Molecular Interactions between Lecithin and Bile Salts/Acids
in Oils and Their Effects on Reverse Micellization
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Abstract
It has been known that the addition
of bile salts to lecithin organosols
induces the formation of reverse wormlike micelles and that the worms
are similar to long polymer chains that entangle each other to form
viscoelastic solutions. In this study, we further investigated the
effects of different bile salts and bile acids on the growth of lecithin
reverse worms in cyclohexane and <i>n</i>-decane. We utilized
rheological and small-angle scattering techniques to analyze the properties
and structures of the reverse micelles. All of the bile salts can
transform the originally spherical lecithin reverse micelles into
wormlike micelles and their rheological behaviors can be described
by the single-relaxation-time Maxwell model. However, their efficiencies
to induce the worms are different. In contrast, before phase separation,
bile acids can induce only short cylindrical micelles that are not
long enough to impart viscoelasticity. We used Fourier transform infrared
spectroscopy to investigate the interactions between lecithin and
bile salts/acids and found that different bile salts/acids employ
different functional groups to form hydrogen bonds with lecithin.
Such effects determine the relative positions of the bile salts/acids
in the headgroups of lecithin, thus resulting in varying efficiencies
to alter the effective critical packing parameter for the formation
of wormlike micelles. This work highlights the importance of intermolecular
interactions in molecular self-assembly