We propose a model for the liquid-liquid phase transition observed in osmotic
pressure measurements of certain charged lamellae-forming amphiphiles. The
model free energy combines mean-field electrostatic and phenomenological
non-electrostatic interactions, while the number of dissociated counterions is
treated as a variable degree of freedom that is determined self-consistently.
The model, therefore, joins two well-known theories: the Poisson-Boltzmann
theory for ionic solutions between charged lamellae, and
Langmuir-Frumkin-Davies adsorption isotherm modified to account for charged
adsorbing species. Minimizing the appropriate free energy for each
interlamellar spacing, we find the ionic density profiles and the resulting
osmotic pressure. While in the simple Poisson-Boltzmann theory the osmotic
pressure isotherms are always smooth, we observe a discontinuous liquid-liquid
phase transition when Poisson-Boltzmann theory is self-consistently augmented
by Langmuir-Frumkin-Davies adsorption. This phase transition depends on the
area per amphiphilic headgroup, as well as on non-electrostatic interactions of
the counterions with the lamellae, and interactions between counterion-bound
and counterion-dissociated surfactants. Coupling lateral phase transition in
the bilayer plane with electrostatic interactions in the bulk, our results
offer a qualitative explanation for the existence of the phase-transition of
DDABr (didodecyldimethylammonium bromide), but its apparent absence for the
chloride and the iodide homologues. More quantitative comparisons with
experiment require better understanding of the microscopic basis of the
phenomenological model parameters.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure