Abstract: | We present a neutron scattering study of oriented samples for the lamellar phase of the ternary mixture sodium decyl sulphate/1-decanol/water. Diffuse scatterings are observed, around the Bragg reflections and away from them, which show that the structure of this lamellar phase deviates from the periodic stacking of infinite homogeneous lamellae of water and amphiphilic molecules usually proposed for the structure of lamellar phases. The nature of this deviation evolves with the soap/decanol ratio, according to the location of the sample in the lamellar domain of the phase diagram. In the middle of the domain the deviation relates to the organization of the lamellar stacking, without apparent modification of the structure of the lamellae of amphiphiles. Moving away from the middle, for higher soap/decanol ratios, the structure of the lamellae appears to be randomly perturbed, eventually by the presence of a few water regions piercing them. When the boundary of the lamellar domain is approached, for still higher soap/decanol ratios, the density of these peturbations increases and they start to be correlated over limited distances, within the lamellae and from lamella to lamella. The local symmetry of these short range correlations is such that these perturbations may be seen as structural fluctuations which may be seen as precursors of the transformation of the lamellar phase into a neighbouring phase on the phase diagram. This phenomenon is discussed briefly in relation to the structural fluctuations of the relative concentrations of sodium decyl sulphate and decanol within the aggregates. |