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Thermodynamics, adsorption kinetics and rheology of mixed protein-surfactant interfacial layers
Authors:Cs Kotsmar  VS Alahverdjieva  EV Aksenenko  VI Kovalchuk  ME Leser  R Miller
Institution:a Max-Planck-Institut für Kolloid- und Grenzflächenforschung, Am Mühlenberg 1, 14424 Potsdam, Germany
b Nestlé, PTC Orbe, CH-1350 Orbe, Switzerland
c Institute of Colloid Chemistry and Chemistry of Water, 42 Vernadsky Avenue, 03680 Kyiv (Kiev), Ukraine
d Medical Physicochemical Centre, Donetsk Medical University, 16 Ilych Avenue, 83003 Donetsk, Ukraine
e Institute of Biocolloid Chemistry, 42 Vernadsky Avenue, 03680 Kyiv (Kiev), Ukraine
f Nestlé Research Center, CH-1000 Lausanne 26, Switzerland
g St. Petersburg State University, Chemical Faculty, Universitetsky pr. 2, 198904 St. Petersburg, Russia
Abstract:Depending on the bulk composition, adsorption layers formed from mixed protein/surfactant solutions contain different amounts of protein. Clearly, increasing amounts of surfactant should decrease the amount of adsorbed proteins successively. However, due to the much larger adsorption energy, proteins are rather strongly bound to the interface and via competitive adsorption surfactants cannot easily displace proteins. A thermodynamic theory was developed recently which describes the composition of mixed protein/surfactant adsorption layers. This theory is based on models for the single compounds and allows a prognosis of the resulting mixed layers by using the characteristic parameters of the involved components. This thermodynamic theory serves also as the respective boundary condition for the dynamics of adsorption layers formed from mixed solutions and their dilational rheological behaviour. Based on experimental studies with milk proteins (β-casein and β-lactoglobulin) mixed with non-ionic (decyl and dodecyl dimethyl phosphine oxide) and ionic (sodium dodecyl sulphate and dodecyl trimethyl ammonium bromide) surfactants at the water/air and water/hexane interfaces, the potential of the theoretical tools is demonstrated.The displacement of pre-adsorbed proteins by subsequently added surfactant can be successfully studied by a special experimental technique based on a drop volume exchange. In this way the drop profile analysis can provide tensiometry and dilational rheology data (via drop oscillation experiments) for two adsorption routes — sequential adsorption of the single compounds in addition to the traditional simultaneous adsorption from a mixed solution. Complementary measurements of the surface shear rheology and the adsorption layer thickness via ellipsometry are added in order to support the proposed mechanisms drawn from tensiometry and dilational rheology, i.e. to show that the formation of mixed adsorption layer is based on a modification of the protein molecules via electrostatic (ionic) and/or hydrophobic interactions by the surfactant molecules and a competitive adsorption of the resulting complexes with the free, unbound surfactant. Under certain conditions, the properties of the sequentially formed layers differ from those formed simultaneously, which can be explained by the different locations of complex formation.
Keywords:Thermodynamics of adsorption  Adsorption kinetics  Protein-surfactant mixtures  Liquid interfaces  Surface dilational rheology  Surface shear rheology
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