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1.
Adsorption of surfactants and polymers at solid-liquid interfaces is used widely to modify interfacial properties in a variety of industrial processes such as flotation, ceramic processing, flocculation/dispersion, personal care product formulation and enhanced oil recovery. The behavior of surfactants and polymers at interfaces is determined by a number of forces, including electrostatic attraction, covalent bonding, hydrogen bonding, hydrophobic bonding, and solvation and desolvation of various species. The extent and type of the forces involved varies depending on the adsorbate and the adsorbent, and also the composition and other characteristics of the solvent and dissolved components in it. The influence of such forces on the adsorption behavior is reviewed here from a thermodynamics point of view. The experimental results from microcalorimetric and spectroscopic studies of adsorbed layers of different surfactant and polymer systems at solid-liquid interfaces are also presented. Calorimetric data from the adsorption of an anionic surfactant, sodium octylbenzenesulfonate, and a non-ionic surfactant, dodecyloxyheptaethoxyethylalcohol, and their mixtures on alumina, yielded important thermodynamic information. It was found that the adsorption of anionic surfactants alone on alumina was initially highly exothermic due to the electrostatic interaction with the substrate. Further adsorption leading to a solloid (hemimicelle) formation is proposed to be mainly an entropy-driven process. The entropy effect was found to be more pronounced for the adsorption of anionic-non-ionic surfactant mixtures than for the anionic surfactant alone. Fluorescence studies using a pyrene probe on an adsorbed surfactant and polymer layers, along with electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy, reveal the role of surface aggregation and the conformation of the adsorbed molecules in controlling the dispersion and wettability of the system.  相似文献   

2.
Polymer/surfactant interactions at the air/water interface   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The development of neutron reflectometry has transformed the study and understanding of polymer/surfactant mixtures at the air/water interface. A critical assessment of the results from this technique is made by comparing them with the information available from other techniques used to investigate adsorption at this interface. In the last few years, detailed information about the structure and composition of adsorbed layers has been obtained for a wide range of polymer/surfactant mixtures, including neutral polymers and synthetic and naturally occurring polyelectrolytes, with single surfactants or mixtures of surfactants. The use of neutron reflectometry together with surface tensiometry, has allowed the surface behaviour of these mixtures to be related directly to the bulk phase behaviour. We review the broad range of systems that have been studied, from neutral polymers with ionic surfactants to oppositely charged polyelectrolyte/ionic surfactant mixtures. A particular emphasis is placed upon the rich pattern of adsorption behaviour that is seen in oppositely charged polyelectrolyte/surfactant mixtures, much of which had not been reported previously. The strong surface interactions resulting from the electrostatic attractions in these systems have a very pronounced effect on both the surface tension behaviour and on adsorbed layers consisting of polymer/surfactant complexes, often giving rise to significant surface ordering.  相似文献   

3.
The adsorption behavior on silica of some polystrenes of moderate molecular weight distribution, both singly and in mixtures, has been examined. The adsorption isotherms indicate that, in both a good solvent (trichloroethylene) and under theta conditions, the species of higher molecular weight is preferentially adsorbed at or near full surface coverage, but that the smaller adsorbate has an improved opportunity for adsorption at low surface coverage. The use of tritiated adsorbates substantiate the isotherm data in cyclohexane solution.  相似文献   

4.
研究阴、阳离子表面活性剂混合体系(十二烷基氯代吡啶,辛基磺酸钠,辛基三乙基溴化铵/十二烷基苯磺酸钠)在硅胶,纯水和硅胶,矿化水界面上的吸附作用,探讨阴(阳)离子表面活性剂的存在对阳(阴)离子表面活性剂吸附作用的影响.结果表明,阴离子表面活性剂的存在基本不影响阳离子表面活性剂在带负电固体表面的吸附;而阳离子表面活性剂的存在却使本来吸附量就不大的阴离子表面活性剂在带负电的固体表面上不再吸附.在矿化水中阳离子表面活性剂的吸附量比在纯水中明显降低.从硅胶表面吸附机制解释了所得结果.  相似文献   

5.
The adsorption of organic ionic dyes on different pore size engineered silica materials with potential application for industrial wastewater treatment has been investigated using Fourier transform laser microprobe mass spectrometry (FT-LMMS) and time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-S-SIMS). The complementary use of the two methods with different information depth allowed data on the subsurface distribution and pore penetration of the adsorbed organic compounds. Macroscopic methods were employed to determine the amount adsorbed on the particles and the specific external surface area. Local MS analysis allows identification of the organic dyes exclusively at the outer particle surface when the pore size is inferior to the size of the adsorbing molecule, or at the surface of the channels inside the material. Specifically, the monolayer information depth of TOF-S-SIMS causes a signal to refer essentially to the adsorbate at the outer particle surface, which is only a fraction of the total adsorption in mesoporous materials, while FT-LMMS allowed detection of the presence of adsorbates at the outer surface as well as inside the subsurface of 10 to 50 nm depending on the material under study. The observed data open perspectives for the molecular monitoring of the adsorption behaviour of different materials at the (sub) microm scale.  相似文献   

6.
Using density functional theory slab calculations, we have investigated (i) the origin of nonlocal interactions occurring in the adsorption of small polar molecules (H2O,NH3,CH3OH,CH3NH2) on the clean Si(001)-2 x 1 surface and (ii) the nonlocal effects on two-dimensional arrangement of adsorbates. Our results show the adsorption properties are significantly altered in the presence of adsorbates on an adjacent dimer along a row. We have identified that the coverage dependent behavior arises from a combination of (i) surface polarization change, (ii) adsorbate-induced charge delocalization, (iii) adsorbate-adsorbate repulsion, and (iv) hydrogen bonding. The nucleophilic-electrophilic molecular adsorption involves charge delocalization to neighboring dimers along a row, which in turn undermines molecular adsorption on the neighboring dimers. Nonlocal effects associated with polar interactions with neighboring dimers and adsorbates vary with adsorption system. While such polar interactions are unimportant in CH3OH adsorption, hydrogen bonding and adsorbate-adsorbate repulsion play an important role in determining the adsorption structures of H2O and NH3CH3NH2, respectively. In addition, the electrostatic attraction with the buckled-up Si atoms of adjacent dimers contributes to stabilization of H2O, NH3, and CH3NH2 adsorption. We also discuss kinetic effects on two-dimensional ordering of adsorbates, in conjunction with surface phase transition and adsorption-dissociation rates.  相似文献   

7.
A novel in-situ streaming-potential optical reflectometry apparatus (SPOR) was constructed and utilized to probe the molecular architecture of aqueous adsorbates on a negatively charged silica surface. By combining optical reflectometry and electrokinetic streaming potentials, we measure simultaneously the adsorption density, gamma, and zeta potential, zeta, in a rectangular flow cell constructed with one transparent wall. Both dynamic and equilibrium measurements are possible, allowing the study of sorption kinetics and reversibility. Using SPOR, we investigate the adsorption of a classic nonionic surfactant (pentaethylene glycol monododecyl ether, C12E5), a simple cationic surfactant (hexadecyl trimethylammonium bromide, CTAB) of opposite charge to that of the substrate surface, and two cationic polyelectrolytes (poly(2-(dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate), PDAEMA; (poly(propyl methacrylate) trimethylammonium chloride, MAPTAC). For the polyethylene oxide nonionic surfactant, bilayer adsorption is established above the critical micelle concentration (cmc) both from the adsorption amounts and from the interpretation of the observed zeta potentials. Near adsorption saturation, CTAB also forms bilayer structures on silica. Here, however, we observe a strong charge reversal of the surface. The SPOR data, along with Gouy-Chapman theory, permit assessment of the net ionization fraction of the CTAB bilayer at 10% so that most of the adsorbed CTAB molecules are counterion complexed. The adsorption of both C12E5 and CTAB is reversible. The adsorption of the cationic polymers, however, is completely irreversible to a solvent wash. As with CTAB, both PDAEMA and MAPTAC demonstrate strong charge reversal. For the polyelectrolyte molecules, however, the adsorbed layer is thin and flat. Here also, a Gouy-Chapman analysis shows that less than 20% of the adsorbed layer is ionized. Furthermore, the amount of charge reversal is inversely proportional to the Debye length in agreement with available theory. SPOR provides a new tool for elucidating aqueous adsorbate molecular structure at solid surfaces.  相似文献   

8.
Forces have been measured between silica surfaces with adsorbed surfactants by means of a bimorph surface force apparatus. The surfactants used are the cationic surfactant tetradecyltrimethylammonium bromide (TTAB) and the nonionic surfactant hexakis(ethylene glycol) mono-n-tetradecyl ether (C(14)E(6)) as well as mixtures of these two surfactants. The measurements were made at elevated pH, and the effect of salt was studied. At high pH the glass surface is highly charged, which increases the adsorption of TTAB. Despite the low adsorption generally seen for nonionic surfactants on silica at high pH, addition of C(14)E(6) has a considerable effect on the surface forces between two glass surfaces in a TTAB solution. The barrier force is hardly affected, but the adhesion is reduced remarkably. Also, addition of salt decreases the adhesion, but increases the barrier force. In the presence of salt, addition of C(14)E(6) also increases the thickness of the adsorbed layer. The force barrier height is also shown to be related to literature values for surface pressure data in these systems.  相似文献   

9.
The adsorption of the monomeric/gemini surfactant mixtures at the silica/aqueous solution interface has been characterized on the basis of quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) data. The gemini surfactant employed in this study was cationic 1,2-bis(dodecyldimethylammonio)ethane dibromide (12-2-12). This surfactant was mixed with monomeric surfactants (dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide (DTAB), hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide (HTAB), and octaoxyethylenedodecyl ether (C(12)EO(8))) in the presence of an added electrolyte (NaBr). The key finding in our current study is that the addition of the gemini surfactant (12-2-12) makes significant impact on the adsorption properties even when the mole fraction of 12-2-12 is quite low in the surfactant mixtures. This is suggested by the experimental results that (i) the QCM-D adsorption isotherms measured for the monomeric/gemini surfactant mixtures shift to the region of lower surfactant concentrations compared with the monomeric single systems; (ii) the adsorbed layer morphology largely depends on the mole fraction of 12-2-12 in the surfactant mixtures, and the increased 12-2-12 mole fraction results in the less curved surface aggregates; and (iii) the addition of 12-2-12 yields a relatively rigid adsorbed layer when compared with the layer formed by the monomeric single systems. These adsorption properties result from the fact that the more favorable interaction of 12-2-12 with the silica surface sites drives the overall surfactant adsorption in these mixtures, which is particularly obvious in the region of low surfactant concentrations and at the 12-2-12 low mole fractions. We believe that this knowledge should be important when considering the formulation of gemini surfactants into various chemical products.  相似文献   

10.
Mixed polymer-surfactant systems have broad applications, ranging from detergents, paints, pharmaceutical, and cosmetic to biotechnological. A review of the underlying polymer-surfactant association in bulk is given. While ionic surfactants bind broadly to polymers, nonionics only do so if the polymer has a lower polarity and can interact by hydrophobic interactions. Water-soluble polymers, which have hydrophobic groups, form physical cross-links, hence they may be used as thickeners. The rheological behaviour is strongly influenced by various cosolutes; especially strong effects are due to surfactants and both a decrease and an increase in viscosity can occur. When the polymer-surfactant interactions are particularly strong, an associative phase separation can occur, like in the case where there is electrostatic attraction as well as hydrophobic; this and other types of phase separation phenomena are described. Except for linear ionic and nonionic polymers, the interactions between surfactants and cross-linked polymers, microgel particles and covalent macroscopic gels are analyzed, as well as the possibility of forming gel particles of interest for encapsulation purposes. Furthermore, the behavior of these mixed systems on surfaces is discussed. In particular, we consider the adsorption of mixtures of ionic polymers and oppositely charged surfactants on polar and nonpolar surfaces. Depending on concentration, an ionic surfactant can either induce additional polyion adsorption or induce desorption. Kinetic control of adsorption and, in particular, desorption is typical. Important consequences of this include an increased adsorption on rinsing and path dependent adsorbed layers. Recently, considerable attention has been given to the interaction between DNA and cationic surfactant, both as a means to understand the behaviour of DNA in biological systems and to develop novel formulations, for example for gene therapy. Here we review aspects such as DNA compaction, DNA covalent gels and DNA soft nanoparticles.  相似文献   

11.
The adsorption of a rake-type polymeric siloxane surfactant (polydimethylsiloxane-graft-polyether copolymer) on carbon black (CB) particles dispersed in mixtures of water with polar organic solvents (ethanol, formamide, or glycerol) has been investigated. The adsorption obeys the Langmuir isotherm at low surfactant concentrations (below the critical micelle concentration, CMC). At these conditions, the average surface area occupied by one siloxane surfactant follows the sequence water+glycerol mixture >plain water >water+ethanol mixture. At higher surfactant concentrations in the solution in contact with the particles, a sharp increase in the adsorbed amount is observed. The adsorbed layer thickness has been determined by dynamic light scattering. Below the CMC the adsorbed layer thickness is less than 10 nm. Above the CMC, the adsorbed layer thickness increases to 20-30 nm, a length scale comparable to the diameter of the siloxane surfactant micelles in aqueous solution. This fact, together with SANS data that we have obtained in the absence of added polar organic solvent, indicates that the structure of the adsorbed layer is similar to that of micelles. The findings presented here are relevant to waterborne coatings and ink formulations, where polymeric surfactants are used in conjunction with polar organic solvents.  相似文献   

12.
The adsorption of anionic surfactants on carbon adsorbents modified with water-soluble derivatives of natural polymers, cellulose and chitin, is considered with sodium dodecylsulfate taken as an example. It is shown that such modification leads to changes in the adsorption structural characteristics and the particle size distribution of carbon-water suspensions of the original adsorbent, and to the emergence of new functional groups on its surface that are able to interact selectively with adsorbate molecules. It is assumed that adsorption of anionic surfactant on carbon adsorbents under equilibrium conditions proceeds via stepwise filling of the carbon??s porous structure: we first observe volume filling of micropores according to their sizes, and then the formation of a surfactant??s monolayer in mesopores and on the outer surface of the adsorbate. It is established by thermal analysis that the thermal stability of carbon adsorbents is enhanced through the preferential localization of anionic surfactants in micropores. The filling of mesopores and the outer carbon surface by surfactant molecules leads to a regular decrease in thermal stability and an increase in the adsorbent surface??s hydrophilicity.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The adsorption of Aerosol OT from aqueous solution on to six adsorbates of known specific surface area but of varying surface properties has been measured. For the polar surfaces adsorption corresponding to a double layer was found to occur. The first layer is adsorbed with the surfactant polar heads directed to polar sites on the surface while the second layer is held by interchain cohesion. With the non-polar carbon surface of Sterling MT adsorption is physical and reaches a completely packed monolayer. A maximum in the adsorption was found only for the adsorption of Aerosol from water on to calcium phosphate and carbonized coal.With 4 figures  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
The progresses of understanding of the surfactant adsorption at the hydrophilic solid-liquid interface from extensive experimental studies are reviewed here. In this respect the kinetic and equilibrium studies involves anionic, cationic, non-ionic and mixed surfactants at the solid surface from the solution. Kinetics and equilibrium adsorption of surfactants at the solid-liquid interface depend on the nature of surfactants and the nature of the solid surface. Studies have been reported on adsorption kinetics at the solid-liquid interface primarily on the adsorption of non-ionic surfactant on silica and limited studies on cationic surfactant on silica and anionic surfactant on cotton and cellulose. The typical isotherm of surfactants in general, can be subdivided into four regions. Four-regime isotherm was mainly observed for adsorption of ionic surfactant on oppositely charged solid surface and adsorption of non-ionic surfactant on silica surface. Region IV of the adsorption isotherm is commonly a plateau region above the CMC, it may also show a maximum above the CMC. Isotherms of four different regions are discussed in detail. Influences of different parameters such as molecular structure, temperature, salt concentration that are very important in surfactant adsorption are reviewed here. Atomic force microscopy study of different surfactants show the self-assembly and mechanism of adsorption at the solid-liquid interface. Adsorption behaviour and mechanism of different mixed surfactant systems such as anionic-cationic, anionic-non-ionic and cationic-non-ionic are reviewed. Mixture of surface-active materials can show synergistic interactions, which can be manifested as enhanced surface activity, spreading, foaming, detergency and many other phenomena.  相似文献   

16.
Adsorption of surfactant mixtures on solids is of considerable theoretical and practical importance. In this study, cooperative adsorption of surfactant mixtures of nonyl phenol ethoxylated decyl ether (NP-10) and n-dodecyl-beta-D-maltoside (DM) on silica and alumina has been investigated as a function of the distribution of individual surfactants between solution and solid surface. In the mixed adsorption process, DM is identified to be the "active" adsorbing component and NP is the "passive" co-adsorbing one in the process of adsorption on alumina, while their roles are reversed on silica. A modified model has been proposed to quantify the adsorption behavior of surfactant mixtures and to obtain information in terms of aggregation number and standard free energy for surface aggregation. This model is the first model applied to the aggregation of the surfactant mixture at the solid/solution interfaces.  相似文献   

17.
The adsorption of non-ionic polysaccharide—guar gum (GG) in the presence or absence of the surfactants: anionic SDS, cationic CTAB, nonionic TX-100 and their equimolar mixtures SDS/TX-100, CTAB/TX-100 from the electrolyte solutions (NaCl, CaCl2) on the manganese dioxide surface (MnO2) was studied. The increase of GG adsorption amount in the presence of surfactants was observed in every measured system. This increase results from formation of complexes between the GG and the surfactant molecules. This observation was confirmed by the determination of the influence of GG on surfactants adsorption on the MnO2 surface. The increase of GG adsorption on MnO2 was the largest in the presence of the surfactant mixtures (CTAB/TX-100; SDS/TX-100) which is the evidence of the synergetic effect. The smallest amounts of adsorption were obtained in the presence of TX-100, which results from non-ionic character of this surface active agent. In the case of single surfactant solution CTAB has the best efficiency in increasing the amount of GG adsorption on MnO2 which results from strong interactions with GG and also with the negatively charged surface of the adsorbent. In order to determine the electrokinetic properties of the system, the surface charge density of MnO2 and the zeta potential measurements were performed in the presence of the GG macromolecules and the above mentioned surfactants and their mixtures. The obtained data showed that the adsorption of GG or GG/surfactants complexes on the manganese dioxide surface strongly influences the diffused part of the electrical double layer (EDL)—MnO2/electrolyte solution, but has no influence on the compact part of the electric double layer. This is the evidence that the polymers chains are directly bonded with the surface of the solid and the surfactants molecules are present in the upper part of the EDL.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The effect of cationic and anionic surfactants, as well as cationic and anionic polyelectrolytes (PE), their binary mixtures on the electrokinetic potential of monodisperse carboxylated polystyrene (PS) particles as a function of the reagents dose, pH, the charge density (CD) of polymers, the surfactant/PE and binary PE mixture composition, and sequence of components addition to the suspension has been studied. It has been shown that addition of increasing amount of anionic surfactant/polyelectrolytes increases the absolute value of the negative zeta-potential of PS particles; this increase is stronger the CD of the PE and pH of the system are higher. Adsorption of cationic surfactant/polyelectrolytes leads to a significant decrease in the negative ζ-potential and to overcharging the particles; changes in the ζ-potential are more pronounced for PE samples with higher CD and for suspensions with lower pH values. In mixtures of cationic and anionic PE, in a wide range of mixture composition, the ζ-potential of particles is determined by the adsorbed amount of the anionic polymer independently of the CD of PEs and the sequence of addition of the mixture components. The isoelectric point of the surface is reached at the adsorbed amount of positive charges of PE that is approximately equal to the surface CD of particles. The laws observed were explained by features of macromolecules conformation in adsorbed mixed PE layers. Considerations about the role of coulombic and non-coulombic forces in the mechanism of anionic/cationic PE adsorption are presented.  相似文献   

20.
The adsorption of a universal antiseptic agent, the cationic surfactant miramistin, on the surface of highly dispersed silica has been studied. It has been shown that, when miramistin is adsorbed from acidic premicellar solutions, the main contribution to miramistin binding with the surface is made by hydrogen bonding between amide groups of surfactant molecules and silanol groups of silica, which is, at higher pH values, accompanied by ionic interaction between positively charged quaternary nitrogen atoms of miramistin and negatively charged dissociated silanol groups. In the case of adsorption from a micellar solution, an increase in the surface concentration of miramistin is almost independent of solution pH, because the second layer is predominantly formed due to hydrophobic interactions.  相似文献   

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