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1.
Stabilization of emulsions by mixed polyelectrolyte/surfactant systems is a prominent example for the application in modern technologies. The formation of complexes between the polymers and the surfactants depends on the type of surfactant (ionic, non-ionic) and the mixing ratio. The surface activity (hydrophilic–lipophilic balance) of the resulting complexes is an important quantity for its efficiency in stabilizing emulsions. The interfacial adsorption properties observed at liquid/oil interfaces are more or less equivalent to those observed at the aqueous solution/air interface, however, the corresponding interfacial dilational and shear rheology parameters differ quite significantly. The interfacial properties are directly linked to bulk properties, which support the picture for the complex formation of polyelectrolyte/surfactant mixtures, which is the result of electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions. For long alkyl chain surfactants the interfacial behavior is strongly influenced by hydrophobic interactions while the complex formation with short chain surfactants is mainly governed by electrostatic interactions.  相似文献   

2.
The phase behavior of aqueous mixtures of the "clouding" polymer ethyl(hydroxyethyl)cellulose (EHEC) mixed with colloidal particles and surfactants has been studied. These types of mixtures are important in many technical formulations. Two types of particles, polystyrene latex and silica, and two types of EHEC, nonmodified EHEC (N-EHEC) and hydrophobically modified EHEC (HM-EHEC), were studied. The EHECs adsorb to both kinds of particles. Both the amount and the type of added surfactant were seen to dramatically influence the partitioning of the particles between the EHEC-rich and EHEC-poor phases of phase-separated mixtures (above the cloud point temperature). Surfactants that are known not to associate with the EHEC backbone, that is, nonionic surfactants and short-chain cationic surfactants, changed the interaction between EHEC and the colloidal particles from attraction to repulsion above a specific surfactant concentration, resulting in a change in the partitioning of the particles from the EHEC-rich to the EHEC-poor phase. No such particle inversion was observed for ionic surfactants that bind to the EHEC backbone. An analysis considering both the binding of surfactant to EHEC and the competitive adsorption of surfactant to the particle surfaces could rationalize all observations, including the large variations observed, among the studied mixtures, in the surfactant concentration required for particle inversion.  相似文献   

3.
4.
 The extent of association between the cationic surfactant TTAB and a series of hydrophobically modified polyacrylamides (HPAMs) containing an N-n-alkyl and substituted azobenzene hydrophobic sidegroup has been studied utilizing a cationic surfactant-selective membrane electrode. Binding of TTAB to the polymer hydrophobes is found to increase with increasing hydrophobicity of the hydrophobe. In the presence of electrolyte, aqueous solutions of HPAMs and ionic surfactant exhibit an associative phase separation. The temperature or clearing point (CP) at which the system goes from a one phase to two-phase system are reported. The area of the two-phase region is found to increase with increasing electrolyte concentration, hydrophobicity of the hydrophobe for the high molecular weight HPAMs, and decreasing hydrophobicity for low molecular weight HPAMs. Exposure of HPAMs containing an azobenzene hydrophobe to UV light results in a decrease in interaction between the hydrophobe and surfactant and a corresponding decrease in the CP due to conversion of azobenzene from the more hydrophobic trans form to the less hydrophobic cis isomer. Received: 23 September 1996 Accepted: 11 March 1997  相似文献   

5.
选择性膜电极研究表面活性剂与大分子的相互作用   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:2  
结合本实验室的工作介绍了表面活性剂选择性膜电极研究表面活性剂与大分子相互作用的实验装置和原理,并综述了表面活性剂选择性膜电极在研究离子型表面活性剂及其二元混合体系与不同类型大分子之间相互作用中的应用.讨论了大分子的分子量、外加盐和表面活性剂的结构对表面活性剂和大分子之间相互作用的影响结果.  相似文献   

6.
On the basis of a detailed physicochemical model, a complete system of equations is formulated that describes the equilibrium between micelles and monomers in solutions of ionic surfactants and their mixtures with nonionic surfactants. The equations of the system express mass balances, chemical and mechanical equilibria. Each nonionic surfactant is characterized by a single thermodynamic parameter — its micellization constant. Each ionic surfactant is characterized by three parameters, including the Stern constant that quantifies the counterion binding. In the case of mixed micelles, each pair of surfactants is characterized with an interaction parameter, β, in terms of the regular solution theory. The comparison of the model with experimental data for surfactant binary mixtures shows that β is constant — independent of the micelle composition and electrolyte concentration. The solution of the system of equations gives the concentrations of all monomeric species, the micelle composition, ionization degree, surface potential and mean area per head group. Upon additional assumptions for the micelle shape, the mean aggregation number can be also estimated. The model gives quantitative theoretical interpretation of the dependence of the critical micellization concentration (CMC) of ionic surfactants on the ionic strength; of the CMC of mixed surfactant solutions, and of the electrolytic conductivity of micellar solutions. It turns out, that in the absence of added salt the conductivity is completely dominated by the contribution of the small ions: monomers and counterions. The theoretical predictions are in good agreement with experimental data.  相似文献   

7.
The phase behavior and some physicochemical properties of homopolymers (HP) and hydrophobically modified (HMP) polymers, as well as of polyelectrolytes (PE) and proteins (PR), in the presence of aqueous surfactants, or their mixtures, are discussed. Mixing the above components gives rise to the formation of organized phases, whose properties are controlled by polymer and/or surfactant content, temperature, pH, and ionic strength. Depending on the nature, concentration, and net charge of both solutes, molecular solutions, polymer-surfactant complexes, adsorption onto micelles and vesicles, gels, liquid crystalline phases, and precipitates are observed. Such rich polymorphic behavior is the result of a complex balance between electrostatic, excluded volume, van der Waals, and other contributions to overall system stability. It is also modulated by the molecular details and architecture of both the polymer and the surfactant. Different experimental methods allow investigation of the above systems and getting information on the nature of polymer-surfactant interactions (PSI). Surface adsorption and thermodynamic methods, together with investigation of the phase diagrams, give information on the forces controlling PSI and on the existence of different phases. Conductivity, QELS and viscosity allow estimating the size and shape of polymer-surfactant (protein-surfactant) complexes. Optical microscopy, cryo-TEM, AFM, NMR, fluorescence, and relaxation methods give more information on the above systems. Use of the above mixtures in controlling gelation, surface covering, preparing dielectric layers, and drug release is suggested.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
The interaction of fluorocarbon‐ containing hydrophobically modified sodium polyacrylic acid (FMPAANa) (0.5 wt%) with various surfactants (anionic, nonionic and cationic) has been investigated by rheological measurements. Different rheological behaviors are displayed for ionic surfactants and nonionic surfactants. Fluorinated surfactants have stronger affinity with polyelectrolyte hydrophobes comparing with hydrogenated surfactants. The hydrophobic association of FMPAANa with a cationic surfactant (CTAB) and a fluorinated nonionic surfactant (FC171) is much stronger than with a nonionic surfactant (NP7. 5) and an anionic surfactant (FC143). Further investigation of the effects of temperature on solution properties shows that the dissociation energy Em is correlated to the strength of the aggregated junctions.  相似文献   

10.
The interactions of bovine serum albumin (BSA) with the anionic surfactant sodium decylsulfonate (C10SO3), the cationic surfactant decyltriethylammonium bromide (C10NE) and equimolarly mixed cationic-anionic surfactants C10NE-C10SO3 were investigated by surface tension, viscosity, dynamic light scattering (DLS) and circular dichroism (CD). It was shown that the single ionic surfactant C10SO3 or C10NE has obvious interaction with BSA. The presence of C10SO3 or C10NE modified BSA structure. However, the equimolarly mixed cationic-anionic surfactants C10NE-C10SO3 showed very weak interactions with BSA. The surface tension-log concentration (gamma-logC) plot for the aqueous solutions of C10NE-C10SO3/BSA mixtures coincided with that of C10NE-C10SO3 solutions. Viscometry showed that there is no significant change in the rheological properties for the C10NE-C10SO3/BSA mixed solutions. DLS showed that BSA monomers and mixed aggregates of C10NE-C10SO3 existed in the C10NE-C10SO3/BSA mixed solutions. From CD spectra no obvious modification of BSA structure in the presence of C10NE-C10SO3 mixtures was observed. The weak interactions between BSA and C10NE-C10SO3 might be explained in terms of the very low critical micelle concentration (cmc) of C10NE-C10SO3 mixtures that made the concentration of ionic surfactant monomers much lower than that needed for inducing the modification of BSA structure. In other words, the very strong synergism between oppositely charged cationic and anionic surfactants makes the formation of cationic-anionic surfactant mixed aggregates in the bulk solution a more favorable process than binding to proteins.  相似文献   

11.
Polymer-surfactant mixtures are increasingly being used in a wide range of applications. Weakly interacting systems, such as SDS/PEO and SDS/PVP, comprise ionic surfactants and neutral polymers, while strongly interacting systems, such as SDS/POLYDMDAAC and C12TAB/NaPSS, comprise ionic surfactants and oppositely charged ionic polymers. The complex nature of interactions in the mixtures leads to interesting and surprising surface tension profiles as the concentrations of polymer and surfactant are varied. The purpose of our research has been to develop a model to explain these surface tension profiles and to understand how they relate to the formation of different complexes in the bulk solution. In this paper we show how an existing model based on the law of mass action can be extended to model the surface tension of weakly interacting systems, and we also extend it further to produce a model for the surface tension of strongly interacting systems. Applying the model to a variety of strongly interacting systems gives remarkable agreement with the experimental results. The model provides a sound theoretical basis for comparing and contrasting the behavior of different systems and greatly enhances our understanding of the features observed.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
The interaction of mixed surfactants with polyelectrolytes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The interactions between a linear polymer, sodium poly(2-acrylamide-2-methylpropane sulfonate), and two cationic surfactants, dodecylpyridinium chloride and tetradecylpyridinium chloride and their mixtures with different ratios, were studied by a potentiometric titration method using a surfactant-selective electrode. The ideal mixing/ideal cooperative binding model we had proposed previously was applied to successfully predict the binding isotherms of the mixed surfactant systems and the critical aggregation concentrations of the binding. The binding of surfactant mixtures to polymers is similar to the ideal mixed micelle formation and a sort of synergetic effect was found during the binding process. Received: 18 August 1998 Accepted in revised form: 6 November 1998  相似文献   

14.
Previous work has shown that amylose (AM) can cross-link hydrophobically modified polymers by inclusion complexation, whereby thermoreversible cold-setting gels are formed. In this work, the competition between AM and cyclodextrin (CD) for the formation of inclusion complexes with hydrophobically modified hydroxyethyl cellulose (HMHEC) is investigated. A detailed study of viscosity, NMR self-diffusion, and chemical shifts of the two-component mixture, CD and HMHEC, was performed. The results imply that 2:1 (CD:polymer hydrophobe) complexes may be formed. The three-component mixtures, HMHEC/AM/CD, were investigated by rheology, NMR self-diffusion, and intensities of the NMR resonance peaks. The CD molecules competed efficiently with the AM molecules, as seen by a decreased storage modulus, an increased self-diffusion of AM and HMHEC, and increased NMR intensities of the HMHEC hydrophobes, as the concentration of CD increased in the solution. A high concentration of CD is needed in the mixtures to inhibit all interactions between HMHEC and AM, and it was shown that there still is an effect of AM at excess CD concentration in the mixtures.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Measurements of counterion binding in mixtures of surfactant aqueous solutions have been performed to study the structure of the anionic/cationic mixed micelle/solution interface. The mixtures studied were SDS/DDAC and STS/TDPC. The binding of chloride and sodium ions to mixed anionic/cationic micelles was measured using ion-specific electrodes. Counterion binding was found to be strongly dependent on the molar ratio of surfactants present. The mixed micelle/solution interface includes the headgroups of both surfactants and counterions of surfactant in excess. The addition of oppositely charged surfactant caused an increasing dissociation of counterions.  相似文献   

17.
The use of surfactant mixtures to affect both EOF and separation selectivity in electrophoresis with PDMS substrates is reported, and capacitively coupled contactless conductivity detection is introduced for EOF measurement on PDMS microchips. First, the EOF was measured for two nonionic surfactants (Tween 20 and Triton X‐100), mixed ionic/nonionic surfactant systems (SDS/Tween 20 and SDS/Triton X‐100), and finally for the first time, mixed zwitterionic/nonionic surfactant systems (TDAPS/Tween 20 and TDAPS/Triton X‐100). EOF for the nonionic surfactants decreased with increasing surfactant concentration. The addition of SDS or TDAPS to a nonionic surfactant increased EOF. After establishing the EOF behavior, the separation of model catecholamines was explored to show the impact on separations. Similar analyte resolution with greater peak heights was achieved with mixed surfactant systems containing Tween 20 and TDAPS relative to the single surfactant system. Finally, the detection of catecholamine release from PC12 cells by stimulation with 80 mM K+ was performed to demonstrate the usefulness of mixed surfactant systems to provide resolution of biological compounds in complex samples.  相似文献   

18.
Associating polymers which consist of water-soluble long-chain molecules containing a small fraction of hydrophobic groups (hydrophobes) behave as flocculants in aqueous suspensions. The effects of associating polymers on the rheological behavior are studied for single suspensions of particles with hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces, and their mixtures. For particles with hydrophilic surfaces, the suspensions are highly flocculated by a bridging mechanism, because the water-soluble chains adsorb onto hydrophilic surfaces. On the other hand, the particles with hydrophobic surfaces cannot be dispersed in water without polymer and the additions of a small amount of polymer are required for preparation of homogeneous suspensions. The associating polymer acts as a dispersant at low concentrations. However, further additions of polymer lead to a drastic increase in viscosity. Since the hydrophobes on one end of molecules adsorb onto hydrophobic surfaces and other hydrophobes tending from the particles can form micelles, the particles are connected by linkage of interchain associations. By mixing two suspensions of particles with hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces, the viscosity is substantially reduced and the flow becomes nearly Newtonian. The associating polymer in complex suspensions acts as a binder between the hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces. The hetero-flocculation which leads to the formation of composite particles may be responsible for the viscosity reduction of complex suspensions.  相似文献   

19.
Expressions have been derived from which the spontaneous curvature (H(0)), bending rigidity (k(c)), and saddle-splay constant (k(c)) of mixed monolayers and bilayers may be calculated from molecular and solution properties as well as experimentally available quantities such as the macroscopic hydrophobic-hydrophilic interfacial tension. Three different cases of binary surfactant mixtures have been treated in detail: (i) mixtures of an ionic and a nonionic surfactant, (ii) mixtures of two oppositely charged surfactants, and (iii) mixtures of two ionic surfactants with identical headgroups but different tail volumes. It is demonstrated that k(c)H(0), k(c), and k(c) for mixtures of surfactants with flexible tails may be subdivided into one contribution that is due to bending properties of an infinitely thin surface as calculated from the Poisson-Boltzmann mean field theory and one contribution appearing as a result of the surfactant film having a finite thickness with the surface of charge located somewhat outside the hydrophobic-hydrophilic interface. As a matter of fact, the picture becomes completely different as finite layer thickness effects are taken into account, and as a result, the spontaneous curvature is extensively lowered whereas the bending rigidity is raised. Furthermore, an additional contribution to k(c) is present for surfactant mixtures but is absent for k(c)H(0) and k(c). This contribution appears as a consequence of the minimization of the free energy with respect to the composition of a surfactant layer that is open in the thermodynamic sense and must always be negative (i.e., k(c) is generally found to be brought down by the process of mixing two or more surfactants). The magnitude of the reduction of k(c) increases with increasing asymmetry between two surfactants with respect to headgroup charge number and tail volume. As a consequence, the bending rigidity assumes the lowest values for layers formed in mixtures of two oppositely charged surfactants, and k(c) is further reduced in anionic/cationic surfactant mixtures where the surfactant in excess has the smaller tail volume. Likewise, the reduction of k(c) is enhanced in mixtures of an ionic and a nonionic surfactant where the ionic surfactant has the smaller tail. The effective bilayer bending constant (k(bi)) is also found to be reduced by mixing, and as a result, k(bi) is seen to go through a minimum at some intermediate composition. The reduction of k(bi) is expected to be most pronounced in mixtures of two oppositely charged surfactants where the surfactant in excess has the smaller tail in agreement with experimental observations.  相似文献   

20.
Wetting of low-energy surfaces (polymers, hydrophobized glass) by the aqueous solutions of binary mixtures of nonionic (Triton X-100) and cationic (cetyltrimethylammonium bromide) surfactants at the molar fraction of cationic surfactant = 0.2, 0.5, and 0.8 was studied in the wide concentration range. It was shown that the contact angles of mixed solutions at low-energy surfaces could be predicted on the basis of surface tension isotherms. Concentration ranges of wetting synergism were determined.  相似文献   

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