26 research outputs found
Micellar structure and transformations in sodium alkylbenzenesulfonate (NaLAS) aqueous solutions: effects of concentration, temperature, and salt
We investigate the shape, dimensions, and transformation pathways of micelles of linear sodium alkylbenzenesulfonate (NaLAS), a common anionic surfactant, in aqueous solution. Employing Small Angle Neutron Scattering (SANS) and surface tensiometry, we quantify the effects of surfactant concentration (0.6–15 wt%), temperature (5–40 °C) and added salt (≤0.35 M Na2SO4). Spherical micelles form at low NaLAS (≤2.6 wt%) concentration in water, and become elongated with increasing concentration and decreasing temperature. Addition of salt reduces the critical micelle concentration (CMC) and thus promotes the formation of micelles. At fixed NaLAS concentration, salt addition causes spherical micelles to grow into cylindrical micelles, and then multilamellar vesicles (MLVs), which we examine by SANS and cryo-TEM. Above a threshold salt concentration, the MLVs reach diameters of 100 s of nm to few μm, eventually causing precipitation. While the salt concentrations associated with the micelle-to-cylinder transformation increase only slightly with temperature, those required for the cylinder-to-MLV transformation exhibit a pronounced, linear temperature dependence, which we examine in detail. Our study establishes a solution structure map for this model anionic surfactant in water, quantifying the combined roles of concentration, temperature and salt, at practically relevant conditions
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Liquid-Liquid Phase Separation Induced by Vapor Transfer in Evaporative Binary Sessile Droplets.
Drying of binary sessile droplets consisting of ethanol and octamethyltrisiloxane on a high-energy surface is investigated. During the process of evaporation, the droplets undergo liquid-liquid phase separation, resulting in the appearance of microdroplets at the liquid-air interface, which subsequently violently burst. This phase separation is attributed to water vapor transfer into the droplet, which modifies the solubility and leads to the formation of a ternary mixture. The newly formed ternary mixture may undergo nucleation and growth or spinodal decomposition, depending on the droplet composition path. By control of the relative humidity of air, phase separation can be mitigated or even eliminated. The droplets also display high mobility and complex wetting behavior due to phase separation, with two contracting and two spreading stages. The mass loss experiments reveal that the droplets undergo three distinct drying stages with an enhanced evaporation rate observed during the phase separation stage. A modified diffusion-limited model was employed to predict the evaporation rate, accounting for the physiochemical changes during evaporation and proved to be consistent with experimental observations. The findings of this work enhance our understanding of a coupled fundamental process involving the evaporation of multicomponent mixtures, wetting, and phase separation.ICase award from EPSRC and Unileve
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Scalloped pattern deposition during the spreading and drying of polymer droplets.
Droplets containing polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) dissolved in ethanol display a distinctive scalloped pattern at the rim while spreading and drying on a high-energy surface. Two distinct spreading regimes are observed, leading to the formation of a thin film with a uniform height that extends from the original droplet. An experimental study indicates polymer accumulation at the edge containing trace water, resulting in a surface tension gradient across the droplet, enhancing the droplet's spreading. This fast-spreading film develops a ridge at the contact line and becomes unstable. The influence of evaporation within the droplet shows no significant effect on the wavelength of the instability. Instead, the magnitude of the surface tension gradient and the surface energy of the substrate emerge as the dominant factors influencing the instability. This observation is validated by saturating the environment surrounding the droplet with ethanol vapour to reduce evaporation or employing solvents with low vapour pressure. Additionally, PVP in ethanol droplets deposited on hydrophobic substrates demonstrate a stable and pinned contact line, contrasting the behaviour observed on high-energy surfaces. By identifying the critical overlap concentration of the polymer, the transitional threshold between the scalloped instability and ringlike morphology is determined. The scalloped instability can be suppressed by removing residual water from the solution, eliminating the surface tension gradient, indicating that Marangoni forces are the underlying cause of the observed instability. The long-wave evolution equation, assuming a constant Marangoni shear flow, accurately predicts the most unstable wavelength, demonstrating good agreement with experimental observations.ICase award from EPSRC
ICase award from Unileve
The interaction of charged nanoparticles at interfaces
We study charged nanoparticles adsorbed onto surfactant bilayers using small-angle scattering of synchrotron radiation. The in-plane interaction of the particles is well described by a DLVO component (measured independently in solution) and a repulsive dipolar interaction due to the presence of the interface, with an amplitude close to the theoretical prediction. We prove that charged nanoparticles at soft interfaces are well described by the classical model of Poisson-Boltzmann and van der Waals terms; as a corollary, they do not experience the like-charge attraction reported in the literature for some systems of micron-sized spheres at interfaces