Abstract:
The work reported herein deals with the aqueous behavior of hydrocarbon and/or fluorocarbon ionic and nonionic
surfactants mixtures. These mixtures were studied using potentiometric techniques in NaBr (0.1 mol L-1) aqueous
solution as well as in pure water. Mixed micelles were formed from a cationic surfactant (dodecyl or
tetradecyltrimethylammonium bromide respectively called DTABr or TTABr) and neutral lactobionamide surfactants
bearing a hydrogenated dodecyl chain (H12Lac) or a fluorinated chain (CF3-(CF2)5-(CH2)2- or CF3-(CF2)7-
(CH2)2-). We showed that concentrations of ionic and nonionic surfactants in the monomeric form as well as the
composition of the mixed micelles can be specified thanks to a potentiometric technique. The complete characterization
does not request any model of micellization a priori. The activities of the micellar phase constituents, as well as the
free enthalpies of mixing, were calculated. The subsequent interpretation only relies on the experimental characterization.
Comparison of the behaviors of the various systems with a model derived from the regular solution theory reveals
the predominant part of electrostatic interactions in the micellization phenomenon. It also appears that the energy of
interaction between hydrogenated and fluorinated chains is unfavorable to mixing and is of much lower magnitude
than the electric charges interactions.
Description:
Langmuir, 2007, 23 (23), pp 11465–11474
DOI: 10.1021/la701579e
Publication Date (Web): October 13, 2007