2 research outputs found

    Self-Assembly of Lysine-Based Dendritic Surfactants Modeled by the Self-Consistent Field Approach

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    Implementing a united atom model, we apply self-consistent field theory to study structure and thermodynamic properties of spherical micelles composed of surfactants that combine an alkyl tail with a charged lysine-based dendritic headgroup. Following experiments, the focus was on dendron surfactants with varying tail length and dendron generations G0, G1, G2. The heads are subject to acetylation modification which reduces the charge and hydrophilicity. We establish a reasonable parameter set which results in semiquantitative agreement with the available experiments. The critical micellization concentration, aggregation number, and micelle size are discussed. The strongly charged dendronic surfactants micelles are stable for generation numbers G0 and G1, for progressively higher ionic strengths. Associates of G2 surfactants are very small and can only be found at extreme surfactant concentration and salt strengths. Micelles of corresponding weaker charged acetylated variants exist up to G2, tolerate significantly lower salt concentrations, but lose the spherical micelle topology for G0 at high ionic strengths

    Effect of an asymmetry of branching on structural characteristics of dendrimers revealed by Brownian dynamics simulations

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    Dendrimers in dilute solution with asymmetry of branching were simulated by the Brownian dynamics method. In this simulation a coarse-grained dendrimer model and athermal solvent conditions were implemented, extending previous work to a wider range of branch asymmetries at fixed average spacer lengths and high generation numbers close to the theoretical limit. We considered both global and local structural characteristics of dendrimers. The global ones, such as the average distance of ends from the center, the radius of gyration, the hydrodynamic radius and the dendrimer shape anisotropy, are practically insensitive to the asymmetry of branching. The effect of the spacer asymmetry is revealed mainly in the local structure of dendrimers. In particular the radial density profile changes its shape from a convex to a concave one with an increase of the asymmetry. As compared to symmetrical case, the distribution of terminal monomer units in asymmetrical dendrimers shifts towards the dendrimers periphery. The terminal monomers in an asymmetrical dendrimer are on average in a denser environment compared to their symmetrical analogs. The shorter spacers are less stretched and more turned back to the core than the longer ones located at the same topological distance from the dendrimer periphery. The simulations also demonstrated that the asymmetry of branching leads to a smaller radial overlap of dendron fragments inside the dendrimer as compared to the symmetrical case. However, the total overlap was found to be independent of the asymmetry of branching
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