1,319 research outputs found

    Kinetics of Surfactant Adsorption at Fluid-Fluid Interfaces

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    We present a theory for the kinetics of surfactant adsorption at the interface between an aqueous solution and another fluid (air, oil) phase. The model relies on a free-energy formulation. It describes both the diffusive transport of surfactant molecules from the bulk solution to the interface, and the kinetics taking place at the interface itself. When applied to non-ionic surfactant systems, the theory recovers results of previous models, justify their assumptions and predicts a diffusion-limited adsorption, in accord with experiments. For salt-free ionic surfactant solutions, electrostatic interactions are shown to drastically affect the kinetics. The adsorption in this case is predicted to be kinetically limited, and the theory accounts for unusual experimental results obtained recently for the dynamic surface tension of such systems. Addition of salt to an ionic surfactant solution leads to screening of the electrostatic interactions and to a diffusion-limited adsorption. In addition, the free-energy formulation offers a general method for relating the dynamic surface tension to surface coverage without relying on equilibrium relations.Comment: 36 pages, latex, 10 figure

    Self-Assembly in Mixtures of Polymers and Small Associating Molecules

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    The interaction between a flexible polymer in good solvent and smaller associating solute molecules such as amphiphiles (surfactants) is considered theoretically. Attractive correlations, induced in the polymer because of the interaction, compete with intra-chain repulsion and eventually drive a joint self-assembly of the two species, accompanied by partial collapse of the chain. Results of the analysis are found to be in good agreement with experiments on the onset of self-assembly in diverse polymer-surfactant systems. The threshold concentration for self-assembly in the mixed system (critical aggregation concentration, cac) is always lower than the one in the polymer-free solution (critical micelle concentration, cmc). Several self-assembly regimes are distinguished, depending on the effective interaction between the two species. For strong interaction, corresponding experimentally to oppositely charged species, the cac is much lower than the cmc. It increases with ionic strength and depends only weakly on polymer charge. For weak interaction, the cac is lower but comparable to the cmc, and the two are roughly proportional over a wide range of cmc values. Association of small molecules with amphiphilic polymers exhibiting intra-chain aggregation (polysoaps) is gradual, having no sharp onset.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, RevTex, the published version, see also cond-mat/990305

    Swelling kinetics of the onion phase

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    A theory is presented for the behavior of an array of multi-lamellar vesicles (the onion phase) upon addition of solvent. A unique feature of this system is the possibility to sustain pressure gradients by tension in the lamellae. Tension enables the onions to remain stable beyond the unbinding point of a flat lamellar stack. The model accounts for various concentration profiles and interfaces developing in the onion as it swells. In particular, densely packed `onion cores' are shown to appear, as observed in experiments. The formation of interfaces and onion cores may represent an unusual example of stabilization of curved interfaces in confined geometry.Comment: 13 pages, 10 PS figures, LaTeX using SVJour, submitted to Eur Phys J

    Kinetics of Surfactant Adsorption at Fluid-Fluid Interfaces: Surfactant Mixtures

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    The adsorption at the interface between an aqueous solution of several surface-active agents and another fluid (air or oil) phase is addressed theoretically. We derive the kinetic equations from a variation of the interfacial free energy, solve them numerically and provide an analytic solution for the simple case of a linear adsorption isotherm. Calculating asymptotic solutions analytically, we find the characteristic time scales of the adsorption process and observe the behavior of the system at various temporal stages. In particular, we relate the kinetic behavior of the mixture to the properties of its individual constituents and find good agreement with experiments. In the case of kinetically limited adsorption, the mixture kinetics is found to be considerably different from that of the single-surfactant solutions because of strong coupling between the species.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures, to be published in Langmui

    Kinetics of Surfactant Adsorption at Fluid/Fluid Interfaces: Non-ionic Surfactants

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    We present a model treating the kinetics of adsorption of soluble surface-active molecules at the interface between an aqueous solution and another fluid phase. The model accounts for both the diffusive transport inside the solution and the kinetics taking place at the interface using a free-energy formulation. In addition, it offers a general method of calculating dynamic surface tensions. Non-ionic surfactants are shown, in general, to undergo a diffusion-limited adsorption, in accord with experimental findings.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, see also cond-mat/960814

    Food Environments Near Home and School Related to Consumption of Soda and Fast Food

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    Outlines how retail food environments affect adolescents' consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages and fast food, including county-by-county variations. Discusses implications for health outcomes and policy recommendations improve food environments

    Reply to Comment on: "Are stress-free membranes really 'tensionless'?"

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    This is a reply to a comment on the paper arXiv:1204.2075 "Are stress-free membranes really tensionless ?" (EPL 95,28008 (2011))

    Obesity and Diabetes: Two Growing Epidemics in California

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    Analyzes the 2001-07 increase in obesity and diabetes prevalence by race/ethnicity, age, income, education, and years lived in the United States. Outlines policy implications of the disproportionate effect on people of color, the poor, and less educated
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