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1.
To clarify the effect of the surfactant head group on the emulsification process, dilute dodecane in water emulsions were prepared in a small flow-through cell with three surfactants which had the same hydrocarbon tail length but different head groups. The different surfactants types were (a) a nonionic, hexa(ethyleneglycol) mono n-dodecyl ether (C12E6), (b) an anionic, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), and (c) a cationic, n-dodecyl pyridinium chloride (DPC), and the emulsions were prepared under the same conditions. From dynamic light scattering measurements, it was shown that the mean steady state droplet size of the emulsions (obtained after 20 min dispersion) could be related to the interfacial tension at concentrations in the region of the cmc. This result was in agreement with laminar and turbulent viscous flow theory. However, the particle size versus surface tension data for the different surfactant systems did not fall on a single line. This behavior suggested that the surfactant played a secondary role in defining the droplet size (in addition to reducing the interfacial tension) possibly through diffusion and relaxation, during deformation of the interface. In addition, it was found that the values of the equilibrium "surfactant packing densities" of the different surfactants at the oil/water interface were almost equal near the cmc, but the mean droplet size and the interfacial tension at the cmc decreased following the order DPC>SDS>C12E6 .  相似文献   

2.
PPD emulsion product is advantageous for use in sub-ambient temperature as it improve the physical handling characteristic compared to traditional product. However, existing PPD emulsion system is solely implementing a single anionic surfactant system which leads instability towards a series of temperature changes. Therefore, mixed surfactant (anionic and non-ionic) surfactant was introduced to overcome this problem. Through this research, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) act as anionic surfactant and Tween 80 used as non-ionic surfactant in this study. The stability of an emulsion was identified through particle size and zeta potential. For the mixed surfactant composition, the result show the presence of SDS content contributes in reduction on particle size. Furthermore, the study on effectiveness of surfactant on EVA emulsion was evaluated. The result indicates with present of surfactant, interfacial surface tension was reduced. The freezing point and pour point depressant test of the EVA emulsion was evaluated. Present of non-ionic surfactant help in stability and flow-respond at low temperature. Mixed surfactant system provides sufficient protection from droplet size growth caused by the temperature changes which eventually leads to instability.  相似文献   

3.
This paper describes how the cationic polyelectrolyte, polyDMDAAC (poly(dimethyl diallylammonium chloride)), is used to manipulate the adsorption of the anionic surfactant SDS and the mixed ionic/nonionic surfactant mixture of SDS (sodium dodecyl sulfate)/C(12)E(6) (monododecyl hexaethylene glycol) onto the surface of hydrophilic silica. The deposition of a thin robust polymer layer from a dilute polymer/surfactant solution promotes SDS adsorption and substantially modifies the adsorption of SDS/C(12)E(6) mixtures in favor of a surface relatively rich in SDS compared to the solution composition. Different deposition conditions for the polyDMDAAC layer are discussed. In particular, at higher solution polymer concentrations and in the presence of 1 M NaCl, a thicker polymer layer is deposited and the reversibility of the surfactant adsorption is significantly altered.  相似文献   

4.
The adsorption of the surface-active protein hydrophobin, HFBII, and the competitive adsorption of HFBII with the cationic, anionic, and nonionic surfactants hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide, CTAB, sodium dodecyl sulfate, SDS, and hexaethylene monododecyl ether, C(12)E(6), has been studied using neutron reflectivity, NR. HFBII adsorbs strongly at the air-water interface to form a dense monolayer ~30 ? thick, with a mean area per molecule of ~400 ?(2) and a volume fraction of ~0.7, for concentrations greater than 0.01 g/L, and the adsorption is independent of the solution pH. In competition with the conventional surfactants CTAB, SDS, and C(12)E(6) at pH 7, the HFBII adsorption totally dominates the surface for surfactant concentrations less than the critical micellar concentration, cmc. Above the cmc of the conventional surfactants, HFBII is displaced by the surfactant (CTAB, SDS, or C(12)E(6)). For C(12)E(6) this displacement is only partial, and some HFBII remains at the surface for concentrations greater than the C(12)E(6) cmc. At low pH (pH 3) the patterns of adsorption for HFBII/SDS and HFBII/C(12)E(6) are different. At concentrations just below the surfactant cmc there is now mixed HFBII/surfactant adsorption for both SDS and C(12)E(6). For the HFBII/SDS mixture the structure of the adsorbed layer is more complex in the region immediately below the SDS cmc, resulting from the HFBII/SDS complex formation at the interface.  相似文献   

5.
We present a methodology to quantitatively determine the fraction of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) that partitions to the oil/water interface in oil-in-water macroemulsions and calculate the total interfacial area (TIA) through the novel use of filtration through nanoporous membranes. Ultrafiltration was carried out in centrifuge tubes having nanoporous filters with a 30,000 molecular weight cutoff (MWCO), so that emulsion droplets would not pass through, and only SDS (as monomers and micelles) that is in the bulk water phase (i.e., not at the interface) could pass through. The concentration of SDS in the filtrate was determined and used to calculate the TIA for each system. The mean droplet diameter of the emulsions was measured by light scattering. We analyzed the effects of total SDS concentration and oil chain length on the amount of SDS that partitions to the interface, the TIA, and the droplet diameter. The results showed that partitioning of SDS to the oil/water interface increases with increasing total SDS concentration in emulsion systems (i.e., the more SDS we add to the bulk solution, the more SDS partitions to the oil/water interface). However, the surface-to-bulk partition coefficient (i.e., the SDS concentration at the interface divided by the SDS concentration in the aqueous phase) remains the same over the entire concentration range (8-200 mM). The results showed a chain-length compatibility effect in that the minimum amount of SDS partitioned to the interface for C(12) oil. The droplet size measurements revealed a maximum size of droplets for C(12) oil. Penetration of oil molecules into SDS film at the interface has been proposed to account for the maximum droplet size and minimum partitioning of SDS at the oil/water interface for C(12) oil+SDS emulsion system. The TIA, as determined from our ultrafiltration method, was consistently two orders of magnitude greater than that calculated from the droplet size measured by light scattering. Possible explanations for this disparity are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The polyelectrolyte poly(ethylenenimine), PEI, is shown to strongly influence the adsorption of the anionic-nonionic surfactant mixture of sodium dodecyl sulfate, SDS, and monododecyl hexaethylene glycol, C(12)E(6), at the air-solution interface. In the presence of PEI, the partitioning of the mixed surfactants to the interface is highly pH-dependent. The adsorption is more strongly biased to the SDS as the pH increases, as the PEI becomes a weaker polyelectrolyte. At surfactant concentrations >10(-4) M, the strong interaction and adsorption result in multilayer formation at the interface, and this covers a more extensive range of surfactant concentrations at higher pH values. The results are consistent with a strong interaction between SDS and PEI at the surface that is not predominantly electrostatic in origin. It provides an attractive route to selectively manipulate the adsorption and composition of surfactant mixtures at interfaces.  相似文献   

7.
Electron paramagnetic resonance, viscosity, and small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) measurements have been used to study the interaction of mixed anionic/nonionic surfactant micelles with the polyampholytic protein gelatin. Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and the nonionic surfactant dodecylmalono-bis-N-methylglucamide (C12BNMG) were chosen as "interacting" and "noninteracting" surfactants, respectively; SDS micelles bind strongly to gelatin but C12BNMG micelles do not. Further, the two surfactants interact synergistically in the absence of the gelatin. The effects of total surfactant concentration and surfactant mole fraction have been investigated. Previous work (Griffiths et al. Langmuir 2000, 16 (26), 9983-9990) has shown that above a critical solution mole fraction, mixed micelles bind to gelatin. This critical mole fraction corresponds to a micelle surface that has no displaceable water (Griffiths et al. J. Phys. Chem. B 2001, 105 (31), 7465). On binding of the mixed micelle, the bulk solution viscosity increases, with the viscosity-surfactant concentration behavior being strongly dependent on the solution surfactant mole fraction. The viscosity at a stoichiometry of approximately one micelle per gelatin molecule observed in SDS-rich mixtures scales with the surface area of the micelle occupied by the interacting surfactant, SDS. Below the critical solution mole fraction, there is no significant increase in viscosity with increasing surfactant concentration. Further, the SANS behavior of the gelatin/mixed surfactant systems below the critical micelle mole fraction can be described as a simple summation of those arising from the separate gelatin and binary mixed surfactant micelles. By contrast, for systems above the critical micelle mole fraction, the SANS data cannot be described by such a simple approach. No signature from any unperturbed gelatin could be detected in the gelatin/mixed surfactant system. The gelatin scattering is very similar in form to the surfactant scattering, confirming the widely accepted picture that the polymer "wraps" around the micelle surface. The gelatin scattering in the presence of deuterated surfactants is insensitive to the micelle composition provided the composition is above the critical value, suggesting that the viscosity enhancement observed arises from the number and strength of the micelle-polymer contact points rather than the gelatin conformation per se.  相似文献   

8.
Neutron reflectivity, NR, and surface tension have been used to study the adsorption at the air-solution interface of mixtures of the dialkyl chain cationic surfactant dihexadecyl dimethyl ammonium bromide (DHDAB) and the nonionic surfactants monododecyl triethylene glycol (C12E3), monododecyl hexaethylene glycol (C12E6), and monododecyl dodecaethylene glycol (C12E12). The adsorption behavior of the surfactant mixtures with solution composition shows a marked departure from ideal mixing that is not consistent with current theories of nonideal mixing. For all three binary surfactant mixtures there is a critical composition below which the surface is totally dominated by the cationic surfactant. The onset of nonionic surfactant adsorption (expressed as a mole fraction of the nonionic surfactant) increases in composition as the ethylene oxide chain length of the nonionic cosurfactant increases from E3 to E12. Furthermore, the variation in the adsorption is strongly correlated with the variation in the phase behavior of the solution that is in equilibrium with the surface. The adsorbed amounts of DHDAB and the nonionic cosurfactants have been used to estimate the monomer concentration that is in equilibrium with the surface and are shown to be in reasonable qualitative agreement with the variation in the mixed critical aggregation concentration (cac).  相似文献   

9.
The adsorption isotherms onto a hydrophilic silica of mixtures of sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) and of all the oligomers of a polydisperse nonylethylene glycol n-dodecyl ether (C(12)E(9)) surfactant were determined using a high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) technique. Incorporation of the anionic surfactant to the negatively charged silica surface is favored by the adsorption of the nonionic surfactant. Comparison between the adsorption isotherms of mixtures of SDS with a monodisperse C(12)E(9) and a polydisperse C(12)E(9) shows that the adsorption of SDS at the silica/water interface is stronger with the latter material than with the former in a large surface coverage domain. The composition of the surface aggregates and the variation of the oligomer distribution in these aggregates were determined. The previously described phenomena called self-desorption which was observed for the global C(12)E(9) and SDS surfactant mixtures was confirmed: increasing the total concentration at a fixed surfactant ratio induces at high concentration a desorption of the anionic surfactant and all of the less polar oligomers from the solid/water interface. An interpretation scheme is proposed which assumes that the interaction of SDS is larger with the less polar oligomers than with the polar ones. The self-desorption effect could then be considered as the consequence of the polydispersity of the nonionic surfactant and to the net repulsion interaction between SDS and the silica surface as the mole fraction of SDS in the surfactant mixture increases.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of long-chain alcohols (C(n)OH for n=8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18) on the partitioning of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) to the oil/water interface in oil-in-water macroemulsions was investigated and related to emulsion droplet size and total interfacial area (TIA) contributed by SDS. Alcohols were solubilized in hexadecane and emulsified in SDS solutions. Ultrafiltration was carried out in centrifuge tubes having nanoporous filters with a 30,000 molecular weight cutoff (MWCO), so that emulsion droplets would not pass through, and only SDS that is in the bulk water phase as monomers or micelles (i.e., not at the interface) could pass through. The results showed a chain-length compatibility effect; the maximum amount of SDS partitioned to the interface when dodecanol (C(12)OH) was added to the oil. The results also showed that partitioning of SDS is affected only when dodecanol is added. All other alcohols had no significant influence on SDS partitioning to the oil/water interface. Droplet size measurements revealed a minimum in droplet size for emulsions with added C(12)OH. In order to explain the results, it was proposed that the penetration of alcohol molecules into the interfacial film occur at the interface, resulting in more cohesive molecular packing at the interface, and the minimum droplet size and maximum partitioning of SDS at the oil/water interface for C(12)OH/SDS emulsion system. The TIA provided by the SDS molecules, as determined from our ultrafiltration method, was two orders of magnitude greater than that calculated from the droplet size measured by light scattering. Possible explanations for this disparity are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The adsorption of surface-active protein hydrophobin, HFBII, and HFBII/surfactant mixtures at the solid-solution interface has been studied by neutron reflectivity, NR. At the hydrophilic silicon surface, HFBII adsorbs reversibly in the form of a bilayer at the interface. HFBII adsorption dominates the coadsorption of HFBII with cationic and anionic surfactants hexadecyltrimethyl ammonium bromide, CTAB, and sodium dodecyl sulfate, SDS, at concentrations below the critical micellar concentration, cmc, of conventional cosurfactants. For surfactant concentrations above the cmc, HFBII/surfactant solution complex formation dominates and there is little HFBII adsorption. Above the cmc, CTAB replaces HFBII at the interface, but for SDS, there is no affinity for the anionic silicon surface hence there is no resultant adsorption. HFBII adsorbs onto a hydrophobic surface (established by an octadecyl trimethyl silane, OTS, layer on silicon) irreversibly as a monolayer, similar to what is observed at the air-water interface but with a different orientation at the interface. Below the cmc, SDS and CTAB have little impact upon the adsorbed layer of HFBII. For concentrations above the cmc, conventional surfactants (CTAB and SDS) displace most of the HFBII at the interface. For nonionic surfactant C(12)E(6), the pattern of adsorption is slightly different, and although some coadsorption at the interface takes place, C(12)E(6) has little impact on the HFBII adsorption.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Vitamin E is widely used in pharmaceutical, food and cosmetic preparations. This paper discusses methods of preparing a vitamin E emulsion by using sodium N-lauroylsarcosinate (SNLS) ionic surfactant. The amount of vitamin E dissolved in water was analyzed by turbidity and UV absorption measurements. The emulsion droplet size was determined by laser light scattering. Microemulsions with small particle size and high resistance to oxidation in air can be obtained by solubilizing vitamin E in SNLS solution. The dissolution is rapid and the surfactant solution has high solubilization power. At 0.7% surfactant concentration, the saturation value is 1 g vitamin E per gram of surfactant. The micellar dissociation concentration (MDC) of the surfactant can be estimated from a vitamin saturation—surfactant concentration curve. Dissolution mechanisms at different surfactant concentrations are interpreted by use of the MDC and CMC (critical micellar concentration) concepts.  相似文献   

14.
The competitive binding of counterions to anionic dodecyl sulfate ions in aqueous solutions of cesium dodecyl sulfate (CsDS) and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) mixtures, which significantly influences the critical micelle concentration (cmc) and surface (or interfacial) tension of surfactant solutions, was investigated. The cmc and degree of counterion binding were obtained through electrical conductivity measurements. The curve of cmc versus the mole fraction of CsDS in the surfactant mixture was simulated by Rubingh's equations, which enabled us to estimate the interaction parameter in micelles (W R) based on the regular solution approximation. The curve-fitting exhibited a slightly negative value (W R=−0.1), indicating that the mixing (SDS+CsDS) enhances micelle formation owing to a greater interaction between surfactant molecules and counterions than in pure systems (SDS). On going from SDS, SDS:CsDS(75:25), SDS:CsDS(50:50), SDS:CsDS(25:75) to CsDS, interfacial tension at the hexadecane/surfactant-solution interface showed a negative deviation from the mixing rule (interaction parameter in adsorbed film W A=−0.38), indicating the replacement of Na+ bound to anionic dodecyl sulfate by Cs+ ions owing to the stronger interaction between the Cs+ and the dodecyl sulfate ions. Droplet sizes of emulsion formed with hexadecane and aqueous dodecyl sulfate solutions were investigated using the light scattering spectrophotometer. The higher binding capacity of Cs+, having a smaller hydrated ionic size than Na+, also resulted in a negative deviation in emulsion droplet size in mixed systems. Received: 10 May 2000/Accepted: 11 August 2000  相似文献   

15.
The formation of O/W nano-emulsions by the PIT emulsification method in water/mixed nonionic surfactant/oil systems has been studied. The hydrophilic-lipophilic properties of the surfactant were varied by mixing polyoxyethylene 4-lauryl ether (C12E4) and polyoxyethylene 6-lauryl ether (C12E6). Emulsification was performed in samples with constant oil concentration (20 wt%) by fast cooling from the corresponding HLB temperature to 25 degrees C. Nano-emulsions with droplet radius 60-70 nm and 25-30 nm were obtained at total surfactant concentrations of 4 and 8 wt%, respectively. Moreover, droplet size remained practically unchanged, independent of the surfactant mixing ratio, X(C12E6). At 4 wt% surfactant concentration, the polydispersity and instability of nano-emulsions increased with the increase in X(C12E6). However, at 8 wt% surfactant concentration, nano-emulsions with low polydispersity and high stability were obtained in a wide range of surfactant mixing ratios. Phase behavior studies showed that at 4 wt% surfactant concentration, three-liquid phases (W+D+O) coexist at the starting emulsification temperature. Furthermore, the excess oil phase with respect to the microemulsion D-phase increases with the increase in X(C12E6), which could explain the increase in instability. At 8 wt% surfactant concentration, a microemulsion D-phase is present when emulsification starts. The low droplet size and polydispersity and higher stability of these nano-emulsions have been attributed, in addition to the increase in the surface or interfacial activity, to the spontaneous emulsification produced in the microemulsion D-phase.  相似文献   

16.
Surfactant based enhanced oil recovery (EOR) is an interesting area of research for several petroleum researchers. In the present work, individual and mixed systems of anionic and cationic surfactants consisting of sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS) and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) in different molar ratios were tested for their synergistic effect on the crude oil-water interfacial tension (IFT) and enhanced oil recovery performance. The combination of these two surfactant systems showed a higher surface activity as compared to individual surfactants. The effect of mixed surfactant systems on the IFT and critical micellar concentration (CMC) is strongly depends on molar ratios of the two surfactant. Much lower CMC values were observed in case of mixed surfactant systems prepared at different molar ratios as compared to individual surfactant systems. The lowest CMC value was found when the molar concentration of SDS was higher than the CTAB. When the individual and mixed surfacant systems were tested for EOR performance through flooding experiments, higher ultimate oil recovery was obtained from mixed surfactant flooding compared to individual surfactants. Combination of SDS and CTAB or probably other anionic-cationic surfactants show synergism with substantial ability to reduce crude oil water IFT and can be a promising EOR method.  相似文献   

17.
 The interaction of a nonionic polymeric surfactant with an anionic surfactant at the oil–water interface has been studied by its effects on the droplet size, stability and rheology of emulsions. Oil-in-water (o/w) emulsions were prepared using isoparaffinic oil and mixtures of a nonionic polymeric surfactant with an anionic surfactant. The macro-molecular surfactant was a graft copolymer with a backbone of polymethyl methacrylate and grafted polyethylene oxide (a graft copolymer with PEO chains of MW=750). The anionic surfactant was sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). The stabiliza-tion of the emulsion droplets was found to be different when using one or the other surfactant. The mechanism of stabilization of emulsion droplets by the macro-molecular surfactant is of the steric type while the stabilization by anionic surfactant is of the electrostatic repulsion type. Emulsions stabilized with mixtures present both types of stabilization. Other effects on the preparation and stabilization of emulsions were found to be dependent on properties associated with the surfactant molecular weight such as the Marangoni effect and Gibbs elasticity. The initial droplet size of the emulsions showed a synergistic effect of the surfactant combination, showing a minimum for the mixtures compared to the pure components. Emulsion stability also shows a synergistic interaction of both surfactants. Rheological measurements allow for the estimation of the interparticle interaction when measured as a function of volume fraction. Most of the effects observed can be attributed to the differences in interfacial tension and droplet radius produced by both surfactants and their mixtures. The elastic moduli are well explained on the basis of droplet deformation. Ionic versus steric stabilization produce little difference in the observed rheology, the only important differences observed concerned the extent of the linear viscoelasticity region. Received: 22 November 1996 Accepted: 24 March 1997  相似文献   

18.
The interaction of various flavonoids (compounds having C6-C3-C6 configuration) with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) an anionic surfactant was studied through absorption spectroscopy as a function of the concentration of surfactant above and below the critical micelle concentration (CMC) of the surfactant. A mechanism was proposed for the interaction between these flavonoids and anionic surfactants. The approximate number of additive molecules (flavonoids) incorporated per micelle was estimated at a particular concentration of SDS. Incorporation of additive in micelles shifts the UV absorption bands towards higher wavelengths of different magnitude. The spectral shift also depends upon the nature of the surfactant head group. The absorption spectra of the flavonoids in aqueous solution and in methanol are also reported.  相似文献   

19.
The SDS unimer concentration in a series of mixed anionic/non-ionic surfactant solutions comprising sodium dodecylsulphate (SDS) and sugar-based dodecyl bis-N-methyl gluconamides (C12BNMG) have been studied using an anionic surfactant selective electrode, both in the presence and absence of the polyampholyte gelatin. The activity of the SDS has been calculated at the critical micelle concentration (CMC) in the gelatin-free studies and at CMC(1) in the gelatin studies. From the known solution composition, the activity coefficients can be calculated; these show deviations from unity around a solution mole fraction (SDS) of 0.95 SDS in both cases. The deviation is significantly greater in the presence of gelatin, to an extent that the SDS activity versus SDS curve exhibits a maximum and a minimum in the region SDS=0.8–1.0, consistent with the possibility of coexisting micelle types, in agreement with our earlier NMR study (Griffiths et al. (1998) J Chem Soc Chem Comm 1:53).  相似文献   

20.
Properties of binary surfactant systems of nonionic surfactants poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) lauryl ethers (C(12)E(10), C(12)E(23), C(12)E(42)) with a cationic gemini surfactant, butanediyl-α,ω-bis(tetradecyldimethylammonium bromide) (14-4-14), have been investigated by Steady-state Fluorescence (FL), zeta potential, Dynamic Light Scattering (DLS), Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM), Cryogenic Transmission Electron Microscopy (CryoTEM), and X-ray Diffraction (XRD). Through FL measurements, critical micelle concentration (CMC) of the three binary systems for different mixing mole fractions is determined and the values fall between those of pure constituent surfactants. Ideal CMC (CMC(ideal)), mole fraction in aggregates (X), interaction parameter (β), activity coefficients (f(1) and f(2)), and excess free energy of mixing (ΔG(ex)) have been calculated. All these parameters indicate nonideal behavior and synergistic interactions between the constituent surfactants, which is explained in terms of electrostatic attraction between headgroups of constituent surfactants and reduction of electrostatic repulsion between headgroups of 14-4-14 due to the presence of nonionic surfactants. DLS, TEM and CryoTEM results show that nonionic surfactants facilitate the formation of larger aggregates. Micelles and vesicles in larger size compared with those of 14-4-14 coexist in the mixed solutions. Both surfactant composition and PEO chain length are found to play a strong effect on the properties of the binary systems.  相似文献   

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