1 research outputs found
Pressure-Responsive, Surfactant-Free CO<sub>2</sub>‑Based Nanostructured Fluids
Microemulsions
are extensively used in advanced material and chemical
processing. However, considerable amounts of surfactant are needed
for their formulation, which is a drawback due to both economic and
ecological reasons. Here, we describe the nanostructuration of recently
discovered surfactant-free, carbon dioxide (CO<sub>2</sub>)-based
microemulsion-like systems in a water/organic-solvent/CO<sub>2</sub> pressurized ternary mixture. “Water-rich” nanodomains
embedded into a “water-depleted” matrix have been observed
and characterized by the combination of Raman spectroscopy, molecular
dynamics simulations, and small-angle neutron scattering. These single-phase
fluids show a reversible, pressure-responsive nanostructuration; the
“water-rich” nanodomains at a given pressure can be
instantaneously degraded/expanded by increasing/decreasing the pressure,
resulting in a reversible, rapid, and homogeneous mixing/demixing
of their content. This pressure-triggered responsiveness, together
with other inherent features of these fluids, such as the absence
of any contaminant in the ternary mixture (<i>e</i>.<i>g</i>., surfactant), their spontaneous formation, and their
solvation capability (enabling the dissolution of both hydrophobic
and hydrophilic molecules), make them appealing complex fluid systems
to be used in molecular material processing and in chemical engineering