18 research outputs found

    Abstract P-38: Tunable Soft Networks of Wormlike Micelles and Clay Particles

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    Background: Over the past few decades, there has been a great deal of interest in the aqueous self-assembly of surfactant molecules into giant wormlike micelles (WLMs). These cylindrical aggregates undergo reversible breakdown processes and in favorable cases can grow up to few tens of micrometers that is comparable with the length of high molecular weight polymer. The viscoelastic properties of WLMs can be easily modified by different additives like salts or polymers. A new emerging research area consists of tuning the WLM solution properties by inorganic nanoparticles. It suggests, in particular, the use of networks of entangled WLMs as a matrix for producing soft nanocomposites with different kinds of embedded nanoparticles that are promising for controlled release, template synthesis, and oilfield applications. These materials can combine adaptive rheological properties of the WLM matrix and the functionality of nanofiller. Methods: Rheometry and cryo-transmission electron microscopy were combined to investigate the structure and properties of mixed WLMs of zwitterionic oleylamidopropyl dimethyl betaine and anionic sodium dodecyl sulfate surfactants and platelike particles of bentonite clay. Results: This system demonstrates the formation of giant linear long-lived WLMs, which even at extremely low surfactant concentrations reach a sufficient length to entangle with each other and form a temporally persistent network. The stability of these micelles can be due to electrostatic attraction between the headgroups of the anionic and zwitterionic surfactants and favorable volume/length hydrophobic ratio in the surfactant mixture. At increasing surfactant concentration, the long-lived linear micelles transform into fast-breaking branched micelles. Stable viscoelastic suspensions of clay particles in semi-dilute solutions of WLM were elaborated. They represent a novel type of soft nanocomposite with the tunable matrix. Structural studies revealed that the clay is dispersed in a dense network of entangled WLM in the form of 100-nm tactoids. Rheological investigations demonstrated that clay particles can induce an increase of viscosity and relaxation time by up to one order of magnitude. The effect of the clay becomes more pronounced with increasing content of anionic surfactant, when the micelles become branched. This behavior was explained by the stabilization of micelle-nanoclay junction points due to the screening of the repulsion between positively charged fragments of zwitterionic head groups by added anionic surfactant. Conclusion: The pronounced effect of nanoparticles on the viscoelasticity of the network formed by branched WLMs was observed for the first time. The nanoparticles-WLM junctions were confirmed by cryo-TEM data. The elaborated systems are of interest for many industrial applications

    Microstructure evolution during AlSi10Mg molten alloy/BN microflake interactions in metal matrix composites obtained through 3D printing

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    Utilization of metal/ceramic powders opens new possibilities for 3D printing of metal matrix composites of complex shape with high strength, but it is still a great challenge. In this work, an AlSi10Mg matrix composite embedded with 1 wt.% of hexagonal BN phase microflakes (h-BN) was obtained by means of 3D printing. Then the present study elucidated microstructure evolutions occurring at the h-BN/melt interface during selective laser melting (SLM) of an h-BN-AlSi10Mg powder mixture. During short-term (0.15 ms) high-temperature (∌2900 K) processing the BN inclusions partly dissolved in the Al-Si melt. This process was accompanied by the formation of an AlN phase at the BN surfaces. The AlN crystallites, 100-200 nm in size, had spherical/semispherical shape and formed a continuous layer along the BN/metal grain boundaries. The peculiar growth of AlN grains along the metal/BN interfaces was governed by the specific features of localized N diffusion in the vicinity of interfaces. By contrast, B atoms, released from the dissolved BN phase, were randomly distributed over the melt. AlB2 nanocrystallites (∌10 nm in size) precipitated from the supersaturated Al-Si melt during cooling stage. With the addition of h-BN microflakes, the composite hardness and tensile strength increased by 32% and 28%, respectivelly. The observed experimental results were supported by ab initio molecular dynamics simulations. Our study demonstrates the possibility and wide prospects of obtaining a dense BN/AlSi10Mg material reinforced with h-BN, AlN, and AlB2 phases via SLM 3D printing and sheds a new light on fine morphological and microstructural features of thus obtained new composites

    Double dynamic hydrogels formed by wormlike surfactant micelles and cross-linked polymer

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    Hypothesis: Interpenetrating networks consisting of a polymer network with dynamic cross-links and a supramolecular network allow obtaining hydrogels with significantly enhanced mechanical properties. Experiments: Binary hydrogels composed of a dynamically cross-linked poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) network and a transient network of entangled highly charged mixed wormlike micelles (WLMs) of surfactants (potassium oleate and n-octyltrimethylammonium bromide) were prepared and studied by rheometry, SANS, USANS, cryo-TEM, and NMR spectroscopy. Findings: Binary hydrogels show significantly enhanced rheological properties (a 3400-fold higher viscosity and 27-fold higher plateau modulus) as compared to their components taken separately. This is due to the microphase separation leading to local concentrating of PVA and WLMs providing larger number of polymer–polymer contacts for cross-linking and longer WLMs with more entanglements. Such materials are very promising for the application in many areas, ranging from enhanced oil recovery to biomedical uses

    Two-Ply Composite Membranes with Separation Layers from Chitosan and Sulfoethylcellulose on a Microporous Support Based on Poly(diphenylsulfone-N-phenylphthalimide)

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    Two-ply composite membranes with separation layers from chitosan and sulfoethylcellulose were developed on a microporous support based on poly(diphenylsulfone-N-phenylphthalimide) and investigated by use of X-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscopy methods. The pervaporation properties of the membranes were studied for the separation of aqueous alcohol (ethanol, propan-2-ol) mixtures of different compositions. When the mixtures to be separated consist of less than 15 wt % water in propan-2-ol, the membranes composed of polyelectrolytes with the same molar fraction of ionogenic groups (-NH3+ for chitosan and -SO3− for sulfoethylcellulose) show high permselectivity (the water content in the permeate was 100%). Factors affecting the structure of a non-porous layer of the polyelectrolyte complex formed on the substrate surface and the contribution of that complex to changes in the transport properties of membranes are discussed. The results indicate significant prospects for the use of chitosan and sulfoethylcellulose for the formation of highly selective pervaporation membranes

    Dissection of the Deep-blue Autofluorescence Changes Accompanying Amyloid Fibrillation

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    Pathogenesis of numerous diseases is associated with the formation of amyloid fibrils. Extrinsic fluorescent dyes, including Thioflavin T (ThT), are used to follow the fibrillation kinetics. It has recently been reported that the so-called deep-blue autofluorescence (dbAF) is changing during the aggregation process. However, the origin of dbAF and the reasons for its change remain debatable. Here, the kinetics of fibril formation in model proteins were comprehensively analyzed using fluorescence lifetime and intensity of ThT, intrinsic fluorescence of proteinaceous fluorophores, and dbAF. For all systems, intensity enhancement of the dbAF band with similar spectral parameters (∌350 nm excitation; ∌450 nm emission) was observed. Although the time course of ThT lifetime (indicative of protofibrils formation) coincided with that of tyrosine residues in insulin, and the kinetic changes in the ThT fluorescence intensity (reflecting formation of mature fibrils) coincided with changes in ThT absorption spectrum, the dbAF band started to increase from the beginning of the incubation process without a lag-phase. Our mass-spectrometry data and model experiments suggested that dbAF could be at least partially related to oxidation of amino acids. This study scrutinizes the dbAF features in the context of the existing hypotheses about the origin of this spectral band
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