new constant pressure pendant-drop penetration surface balance has been developed combining a pendant-drop surface balance, a rapid-subphase-exchange technique, and a fuzzy logic control algorithm. Beside the determination of insoluble monolayer compression-expansion isotherms, it allows performance of noninvasive kinetic studies of the adsorption of surfactants added to the new subphase onto the free surface and of the adsorption/penetration/reaction of the former onto/into/with surface layers, respectively. The interfacial pressure pi is a fundamental parameter in these studies: by working at constant pi one controls the height of the energy barrier to adsorption/penetration and can select different regimes and steps of the adsorption/penetration process. In our device a solution drop is formed at the tip of a coaxial double capillary, connected to a double microinjector. Drop profiles are extracted from digital drop micrographs and fitted to the equation of capillarity, yielding pi, the drop volume V, and the interfacial area A. pi is varied changing V (and hence A) with the microinjector. Control is based on a case-adaptable modulated fuzzy-logic PID algorithm able to maintain constant pi (or A) under a wide range of experimental conditions. The drop subphase liquid can be exchanged quantitatively by the coaxial capillaries. The adsorption/penetration/reaction kinetics at constant pi are then studied monitoring A(t), i.e., determining the relative area change necessary at each instant to compensate the pressure variation due to the interaction of the surfactant in the subsurface with the surface layer. A fully Windows-integrated program manages the whole setup. Examples of experimental protein adsorption and monolayer penetration kinetics are presented.  相似文献   

2.
3.
The equilibrium adsorption layers of symmetric chain alkyltrimethylammonium alkyl sulfates (Cn+.Cn- for n = 8, 12) were investigated at the air/water interface by sum-frequency vibrational spectroscopy in the function of the bulk surfactant concentration. To ensure the surface purity of the solutions investigated, an improved version of the foam fractionation method was used for the purification of the constituent ionic surfactants and the surface purity of the solutions was also checked. In the monolayer of the C12+.C12- surfactant, a two-dimensional first-order gas/liquid phase transition was observed. At surfactant bulk concentrations just exceeding the concentration corresponding to the phase transition, the monolayer is conformationally disordered, liquidlike, but with increasing bulk surfactant concentration the conformational order of the monolayer increases. The SFG spectra of the C8+.C8- monolayer did not indicate the occurrence of phase transition at room temperature.  相似文献   

4.
Interfacial properties of cationic surfactants show strong dependence on the type of surfactant counterion or on the type of anion of a salt added to the surfactant solution. In the paper, the models of ionic surfactant adsorption that can take into account ionic specific effects are reviewed. Model of ionic surfactant adsorption based on the assumption that the surfactant ions and counterions undergo nonequivalent adsorption within the Stern layer was selected to describe experimental surface tension isotherms of aqueous solutions of a number of cationic surfactants. The experimental isotherms for: n-alkyl trimethylammonium cationic surfactants, namely: C(16)TABr (CTABr or CTAB), C(16)TACl, C(16)TAHSO(4), C(10)TABr and C(12)TABr as well as decyl- and dodecylpyridinium salts with and without various electrolyte anions as Cl(-), Br(-), F(-), I(-), NO(3)(-), ClO(4)(-) and CH(3)COO(-) were described in terms of the model and a good agreement between the theory and experiment was obtained for a wide range of surfactants and added electrolyte concentrations. A very pronounced Hofmeister effect in dependence of surface tension of cationic surfactants on the type of anion was found. Analysing this dependence in terms of the proposed model of ionic surfactant adsorption, strong correlation between "anion surface activity" (the model parameter accounting for ion penetration into the Stern layer), and the ion polarizability was obtained. That suggests that the mechanism related to the dispersive interaction of polarized ion with electric field at interface is responsible for Hofmeister series effects in surface activity of cationic surfactants. The same mechanism was proposed recently to explain the dependence of surface tension increase with electrolyte concentration on anion and cation type.  相似文献   

5.
An approximate analytical solution is obtained for the adsorption kinetics equation derived earlier. On the basis of these relations the importance of the consideration of a non-equilibrium diffuse layer has been shown. To describe the retarded adsorption kinetics the distribution of adsorbed ions in the diffuse layer section of multivalent surfactant ions has been taken into account. The rate of adsorption calculated for a non-ionic surfactant is compared with the adsorption rate for monovalent and bivalent ionic surfactants, respectively.  相似文献   

6.
Surface properties of systems that are mixtures of ionic surfactants and sugar derivatives-anionic surfactant sodium dodecyl sulfate and n-dodecyl-beta-D-maltoside (SDS/DM) and cationic surfactant dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide and n-dodecyl-beta-D-glucoside (DTABr/DG)-were investigated. The experimental results obtained from measurements of surface tension of mixtures with various ratio of ionic to nonionic components were analyzed by two independent theories. First is Motomura theory, derived from the Gibbs-Duhem equation, allowing for indirect evaluation of the composition of mixed monolayers and the Gibbs energies of adsorption, corresponding to mutual interaction between surfactants in mixed adsorbed film. As second theory we used our newly developed theoretical model of adsorption of ionic-nonionic surfactant mixtures. Using this approach, we were able to describe the experimental surface tension isotherms for mixtures of surface-active sugar derivatives and ionic surfactants. We obtained a good agreement with experimental data using the same set of model parameters for a whole range of studied compositions of a given surfactant mixture. The values of surface excess calculated from both theories agreed with each other with a reasonable accuracy. However, the newly developed model of adsorption of ionic-nonionic surfactant mixtures has the advantage of straightforward determination of surface layer composition. By the solution of equations of adsorption, one can obtain directly the values of surface excess of all components (surfactant ions, counterions, and nonionic surfactants molecules), which are present in the investigated system.  相似文献   

7.
Dispersions of multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWNTs) assisted by surfactant adsorption were prepared for a number of ionic and non-ionic surfactants including sodium 4-dodecylbenzenesulfonate (NaDDBS), hexadecyl(trimethyl)azanium bromide (CTAB), sodium dodecane-1-sulfonate (SDS), Pluronic? F68, Pluronic? F127, and Triton? X-100 to examine the effects of nanotube diameter, surfactant concentration, and pH on nanotube dispersability. Nanotube diameter was found to be an important role in surfactant adsorption rendering single-walled carbon nanotube studies as unreliable in predicting MWNT dispersive behavior. Similar to other reports, increasing surfactant concentrations resulted in a solubility plateau. Quantification of nanotube solubility at these plateaus demonstrated that CTAB is the best surfactant for MWNTs at neutral pH conditions. Deviations from neutral pH demonstrated negligible influence on non-ionic surfactant adsorption. In contrast, both cationic and anionic surfactants were found to be poor dispersing aids for highly acidic solutions while, CTAB remained a good surfactant under strongly basic conditions. These pH dependent results were explained in the context of nanotube surface ionization and Debye length variation.  相似文献   

8.
Here, we derive analytical asymptotic expressions for the dynamic surface tension of ionic surfactant solutions in the general case of nonstationary interfacial expansion. Because the diffusion layer is much wider than the electric double layer, the equations contain a small parameter. The resulting perturbation problem is singular and it is solved by means of the method of matched asymptotic expansions. The derived general expression for the dynamic surface tension is simplified for the special case of immobile interface and for the maximum bubble pressure method (MBPM). The case of stationary interfacial expansion is also considered. The effective diffusivity of the ionic surfactant essentially depends on the concentrations of surfactant and nonamphiphilic salt. To test the theory, the derived equations are applied to calculate the surfactant adsorption from MBPM experimental data. The results excellently agree with the adsorption determined independently from equilibrium surface-tension isotherms. The derived theoretical expressions could find application for interpreting data obtained by MBPM and other experimental methods for investigating interfacial dynamics.  相似文献   

9.
Two polymer-surfactant mixtures have been studied at the air-water interface using neutron reflectivity and surface tension techniques. For the noninteracting system poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM)/octaethyleneglycol mono n-decyl ether (C10E8), the adsorption behavior is competitive and driven purely by surface pressure (pi). When pi(polymer) > pi(surfactant), the surface layer consists of almost pure polymer, and for pi(polymer) < pi(surfactant), the polymer is displaced from the surface by the increasing pressure of the surfactant. Beyond the CMC, the polymer is completely displaced from the surface. For the interacting system PNIPAM/sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) where the two species interact strongly in the bulk beyond the critical aggregation concentration (CAC), the surface behavior is more original. Earlier neutron reflectivity studies investigated PNIPAM adsorption behavior where the SDS was contrast-matched to the solvent. In the present study, complementary measurements of SDS adsorption where PNIPAM is contrast-matched to the solvent give a complete view of the surface composition of the mixed system. At a constant polymer concentration, with increasing SDS, three main regimes are obtained. For C(SDS) < CAC, adsorption is governed by simple competition and PNIPAM is predominant at the interface. At intermediate SDS concentration (CAC < C(SDS) < x2, where x2 indicates the predominance of free SDS micelles), interfacial behavior is governed by bulk polymer-surfactant interaction. Adsorbed polymer is displaced from the interface to form PNIPAM-SDS complex in the bulk. SDS adsorption remains weak since most of the SDS molecules are used to form bulk polymer-surfactant aggregates. Further increase in SDS concentration results in continued displacement of PNIPAM and an abrupt increase in SDS adsorption. This is a result of saturation of bulk polymer chain with adsorbed micelles. Interestingly, beyond x2, PNIPAM is not completely displaced from the surface. A mixed PNIPAM-SDS adsorbed layer with enhanced packing of the SDS monolayer is formed.  相似文献   

10.
The adsorption of nonionic surfactants of the alkyl-phenol-poly(ethylene oxide) family and of acrylic latex particles on several anhydrous (but hydrating) or fully hydrated mineral phases of Portland cement was studied. No or negligible adsorption of the surfactant was observed. This was assigned to the ionized character of the surface silanol groups in calcium-silicate-hydrates and to the strongly ionic character of the OH groups in calcium hydroxide and in the calcium-sulfoaluminate-hydrates, which prevents the formation of surface-ethoxy hydrogen bonds. In contrast, provided they are properly stabilized by the surfactant, the latex particles form a loose monolayer on the surface of hydrating tricalcium silicate particles. The attractive interaction between the positive mineral surface and the negative latex surface appears to be the driving force for adsorption. In line with this, adsorption is reduced by sulfate anions, which adsorb specifically onto the silicate surface. Compared to tricalcium silicate, portlandite and gypsum interact only marginally with the latex particles. Our results show that the stability of the nonionic surfactant/latex/cement systems is essentially controlled by the latex colloidal stability and the latex-cement interactions, the surfactant having little direct interaction, if any, with the mineral surfaces.  相似文献   

11.
A quantitative model for the kinetics of adsorption of ionic surfactants to an expanding liquid surface is presented for surfactant concentrations below and above the critical micelle concentration (cmc). For surfactant concentrations below the cmc, the electrostatic double layer is accounted for explicitly in the adsorption isotherm. An overflowing cylinder (OFC) was used to create nonequilibrium liquid surfaces under steady-state conditions. Experimental measurements of the surface excess for solutions of cationic surfactants CH3(CH2)n-1N+(CH3)3 Br- (CnTAB, n = 12, 14, 16) and the anionic fluorocarbon surfactant sodium bis(1H,1H-nonafluoropentyl)-2-sulfosuccinate (di-CF4) in the OFC are in excellent agreement with the theoretical predictions for diffusion-controlled adsorption for all concentrations studied below the cmc. For surfactant concentrations above cmc, the diffusion ofmicelles and monomers are handled separately under the assumption of fast micellar breakdown. This simplified model gives excellent agreement for the system C14TAB + 0.1 M NaBr above the cmc. Agreement between theory and experiment for C16TAB + 0.1 M NaBr is less good. A plausible explanation for the discrepancy is that micellar breakdown is no longer fast on the time scale of the OFC (ca. 0.1 s).  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
The adsorption behaviour of proteins and systems mixed with surfactants of different nature is described. In the absence of surfactants the proteins mainly adsorb in a diffusion controlled manner. Due to lack of quantitative models the experimental results are discussed partly qualitatively. There are different types of interaction between proteins and surfactant molecules. These interactions lead to protein/surfactant complexes the surface activity and conformation of which are different from those of the pure protein. Complexes formed with ionic surfactants via electrostatic interaction have usually a higher surface activity, which becomes evident from the more than additive surface pressure increase. The presence of only small amounts of ionic surfactants can significantly modify the structure of adsorbed proteins. With increasing amounts of ionic surfactants, however, an opposite effect is reached as due to hydrophobic interaction and the complexes become less surface active and can be displaced from the interface due to competitive adsorption. In the presence of non-ionic surfactants the adsorption layer is mainly formed by competitive adsorption between the compounds and the only interaction is of hydrophobic nature. Such complexes are typically less surface active than the pure protein. From a certain surfactant concentration of the interface is covered almost exclusively by the non-ionic surfactant. Mixed layers of proteins and lipids formed by penetration at the water/air or by competitive adsorption at the water/chloroform interface are formed such that at a certain pressure the components start to separate. Using Brewster angle microscopy in penetration experiments of proteins into lipid monolayers this interfacial separation can be visualised. A brief comparison of the protein adsorption at the water/air and water/n-tetradecane shows that the adsorbed amount at the water/oil interface is much stronger and the change in interfacial tension much larger than at the water/air interface. Also some experimental data on the dilational elasticity of proteins at both interfaces measured by a transient relaxation technique are discussed on the basis of the derived thermodynamic model. As a fast developing field of application the use of surface tensiometry and rheometry of mixed protein/surfactant mixed layers is demonstrated as a new tool in the diagnostics of various diseases and for monitoring the progress of therapies.  相似文献   

14.
A model for the adsorption of ionic surfactants on oppositely charged solid surfaces of uniform charge density is developed. The model is based on the assumption that, on the solid surface, adsorbed surfactant monomers, monolayered and bilayered surfactant aggregates of different sizes and specifically adsorbing ions of added electrolyte constitute a mixture of hard discs. It means that only excluded area interactions between the surface discs are taken into account. To avoid a rapid two-dimensional condensation of the adsorbed surfactant the potential energy per molecule in the surface aggregates, which is a sum of chemical and electrostatic interactions, is assumed to decrease linearly with the increasing aggregate size. The electrostatic interactions of ionic species with the charged solid surface are described in terms of the Guy-Chapman theory of the double layer formation. The appropriate equations for adsorption isotherms of surfactant and electrolyte ions are derived and used to predict the experimental adsorption isotherms of DTAB on the precipitated silica at two different salt concentrations in the aqueous solution, On the basis of the obtained results the evolution of the adsorbed phase structure and the charge of silica particles with an increasing surface coverage is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Experimental data on surface tension available from the literature and generated in the present study are analyzed to estimate the applicability of adsorption models, based on the Frumkin equation, to nonionic and ionic surfactants and their mixtures. Optimization programs based on the least-squares method in media of Delphi V and Pascal VII are used. The effect of interactions between the adsorbed species on surface tension is considered in all cases. The results are compared to those obtained with the simpler Szyszkowski equation, employed in numerous studies of nonionic surfactants, when interactions are neglected. Cases where the Frumkin model can be successfully employed with ionic surfactants and mixtures are presented and the conditions of its applicability are analyzed. Related characteristic quantities (maximum adsorption, standard free energy of surfactant adsorption, energy of interaction between adsorbed species, standard free energy of counterion adsorption, degree of coverage by surfactant/counterion associates) are established as a function of: The properties of an adsorption layer from a mixture of nonionic and ionic surface-active species are compared to those of the single surfactants.  相似文献   

16.
17.
This paper demonstrates the use of polyelectrolytes to modify and manipulate the adsorption of ionic surfactants onto the hydrophilic surface of silica. We have demonstrated that the cationic polyelectrolyte poly(dimethyl diallylammonium chloride), poly-dmdaac, modifies the adsorption of cationic and anionic surfactants to the hydrophilic surface of silica. A thin robust polymer layer is adsorbed from a dilute polymer/surfactant solution. The resulting surface layer is cationic and changes the relative affinity of the cationic surfactant hexadecyl trimethylammonium bromide, C16TAB, and the anionic surfactant sodium dodecyl sulfate, SDS, to adsorb. The adsorption of C16TAB is dramatically reduced. In contrast, strong adsorption of SDS was observed, in situations where SDS would normally have a low affinity for the surface of silica. We have further shown that subsequent adsorption of the anionic polyelectrolyte sodium poly(styrene sulfonate), Na-PSS, onto the poly-dmdaac coated surface results in a change back to an anionic surface and a further change in the relative affinities of the cationic and anionic surfactants for the surface. The relative amounts of C16TAB and SDS adsorption depend on the coverage of the polyelectrolyte, and these preliminary measurements show that this can be manipulated.  相似文献   

18.
An overflowing cylinder (OFC) provides a convenient method for studying nonequilibrium liquid interfaces under steady-state conditions. In the presence of surfactants in solution, large accelerations in the surface velocity are observed as a result of Marangoni effects. The surface expansion rate is approximately uniform over the surface of the OFC and falls in the range of 1-10 s(-1). In this paper, a quantitative model is presented for the mass transport to the expanding surface of the OFC. The model is then used to analyze experimental measurements of surface expansion rates and surface excess for solutions of a cationic surfactant, hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB), obtained by laser Doppler scattering and neutron reflection, respectively. The experimental results are in satisfactory agreement with the predictions of diffusion-controlled adsorption close to the critical micelle concentration (cmc). At concentrations well above and well below the cmc, kinetic barriers to adsorption appear to exist. The data at low concentrations are discussed in terms of a model for mass transport through the electrical double layer. At high concentrations, double-layer effects are negligible and steric barriers to adsorption are postulated. Copyright 2000 Academic Press.  相似文献   

19.
The dynamic and equilibrium surface tensions of C(n)TAB solutions for n = 12, 14, and 16 are studied using ring and bubble pressure tensiometry. Together with respective literature values, including neutron reflectivity and dilational surface rheology measurements, the experimental data are analyzed on the basis of two theoretical models, the Frumkin model and a modified reorientation model that takes into account an intrinsic compressibility of adsorbed surfactant molecules. It turns out that this new reorientation model, earlier applied to nonionic surfactant adsorption layers, is also applicable to ionic surfactants and superior to the Frumkin isotherm. All adsorption properties of one particular surfactant can be described by a single set of model parameters.  相似文献   

20.
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   

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