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1.
The transition from liquid crystalline to microemulsion phases has been investigated by adding oil to surfactant—alcohol—brine mixtures in two systems containing anionic surfactants. At high salinities where the surfactant is preferentially soluble in oil, addition of oil first causes transition from a lamellar liquid crystal to a water-continuous isotropic phase which exhibits streaming birefringence and probably contains large, anisotropic micelles. This isotropic phase inverts to an oil-continuous microemulsion as oil content further increases. At somewhat lower salinities just below the “optimum” where the surfactant has equal solubilization capacities for oil and brine, the system passes through three three-phase regions as oil is added. In order of increasing oil content, these consist of two microemulsions in equilibrium with a lamellar liquid crystalline phase, the same two microemulsions in equilibrium with excess brine, and a microemulsion in equilibrium with excess oil and excess brine.  相似文献   

2.
A nucleophilic substitution reaction between 4-tert-butylbenzyl bromide and potassium iodide has been performed in oil-in-water microemulsions based on various C12Em surfactants, i.e., dodecyl ethoxylate with m number of oxyethylene units. The reaction kinetics was compared with the kinetics of reactions performed in other self-assembly structures based on very similar surfactants and in homogeneous liquids. The reaction was fastest in the micellar system, intermediate in rate in the microemulsions, and most sluggish in the liquid crystalline phase. Reaction in a Winsor I system, i.e., a two-phase system comprising an oil-in-water microemulsion in equilibrium with excess oil, was equally fast as reaction in a one-phase microemulsion. The reactions in microemulsion were surprisingly fast compared to reaction in homogeneous, protic liquids such as methanol and ethanol. The rate was independent of the microstructure of the microemulsion; however, the rate was very dependent on the type of surfactant used. When the C12Em surfactant was replaced by a sugar-based surfactant, octyl glucoside, the reaction was much more sluggish. The high reactivity in microemulsions based on C12Em surfactants is belived to be due to a favorable microenvironment in the reaction zone. The reaction is likely to occur within the surfactant palisade layer, where the water activity is relatively low and where the attacking species, the iodide ion, is poorly hydrated and, hence, more nucleophlic than in a protic solvent such as water or methanol. Sugar surfactants become more hydrated than alcohol ethoxylates and the lower reactivity in the microemulsion based on the sugar surfactant is probably due to a higher water activity in the reaction zone.  相似文献   

3.
Sucrose monoalkanoates (SE) form microemulsions by mixing with lipophilic cosurfactants such as the middle-chain alcohols, or sucrose polyalkanoates. In the case that sucrose monododecanoate is combined with hexanol, a middle-phase microemulsion is produced and coexists with excess water and oil phases at optimum mixing fraction of SE and hexanol. The bicontinuous structure of the microemulsion was confirmed by means of self-diffusion coefficient on NMR measurement.

A larger solubilization capability of oil is attained to a mixed mono- and poly-dodecanoate system than that of the middle-chain alcohol. It is probably due to the location of most of surfactant molecules at the micro-interface inside the microemulsion. In this system, instead of forming a three-phase region, a lamellar liquid crystal intrudes into multi-phase region since the surfactant layer is rather rigid as which was supported by the results of SAXS and ESR measurements. Further addition of a short-chain alcohol such as propanol to the mixed system leads to the flexible interface, as a consequence three-phase microemulsion with large solubilization is formed.  相似文献   

4.
A series of microemulsions, both W/O and O/W, based on nonionic surfactants of the form (NP(EO)n), were prepared using the titration method. Mixing a constant weight of surfactant with a constant volume of the dispersed phase and an initial volume of continuous phase produces an emulsion, which is titrated to clarity with another surfactant (cosurfactant). Plotting (a) the volume of cosurfactant necessary to transform an emulsion into a microemulsion containing a fixed volume of dispersed phase and constant weight of surfactant versus (b) different initial continuous-phase volumes yields a straight line. Extrapolating from experimentally determined values for the cosurfactant volume to the value corresponding to a zero-volume continuous phase allows the determination of the surfactant molar composition and the average number of ethylene oxides (EO) per nonylphenol adsorbed at the interface. Using a surfactant with the same number of ethylene oxides yields a single-surfactant microemulsion. Measurement of surfactants transmittance in the oil and water phases demonstrates that microemulsification occurs when the surfactant interfacial film is equally soluble in the two phases. Surface pressure measurements reveal that oil penetration impedes formation of O/W microemulsions with n-tetradecane or n-hexadecane as dispersed phase. Conductance, particle size, and transmittance measurements show that above a certain dispersed-phase volume percolation of the microemulsion occurs.  相似文献   

5.
Nonionic alcohol ethoxylates are widely used as surfactants in many different applications. They are available in a large number of structural varieties as technical grade products. This variety is mainly based on the use of different alcohols, which can be linear or branched and contain primary, secondary, or tertiary OH groups. Technical grade products are poorly defined as they are composed of alcohol mixtures being different in chain length and structure. On the other hand, monodisperse alcohol ethoxylates are commercially available; however, these surfactants exist only with primary and linear alcohols. In the field of microemulsion research the monodisperse alcohol ethoxylates are widely used. The phase behavior and film properties of these surfactants were studied intensively with respect to the size of the hydrophilic and hydrophobic moieties. Due to the lack of appropriate model surfactants until now, there is little information on how the structure of the hydrocarbon tail influences the microemulsion behavior. To examine structural influences, we synthesized a series of surfactants with the composition C10E5 and having different linear and branched hydrocarbon tails. The surfactants were monodisperse with respect to the hydrocarbon tail but polydisperse with respect to the ethoxylation degree. However, a detailed characterization showed that they were similar concerning the average ethoxylation degree and EO chain length distribution. The phase behavior was investigated for bicontinuous microemulsions, and the film properties were analyzed by small-angle neutron scattering (SANS). Our results show that the structure of the hydrocarbon tail strongly influences the microemulsion behavior. The most efficient surfactant is obtained if the hydrocarbon tail is linear and the hydrophilic group is attached in the C-1 position. Surfactants having the hydrophilic group bound to the C-2 or C-4 position or which contain a branched hydrocarbon tail are less efficient and exhibit in most cases visibly lower phase inversion temperatures. Both the efficiency and temperature behavior mainly can be explained on the basis of increased bulkiness of the branched structures compared to the fully linear version. The phase behavior results are largely confirmed by the SANS investigations. Those results show that the fully linear surfactant exhibits the most rigid interfacial film. In additional experiments this surfactant was compared with its monodisperse analogue. According to the phase diagrams, the surfactant having the polydisperse hydrophilic moiety is drastically more efficient although the film stiffnesses are almost identical.  相似文献   

6.
Commercial ethoxylated surfactants are always a mixture of oligomers with different ethylene oxide number (EON). The different oligomers were separated by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) on an amino column using a mixture of polar and nonpolar mobile phases. Surfactant oil-water-systems were studied according to the unidimensional scan technique. The surfactant content in the oil, microemulsion and water phases was determined by UV spectroscopy and HPLC. The partitioning of the surfactant oligomers in the oil and water phases of a Winsor III system was determined. The effect of different salts on the surfactant partitioning is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The present work shows for the first time that tributylphosphate (TBP), the major ion extractant used in the reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel, acts efficiently as a cosurfactant in the formation of three-phase microemulsions. The system is composed of water, dodecane, TBP, and an extremely hydrophilic sugar surfactant, n-octyl-β-glucoside. The investigation of the three-phase region (Winsor III), the so-called "fish-cut" diagrams, revealed that TBP exhibits cosurfactant behavior comparable to that of classical cosurfactants n-pentanol and n-hexanol. Upon increasing the cosurfactant/surfactant molar ratio, TBP appears to be more efficient than single-chain alcohols in raising the spontaneous curvature of the adsorbed surfactant film toward oil. This is a direct consequence of the different lateral packing of TBP and n-pentanol or n-hexanol in the mixed surfactant film, with TBP having three alkyl chains and so a higher hydrophobic volume than those n-alcohols. This property is underlined by the interfacial film composition, which is determined by the chemical analysis of the excess phases. It gives a surfactant to cosurfactant molar ratio of 1:1 for TBP and 1:3 for n-hexanol. Moreover, the local microstructure of the microemulsion becomes dependent on the addition of salt when n-alcohol is replaced by TBP. A specific salt effect is also observed and rationalized in terms of the complexing property of TBP and Hofmeister's effects. Treatment of the small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) data gives access to (i) the length scales characterizing the microemulsions (i.e., the persistence length, ξ, and aqueous or organic domain sizes, D*) and (ii) the specific surface, Σ. It results that a subtle change is highlighted in the TBP microemulsion structure, in terms of connectivity, according to the type of salt added.  相似文献   

8.
Effect of surfactants [polyglycerol diisostearate ethoxylates (PGDIS-E31, PGDIS-E36 and PGDIS-E40) and Tween-80], alcohols (1,2-propandiol, ethanol, 1-propanol, 1-butanol, 2-butanol and 1-pentanol), oils [isopropyl palmitate (IPP), isooctyl palmitate (IOP), dioctyl carbonate (DOC), and dioctyl hexanediate (DOH)], temperature and sodium chloride on the microemulsion formation of the surfactant/alcohol/oil/water system has been investigated by the pseudo-ternary phase diagrams. The capacities of the four surfactants in the microemulsion formation of the surfactant/alcohol/IPP/water system at surfactant/alcohol of 2:1 are in the order of PGDIS-E31 > PGDIS-E36 > Tween-80 > PGDIS-E40, whatever alcohol (ethanol, 1-propanol, and 1-butanol) is used. PGDIS-E31 and 1-butanol exhibit best synergism in the microemulsion formation. In addition, the volume, structure and polarity of oil all influence the microemulsion formation. At the optimum weight ratio 2:1 of PGDIS-E31/1-butanol, the microemulsion region of the PGDIS-E31/1-butanol/IPP/water system is the largest among the studied systems. The microemulsion system of PGDIS-E31/1-butanol/IPP/water is not sensitive to lower temperature such as 40°C. It is also not sensitive to sodium chloride when the concentration of sodium chloride is in the range of 0 to 1.0%.  相似文献   

9.
The phase behavior and structure of sucrose ester/water/oil systems in the presence of long-chain cosurfactant (monolaurin) and small amounts of ionic surfactants was investigated by phase study and small angle X-ray scattering. In a water/sucrose ester/monolaurin/decane system at 27 degrees C, instead of a three-phase microemulsion, lamellar liquid crystals are formed in the dilute region. Unlike other systems in the presence of alcohol as cosurfactant, the HLB composition does not change with dilution, since monolaurin adsorbs almost completely in the interface. The addition of small amounts of ionic surfactant, regardless of the counterion, increases the solubilization of water in W/O microemulsions. The solubilization on oil in O/W microemulsions is not much affected, but structuring is induced and a viscous isotropic phase is formed. At high ionic surfactant concentrations, the single-phase microemulsion disappears and liquid crystals are favored.  相似文献   

10.
Equilibrium partition processes were quantitatively estimated for acidic reagents of the xanthene and triphenylmethane series in the system water–surfactant micelle–stationary phase. An anionic surfactant (sodium dodecyl sulfate) was used as the micelle-forming compound. Partition coefficients were calculated, and the preferential solubilization of reagents in surfactant micelles was demonstrated. Energies of reagent transfer to sodium dodecyl sulfate micelles and their adsorption energies at the stationary phase were calculated.  相似文献   

11.
Phase equilibria and nonequilibrium structures in the sodium di-2-ethylhexyl phosphate (NaSDEHP)–decane–water system were studied. It was found that, at a certain component ratio, a microemulsion and a liquid crystal phase are present in the system. The phase diagram was plotted, describing two- and three-phase equilibria: NaSDEHP and water solution in decane–microemulsion, microemulsion–liquid crystals, NaSDEHP and water solution in decane–microemulsion–liquid crystals, and NaSDEHP and water solution in decane–liquid crystals. The viscosity of NaSDEHP microemulsion was measured. It was shown that the viscosity increases significantly with an increase in the ratio of sodium hydroxide and di-2-ethyhexyl phosphoric acid molar concentrations from 0.6 to 1.0. Formation of the third liquid (microemulsion) phase in the vicinity of the oil–water interface was found upon the transfer of NaSDEHP from one phase to the other.  相似文献   

12.
Different microemulsions were prepared with and without mefenamic acid (MFA). The base microemulsion was mainly composed of distilled water; the aqueous phase, propylene carbonate; the oil phase, potassium oleate; the surfactant, and finally di-ethylene glycol; the cosurfactant. The effect of mixing ionic (potassium oleate) with nonionic (Tween-20) surfactant was investigated via constructing the phase diagrams of such systems. Changes in conductivity and viscosity of the freshly prepared microemulsion over time were monitored as an indication for the stability of the microemulsion. Measurements were carried out at room temperature, after a freeze-thaw cycle and also after storage for 3 days at 60°C, where the latter is treated as an accelerated test for the time-temperature effects on the stability of a microemulsion. It was found that a set of surfactants, instead of a single surfactant, and inclusion of cosurfactant resulted in a broader region where a stable microemulsion is predominant. At a mass ratio of 1:2 of potassium oleate to Tween-20, O/W microemulsions were found to have maximum stability among all examined systems, under the accelerated test, such that they have a minimum portion of combined surfactants and cosurfactant of 60 wt% and maximum of 80 wt%. With the aforementioned specifications, no phase separation and neither significant change in the conductivity nor in the viscosity was observed in any of the examined systems after subjecting them both to the accelerated and freeze-thaw cycle test, indicating that such systems were thermodynamically stable. Samples of micro emulsions passing previous tests were further subjected to an acidic medium by dispersing 1 g of MFA-containing microemulsion in 10 g HCl solution (pH 1) in a shaking water bath at 37°C, for a 6 hour period. The maximum solubility of MFA in a stable microemulsion was approximately 5 wt%, evaluated at room temperature.  相似文献   

13.
<正>Generally,a microemulsion consists of oil,water,surfactant and sometimes cosurfactant.Herein,we report a novel suffactant-free microemulsion(denoted as SFME) composed of benzene,water and ethanol without the amphiphilic molecular structure of traditional surfactant.The phase behavior of the ternary system was investigated,finding that there were a single-phase region and a two-phase region in ternary phase diagram.The electrical conductivity measurement was employed to investigate the microregion of the single-phase region,and a bicontinuous microregion and a benzene-in-water(O/W) microemulsion microregion were identified,which was confirmed by freeze-fracture transmission electron microscopy(FF-TEM) observations.The sizes of the microemulsion droplets are in the range of 20-50 nm.  相似文献   

14.
Microemulsification of a vegetable oil (eucalyptus) with single and mixed surfactants (AOT and Brij-35), cosurfactant of different lipophilicities (isomers of butanol), and water were studied at different surfactant and cosurfactant mixing ratios. The phase diagrams of the quaternary systems were constructed using unfolded and folded tetrahedron, wherein the phase characteristics of different ternary systems can be underlined. The microemulsion zone was found to be dependent upon the mixing ratios of surfactant and cosurfactant; the largest microemulsion zone was formed with 1:1 (w/w) S:CS. The effects of temperature and additives (NaCl, urea, glucose, and bile salts of different concentrations) on the phase behavior were examined. The mixed microemulsion system showed temperature insensitivity, whereas the Brij-35 (single) stabilized system exhibited a smaller microemulsion zone at elevated temperature. NaCl and glucose increased the microemulsion zone up to a certain concentration, beyond which the microemulsion zones were decreased. These additives decreased the microemulsion zones as temperature was increased. The effect of urea on microemulsion zone was found to be insignificant even at the concentration 3.0 mol dm(-3). Little effect on microemulsion zone was shown by NaC (sodium cholate) at 0.25 and 0.5 mol dm(-3) at different temperatures. The conductance of the single (AOT) and mixed microemulsion system (AOT+Brij-35) depends upon the water content and mixing ratios of the surfactants, and a steep rise in conductance was observed at equal weight percentages of oil and water. Viscosities for both single (AOT) and mixed (AOT+Brij-35) surfactant systems passed through maxima at equal oil and water regions showing structural transition. The viscosities for microemulsion systems increased with increasing Brij-35 content in the AOT+Brij-35 blend. Conductances and viscosities of different monophasic compositions in the absence and presence of additives (NaCl and NaC) were measured at different temperatures. The activation energy of conduction (DeltaE(cond)( *)) and the activation enthalpy for viscous flow (DeltaH(vis)( *)) were evaluated. It was found that both DeltaE(cond)( *) and DeltaH(vis)( *) were a function of the nature of the dispersion medium. Considering the phase separation point of maximum solubility, the free energy of dissolution of water or oil (DeltaG(s)(0)) at the microdispersed state in amphiphile medium was estimated and found to be a function of surfactant composition.  相似文献   

15.
The factors influencing the formation of water-in-134a-propellant microemulsions using the fluorinated ionic surfactants ammonium perfluorooctanoate, ammonium perfluoroheptanoate, and sodium perfluorooctanoate has been determined. None of the fluorinated ionic surfactants could be used to prepare clear, one-phase systems when used as sole surfactant, but they could be when combined with a short-chain fluoro- or hydrocarbon alcohol in surfactant:cosurfactant weight-mixing ratios (K(m)) in the range 1:2 to 2:1. When hydrocarbon alcohols were used this clear region extended over a wide range of compositions and was confirmed by means of photon correlation spectroscopy (PCS) to contain microemulsion droplets in the propellant-rich part of the phase diagram. PCS studies performed in the presence of the water-soluble drug terbutaline sulfate showed that it was possible to solubilize the drug within water-in-propellant microemulsion droplets. These studies confirm for the first time that it is possible to prepare water-in-propellant 134a microemulsions using fluorinated ionic surfactants and to solubilize water-soluble drugs within these systems.  相似文献   

16.
A U-type microemulsion of Brij 96 has been characterized with respect to the change in cosurfactant, oil chain length on dilution, water solubility, and water solubilization capacity. The phase behavior of the systems has been mapped with different oils. Several techniques, viz., conductivity, optical microscopy, dilution method, absorption, and FT-IR spectroscopy, have been used for microemulsion analysis. The equilibrium within the microemulsion droplets and liquid crystals has been visualized using optical microscopy. The microemulsions have evidenced volume-induced conductance percolation in all the cosurfactants (n2n6 alcohols). The energetics of transfer of alcohol from the bulk oil to the interface has been determined through dilution method. To gain insight into the microenvironment of microemulsion, two optical probes, hydrophilic (Methyl orange) and hydrophobic (Nile red), have been utilized in absorption spectroscopy. Lastly, FT-IR has been explored to observe the state and dissolution behavior of water with increasing weight fraction.  相似文献   

17.
In this work, for the first time, the Hydrophilic-Lipophilic Difference (HLD) framework for microemulsion formulation has been applied to silicone oils and silicone alkyl polyether surfactants. Based on the HLD equations and recently introduced mixing rules, we have quantified the hydrophobicity of the oils according to the equivalent alkane carbon number (EACN). We have found that, in a reference system containing sodium dihexyl sulfosuccinate (SDHS) as the surfactant, 0.65 centistoke (cSt) and 3.0 cSt silicone oils behave like n-dodecane and n-pentadecane, respectively. Silicone alkyl polyether surfactants were found to have characteristic curvatures ranging 3.4-18.9, exceeding that of most non-ionic surfactants. The introduction of methacrylic acid (MAA) and hydroxyethyl methacrylate (HEMA) to the aqueous phase caused a significant negative shift in HLD, indicative of an aqueous phase that is less hydrophilic than pure water. The more hydrophobic surfactants (largest positive curvatures) were used in order to compensate for this effect. These findings have led to the formulation of bicontinuous microemulsions (μEs) containing silicone oil, silicone alkyl polyether and reactive monomers in aqueous solution. Ternary phase diagrams of these systems revealed the potential for silicone-containing polymer composites with bicontinuous morphologies. These findings have also helped to explain the phase behavior of formulations previously reported in literature, and could help in providing a systematic, consistent approach to future silicone oil based microemulsion formulation.  相似文献   

18.
We report a solubilization enhancing effect of A-B-type silicone surfactants in microemulsions. The effect of added long-chain silicone surfactants, Si25C3EO51.6 (extended length≈21.8 nm) and Si14C3EO15.8 (extended length≈8.5 nm) on the solubilization capacity of C12EO5 (extended length≈3 nm)/water/dodecane microemulsion was investigated at the hydrophile-lipophile balance temperature at which a microemulsion (surfactant) phase containing equal weights of oil and water touches the three-phase body. The addition of silicone surfactants exhibits an enormous increase of the swelling of the middle phase primarily with an associated increase in the structural length scale of the microemulsion. The solubilization power increases with increasing x2 (mole fraction of silicone surfactants to the total surfactant) and going through a maximum it decreases, since a lamellar liquid crystal introduces in the multiphase region at low surfactant concentrations. The solubilization capacity reaches at the maximum to an almost equal level for different x2 values, 0.02 for Si25C3EO51.6 and 0.09 for Si14C3EO15.8. The solubilization power of the lamellar phase shows a similar trend with lower magnitude.  相似文献   

19.
The role of alcohols in microemulsion formation is primarily two-fold. They function as cosolvents by modifying surfactant partitioning between the aqueous and oleic phases and they function as cosurfactants stabilizing microemulsion to the exclusion of unbounaed structures such as liquid crystals, gels or precipitates. Given the freedom of choice among surfactants and their mixtures, the former role of the alcohol can easily be obviated. However, the latter requirement is more fundamental and not so easily removed. This study provides guidance in the purposeful construction of mixtures of synthetic surfactants which can minimize or eliminate alcohol requirements, depending on temperature and salinity. The approach Involves mixing straight tailed (high solubilization parameter) species with mid-chain branched (low cosolvent requirement) species in a spectrum of mole ratios and identifying the minimum alcohol concentration for stable microemulsion. A number of acceptable systems were found.  相似文献   

20.
Three-phase behavior in a mixed nonionic surfactant system   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The effect of monodisperse solubilities of each surfactant in an excess oil phase on the three-phase behavior was investigated in a water/octaethyleneglycol dodecyl ether (R12EO8)/tetraethyleneglycol dodecyl ether (R12EO4)/heptane system. The mid temperature of the three-phase region is defined as the HLB temperature. The HLB temperature is largely skewed to higher temperature in a dilute region due to the difference in the distribution of each surfactant between excess oil and microemulsion (surfactant) phases forming the three-phase body. Taking account of the monodisperse solubilities, the equation for the HLB temperature was obtained on the basis of geometrical calculation of a particular three-phase triangle. The equation well describes the three-phase behavior for a mixed surfactant system in a space of compositions and temperature.In the mixed surfactant system, the monodisperse solubility of R12EO8 in oil phase forming a three-phase body is monotonously increased with the rise in temperature, whereas that of R12EO4 is first increased and then is decreased. Consequently, the sum of both solubilities does not change greatly in a wide range of temperature.  相似文献   

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