Core-shell lattices with a polystyrene core and a polystyrene/butyl acrylate shell with more than 40% solid contents were produced using a combination of sodium dodecyl maleate hemiester as anionic surfactant and styrenic block copolymer of butylene oxide and ethylene oxide as nonionic surfactant. S
Kinetics of Compositional Ripening in Emulsions Stabilized with Nonionic Surfactants
✍ Scribed by Alejandro A. Peña; Clarence A. Miller
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 129 KB
- Volume
- 244
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9797
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The rates of solubilization of single n-decane/squalane drops were measured in solutions of the pure nonionic surfactant C 12 E 8 containing different amounts of solubilized decane at 22 • C. Solubilization of squalane was negligible for these conditions. The results showed that mass-transfer rates of decane were controlled by interfacial phenomena, not by diffusion in the micellar solution, when transfer was either from drop to solution or vice versa. Good agreement with experimental data was obtained by using a model which assumed that the decane/squalane drops were ideal solutions. This model based on interface-controlled mass transfer was extended to describe the behavior of mixed emulsions stabilized with nonionic surfactants. Predictions of time variation of drop sizes for a particular mixed emulsion studied by B. P. Binks et al.
[Langmuir 14, 5402 (1998)] were in better agreement with the experimental data than those of the authors' model based on diffusion control.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The influence of oil type (n-hexadecane, 1-decanol, n-decane), droplet composition (hexadecane:decanol), and emulsifier type (Tween 20, gum arabic) on droplet growth in oil-in-water emulsions was studied. Droplet size distributions of emulsions were measured over time (0-120 h) by laser diffraction
The effect of nonionic surfactant (H(OCH2-CH2)8-OC6H4-C9H19) on the stability of liquid crystal-in-water dispersions stabilized by copolymers of acrylamide with hydrophobic monomers have been studied. It was observed that the addition of surfactant increases the stability of liquid crystal (LC) disp