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1.
The ternary phase diagram for N-[3-lauryloxy-2-hydroxypropyl]-L-arginine L-glutamate (C12HEA-Glu), a new amino acid-type surfactant, /oleic acid (OA)/water system was established. The liquid crystal and gel complex formations between C12HEA-Glu and OA were applied to a preparation of water-in-oil (W/O) emulsions. Stable W/O emulsions containing liquid paraffin (LP) as the oil and a mixture of C12HEA-Glu and OA as the emulsifier were formed. The preparation of stable W/O emulsions containing 85 wt% water phase was also possible, in which water droplets would be polygonally transformed and closely packed, since the maximum percentage of inner phase is 74% assuming uniformly spherical droplets. Water droplets would be taken into the liquid crystalline phase (or the gel complex) and the immovable water droplets would stabilize the W/O emulsion system. The viscosity of emulsions abruptly increased above the 75 wt% water phase (dispersed phase). The stability of W/O emulsions with a lower weight ratio of OA to C12HEA-Glu and a higher ratio of water phase was greater. This unusual phenomenon may be related to the formation of a liquid crystalline phase between C12HEA-Glu and OA, and the stability of the liquid crystal at a lower ratio of oil (continuous phase). W/O and oil-in-water (O/W) emulsions containing LP were selectively prepared using a mixture of C12HEA-Glu and OA since the desirable hydrophile-lipophile balance (HLB) number for the emulsification was obtainable by mixing the two emulsifiers.  相似文献   

2.
The preparation and formation mechanism of n-hexadecane/water emulsions using natural beta-cyclodextrin (beta-CD) and chemically modified beta-CDs (triacylated beta-cyclodextrins) as an emulsifier were investigated. The stable water/oil (W/O) emulsion was formed using tripropanoyl-beta-CD (TP-beta-CD). From observation using the contact angle (theta(ow)) of precipitates derived from CD, it was clarified that oil/water (O/W) emulsion at theta(ow)<90 degrees and (W/O) emulsion at theta(ow)>90 degrees are formed when the composition of each oil and water was mixed with natural beta-CD or triacylated beta-CDs.  相似文献   

3.
Microchannel (MC) emulsification is a novel technique for preparing monodispersed emulsions. This study demonstrates preparing water-in-oil-in-water (W/O/W) emulsions using MC emulsification. The W/O/W emulsions were prepared by a two-step emulsification process employing MC emulsification as the second step. We investigated the behavior of internal water droplets penetrating the MCs. Using decane, ethyl oleate, and medium-chain triglyceride (MCT) as oil phases, we observed successful MC emulsification and prepared monodispersed oil droplets that contained small water droplets. MC emulsification was possible using triolein as the oil phase, but polydispersed oil droplets were formed from some of the channels. No leakage of the internal water phase was observed during the MC emulsification process. The internal water droplets penetrated the MC without disruption, even though the internal water droplets were larger than the resulting W/O/W emulsion droplets. The W/O/W emulsion entrapment yield was measured fluorometrically and found to be 91%. The mild action of droplet formation based on spontaneous transformation led to a high entrapment yield during MC emulsification.  相似文献   

4.
The present study investigated the transient formation of water-in-oil (W/O) emulsions of sodium bis(2-ethylhexyl) sulfosuccinate (aerosol OT, AOT) in a dodecane/water interfacial region and the anomalous uptake of water in the dodecane phase by in situ bright-field optical microscopy and water concentration measurements in detail. The hydrodynamic radius of the individual W/O emulsions in the dodecane phase was determined to be 0.1-1.2 μm from the analysis of their diffusion behavior; they are much larger than common W/O microemulsions (a few nanometers in radius). At first, they were formed spontaneously in the dodecane/water interfacial region without shaking, and they diffused away into the dodecane phase. Then, almost all of them vanished at the interface by fusion. Their number and the water concentration in the dodecane phase increased first and then decreased gradually. The formation mechanism was discussed with estimated concentration profiles of AOT and water molecules, which suggests that larger W/O emulsions of 0.01-0.44 μm in radius can be formed in the dodecane phase near the interface (within 2 μm) because the concentration of AOT becomes lower than that of water there.  相似文献   

5.
The emulsification processes, during which acylglycerols/zinc stearate emulsifier, water, and oil phase formed ternary systems, such as water-in-oil (W/O) emulsions, oil-in-water (O/W) dispersions, and unstable oil-water mixtures, were investigated in order to characterize the progressive transformations of the dispersed systems. The type, structure, and phase transitions of the systems were found to be determined by temperature and water phase content. Crystallization of the emulsifier caused the destabilization and subsequent phase inversion of the emulsions studied, at a temperature of 60-61 degrees C. The observed destabilization was temporary and led, at lower temperature, to W/O emulsions, "O/W + O" systems, or O/W dispersions, depending on the water content. Simultaneous emulsification and cooling of 20-50 wt % water systems resulted in the formation of stable W/O emulsions that contained a number of large water droplets with dispersed oil globules inside them ("W/O + O/W/O"). In water-rich systems (60-80 wt % of water), crystallization of the emulsifier was found to influence the formation of crystalline vesicle structures that coexisted, in the external water phase, with globules of crystallized oil phase. Results of calorimetric, rheological, and light scattering experiments, for the O/W dispersions obtained, indicate the possible transition of a monostearoylglycerol-based alpha-crystalline gel phase to a coagel state, in these multicomponent systems.  相似文献   

6.
Transition from oil-in-water (O/W) emulsions to water-in-oil (W/O) emulsions and its action on enhanced oil recovery was investigated by viscosity, morphology, and simulated flooding experiments. This transition can be realized by increasing the volume ratio of oil to water or decreasing the emulsifier concentration. At a mass concentration of 0.3 wt%, the self-developed emulsifier FJ-1 mainly forms O/W emulsions at a volume ratio (oil to water) of 1:1. The emulsions behave as O/W emulsions with a low viscosity when the volume ratio of oil to water is below 2:1. Above 2:1, increasing volume ratio leads to the O/W emulsions transferring into W/O emulsions with high viscosity. For example, at a volume fraction of 4:1, the viscosity of W/O emulsions reaches 229.1 mPa · s, and separated water can hardly be detected. Transition from O/W emulsions to W/O emulsions with high viscosity can also be realized by decreasing the concentration of emulsifier to 0.05 wt% or lower at a volume ratio of 1:1. These may be the critical factors leading to transition from O/W emulsions to W/O emulsions at core conditions. Simulated flooding experiments show that emulsifier fluids can act as an in situ mobility improver and make an improvement of oil recovery even by 20.4%. The results indicate that the water-in-crude-oil emulsions possess great potential in enhancing oil recovery.  相似文献   

7.
The preparation and characterization of n-alkane/water emulsions using beta-cyclodextrin (beta-CD) were studied. The prepared n-alkane/water emulsions were of the oil-in-water (O/W) type, and the stability of emulsions was in the order of n-hexadecane > n-dodecane > n-octane. From observations using polarized light microscopy and powder X-ray diffraction measurement, it was suggested that the formation of a dense film at the oil-water interface and the three-dimensional structural network created by precipitated complexes in the continuous phase are associated with the stability of emulsion. Furthermore, it was clarified that O/W-type emulsions were formed because the contact angle (theta ow) which the precipitate makes with the interface was theta ow < 90 degrees in all compounds (oils) used in this study.  相似文献   

8.
Previous studies have focused on monomeric naphthenic acids and their ability to stabilize emulsions, but little has been reported on C80-tetraacids and their ability to function as an emulsifier. In this article, we report on the chemistry of the C80-tetraacids as an emulsion stabilizer and also on the role this acid has in mixed monoacid-tetraacid systems. The study focuses on the type of emulsion formed and the stability of these emulsions with respect to water cut, pH, salinity of the water phase, and type of counterion. Interfacial behavior and the electrostatic properties of the emulsion were studied in order to determine which of the acids were present at the interface and which of the acids gave the largest contribution to the emulsion stability. It was found that C80-tetraacids form only O/W emulsion under the conditions studied. Addition of monoacid to the system did not change the type of emulsion formed. Highest stability was seen for emulsions containing both monoacid and tetraacids. When adding NaCl a phase inversion from O/W to W/O emulsion appeared around a concentration of 2 wt% of NaCl.  相似文献   

9.
This review presents an overview of the nature of ionic liquid (IL)-based interfaces and self-assembled particle morphologies of IL-in-water, oil- and water-in-IL, and novel IL-in-IL Pickering emulsions with emphasis on their unique phenomena, by means of experimental and computational studies. In IL-in-water Pickering emulsions, particles formed monolayers at ionic liquid–water interfaces and were close-packed on fully covered emulsion droplets or aggregated on partially covered droplets. Interestingly, other than equilibrating at the ionic liquid–water interfaces, microparticles with certain surface chemistries were extracted into the ionic liquid phase with a high efficiency. These experimental findings were supported by potential of mean force calculations, which showed large energy drops as hydrophobic particles crossed the interface into the IL phase. In the oil- and water-in-IL Pickering emulsions, microparticles with acidic surface chemistries formed monolayer bridges between the internal phase droplets rather than residing at the oil/water–ionic liquid interfaces, a significant deviation from traditional Pickering emulsion morphology. Molecular dynamics simulations revealed aspects of the mechanism behind this bridging phenomenon, including the role of the droplet phase, surface chemistry, and inter-particle film. Novel IL-in-IL Pickering emulsions exhibited an array of self-assembled morphologies including the previously observed particle absorption and bridging phenomena. The appearance of these morphologies depended on the particle surface chemistry as well as the ILs used. The incorporation of particle self-assembly with ionic liquid science allows for new applications at the intersection of these two fields, and have the potential to be numerous due to the tunability of the ionic liquids and particles incorporated, as well as the particle morphology by combining certain groups of particle surface chemistry, IL type (protic or aprotic), and whether oil or water is incorporated.  相似文献   

10.
A three-step model of the transitional phase inversion (TPI) process for the formation of water-in-oil (W/O) emulsions is presented. Three types of emulsions exist in an emulsification process at different oil–water ratios and hydrophilic–lipophilic balance (HLB). A stable W/O emulsion was obtained using Sorbitan oleate (Span 80) and polyoxyethylenesorbitan monooleate (Tween 80) with a specified HLB and oil volume fraction. Oil was added into water, which contained the water-soluble surfactant, to dissolve the oil-soluble surfactant. This route allowed TPI to occur, and an interesting emulsification process was observed by varying the HLB, which corresponded to the change in the oil–water ratio. Two types of emulsions in the emulsification process were found: transition emulsion 1 (W/O/W high internal phase emulsion) and target emulsion 2 (W/O emulsion with low viscosity). This study describes the changes that occurred in the emulsification process.  相似文献   

11.
Multiple water-in-oil-in-water (W/O/W) emulsions offer a huge potential as encapsulation systems in different food, cosmetic, and pharmaceutical applications. Because of their complex structure, however, it is difficult to characterize these systems. Typical measurement techniques to determine the size and stability of the inner water droplets encapsulated in the oil droplets show limitations and inaccuracies. Determining the total amount of water in the inner droplets is most often done by indirect methods to date. We describe an analytical method based on differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) for characterizing the total amount of encapsulated water droplets and their stability in W/O/W multiple emulsions. It uses the possibility to directly determine the latent heat of freezing of water droplets of the same size and composition as in the multiple emulsions. The amount of water in the inner droplets of a W/O/W emulsion can thus be calculated very accurately. It is shown that this method enables furthermore detecting multi-modalities in the size distribution of inner water droplets in W/O/W emulsions. Changes in droplet size distribution of the inner droplets occurring during the second emulsification step of processing or during storage can be detected. DSC thus offers a powerful tool to characterize the structure of multiple W/O/W emulsions.  相似文献   

12.
W/O/W多重乳液中水传递的控制   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
建立了简化的W/O/W(水/油/水)多重乳液乳珠模型——统计平均半径模型, 预测出当W/O/W多重乳液内水相水滴之间以及内外水相之间均达到水传递平衡时的内外水相中盐的浓度, 从而实现对水传递的控制, 以维持W/O/W多重乳液的稳定. 按理论预测制备出了不同稳定态的W/O/W多重乳液, 利用差分扫描量热仪(DSC)检测了多重乳液中水的传递过程, 确定体系在实验状态下的稳定程度, 实验结果与理论预测基本吻合.  相似文献   

13.
Water transportation through the oil phase in W/O emulsions and in W1/O/W2 systems (W/O emulsion in contact with water) was examined. Substance diffusion through interfaces led to interface instability and spontaneous emulsification which caused nanodispersion formation. The photomicrographs of Pt/C replicas of emulsions showed the presence in the continuous oil phase a lot of nanodispersion droplets with a diameter in the range 17-25 nm. Diffusion coefficient (D) of water calculated on the base of Lifshiz-Slezov-Wagner (LSW) equation was about 15 times lower than the coefficients of molecular diffusion. Since such emulsions were extremely unstable toward coalescence, the growth of water droplets took place through as Ostwald ripening as coalescence. In three-phase W1/O/W2 systems diffusion of water, Rhodamine C, and ethanol was studied. D calculated on the base of the equation of nonstationary diffusion were approximately 1000 times lower than molecular ones. It was assumed, that nanodispersion droplets were more likely water carriers in investigated W/O emulsions stabilized by sorbitan monooleate.  相似文献   

14.
Three-phase geranyl acetate emulsions stabilized by a non-ionic surfactant, Laureth 4, were prepared with a constant weight fraction of a lamellar liquid crystal and varied aqueous to oil phase weight ratios according to the phase diagram. The appearance and micrographs of the drop pattern versus time were recorded. As expected, emulsions with the lower values of the water to oil (W/O) ratio appeared to be of the W/O variety while the two more stable emulsions with the highest W/O ratio appeared as oil to water (O/W). Considering the surfactant exclusive solubility in the oil, this result was unexpected and the emulsions were investigated as to their structure. Unpredictably, all the emulsions were of the O/W kind; including the highest ratio of oil to water. The reason for this unanticipated outcome was the lamellar liquid crystal being dispersed into the aqueous phase at the slightest perturbation.  相似文献   

15.
W/C emulsions were stabilized using hydrophobic silica particles adsorbed at the interface, resulting in average droplet diameters as low as 7.5 microm. A porous cross-linked shell was formed about a hydrophilic (colloidal and fumed) silica core with a trifunctional silylating agent, (heptadecafluoro-1,1,2,2-tetrahydrodecyl)triethyoxysilane, to render the particles CO(2)-philic. The stability of emulsions comprising equal weights of CO(2) and water was assessed with visual observations of settling fronts and the degree of emulsion coalescence, and the average drop size was measured by optical microscopy. The effect of CO(2) density on both emulsion stability and droplet size was determined quantitatively. The major destabilizing mechanism of the emulsions was settling, whereas Ostwald ripening and coalescence were not visible at any density, even over 7 days. Flocculation of the settling droplets did not occur, although gelation of the emulsions through particle interactions resulted after longer periods of time. CO(2)-philic particles offer a new route to highly stable W/C emulsions, with particle energies of attachment on the order of 10(6)kT, even at CO(2) densities as low as 0.78 g ml(-1). At these low densities, surfactants rarely stabilize emulsions as the result of poor surfactant tail solvation.  相似文献   

16.
ABSTRACT

W/O/W and O/W/O multiple emulsions have been found in systems consisting of water, light mineral oil, and two nonionic surfactants (Span 80 and Tween 20).No specific order of addition of the components or pre-mixing was followed. Following gentle agitation at 25°, 35° and 45° for 48?hours, W/O/W emulsions were found at water contents above 30%, while 0/W/O emulsions generally appeared below 60% water.W/0 and 0/W emulsions, micellar phases and liquid crystalline phases were also observed at various compositions. The multiple emulsion regions decreased in size as temperature increased and the areas and positions of the other phases were also temperature dependent.  相似文献   

17.
The cationic antimicrobial peptide, protamine, has been found to destabilize oil/water (O/W) emulsions formed using soy lecithin or Tween-20. Experiments suggested that the destabilization took place via flocculation. We have modelled the interactions between protamine and an O/W interface stabilized by hypothetical amphiphilic molecule (HAM) surfactants. The intent was to suggest what properties such surfactants must possess in order that protamine will not destabilize an O/W emulsion stabilized by HAMs. We considered interfaces formed from mixtures of neutral HAMs together with (a) positively charged HAMs which possess an attractive (van der Waals, hydrogen bonding) interaction with protamine or with (b) negatively charged HAMs with no significant attractive interaction. We represented the oil and water as continuum dielectrics, with the water containing 100 mM monovalent ions and we carried out Monte Carlo computer simulations. We found that a single protamine does not bind to a single interface in case (a) but that there is a range of charged-HAM concentration, c, for which the binding of protamine becomes progressively stronger as c increases in case (b). We investigated stability by studying under what conditions protamines will cause the aggregation of two HAM-stabilized interfaces, and we have identified values of c for which the interfaces are stable. We note that the transition from bound to unbound states of two HAM interfaces with five protamines are examples of entropy-driven unbinding transitions with the entropy of the protamines overcoming the net attractive interactions. We conclude by identifying regions of the phase diagram in which stable emulsions should exist in the presence of protamine.  相似文献   

18.
We have investigated the dynamic rheological properties of concentrated multiple emulsions to characterize their amphiphile composition at interfaces. Multiple emulsions (W1/O/W2) consist of water droplets (W1) dispersed into oil globules (O), which are redispersed in an external aqueous phase (W2). A small-molecule surfactant and an amphiphilic polymer were used to stabilize the inverse emulsion (W1 in oil globules) and the inverse emulsion (oil globules in W2), respectively. Rheological and interfacial tension measurements show that the polymeric surfactant adsorbed at the globule interface does not migrate to the droplet interfaces through the oil phase. This explains, at least partly, the stability improvement of multiple emulsions as polymeric surfactants are used instead of small-molecule surfactants.  相似文献   

19.
Three-phase geranyl acetate emulsions stabilized by a non-ionic surfactant, Laureth 4, were prepared with a constant weight fraction of a lamellar liquid crystal and varied aqueous to oil phase weight ratios according to the phase diagram. The appearance and micrographs of the drop pattern versus time were recorded. As expected, emulsions with the lower values of the water to oil (W/O) ratio appeared to be of the W/O variety while the two more stable emulsions with the highest W/O ratio appeared as oil to water (O/W). Considering the surfactant exclusive solubility in the oil, this result was unexpected and the emulsions were investigated as to their structure. Unpredictably, all the emulsions were of the O/W kind; including the highest ratio of oil to water. The reason for this unanticipated outcome was the lamellar liquid crystal being dispersed into the aqueous phase at the slightest perturbation.  相似文献   

20.
Water-in-CO2 (W/C) emulsions formed using a nickel Triton X-100 surfactant complex (Ni-surfactant) were used as microreactors for the carbon-carbon coupling reaction between hex-3-yne and CO2 to produce tetra-ethyl pyrone (TEP). The structure of the product, which was isolated in the CO2 phase, was determined using gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and infrared spectroscopy. The Ni-surfactant acted as both an emulsion forming agent and a water soluble catalyst for this carbon-carbon coupling reaction. The optimum yield of TEP was determined to be 69% after 72 h, at a temperature of 70 degrees C and a pressure of 206 bar. The ease with which the emulsion could be collapsed allowed the facile separation of products from the catalyst and any unreacted starting material. Product selectivity in the W/C emulsions was found to be greater than that obtained using conventional organic methodologies.  相似文献   

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