Titration microcalorimetry is used to study the influences of iodide, bromide, and chloride counterions on the aggregation of vesicle-forming 1-methyl-4-(2-pentylheptyl)pyridinium halide surfactants. Formation of vesicles by these surfactants was characterised using transmission electron microscopy.
Effect of Counterion Structure on Micellar Growth of Alkylpyridinium Surfactants in Aqueous Solution
β Scribed by Koos Bijma; Elisabeth Rank; Jan B.F.N. Engberts
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 438 KB
- Volume
- 205
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9797
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This paper describes the influence of counterions on the unidirectional growth of micelles formed by alkylpyridinium surfactants in aqueous solution. It is shown that the growth of spherical micelles to form wormlike micelles is strongly dependent on counterion structure. More hydrophobic counterions induce the formation of wormlike micelles at lower surfactant concentrations. Next to hydrophobicity and the type of substituent, the substitution pattern of the aromatic ring plays the most important role in micellar growth. The formation of a network of entangled, elongated wormlike micelles by alkylpyridinium surfactants with o-hydroxybenzoate and p-chlorobenzoate counterions is discussed in terms of surfactant structure. It is concluded that, next to counterion structure, the microenvironment of the counterion (substituent) in the Stern region and the structure of the surfactant monomer (i.e., the surfactant cation) play the most important role in the formation of these elongated wormlike micelles. Headgroup effects are proposed to be the main driving force for this phenomenon.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
EMF measurements have been performed to study the influence of counterions in aqueous solutions of ionic surfactants in which the amphiphile is an n-alkyltrimethylammonium cation. General rules of variation were observed for the activities of the amphiphilic ion and the counterion, as a function of
Mixed micellar properties of nonionic saccharides (n-decyllactobionamide, C10Glu2; n-dodecyllactobionamide, C12Glu2) and anionic fluorocarbon surfactants (lithium perfluorooctanesulfonate, LiFOS) in aqueous solutions have been studied by means of surface tensiometry, NMR, and light scattering. The i