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Mixing of Partially Fluorinated Carboxylic Acids with Their Hydrocarbon Analogs at the Air–Water Interface

✍ Scribed by Hans-Joachim Lehmler; Paul M. Bummer


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
132 KB
Volume
249
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9797

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✦ Synopsis


The mixing behavior of 1-(perfluorobutyl)undecanoic acid-pentadecanoic acid (C15), 1-(perfluorohexyl)undecanoic acid-heptadecanoic acid (C17), and 1-(perfluorooctyl) undecanoic acid-nonadecanoic acid (C19) mixtures was investigated at the air-water interface. The compression isotherms of the fluorocarbon acid-hydrocarbon acid mixtures were recorded at various compositions on hydrochloric acid (pH 1.9, 37+/-2 degrees C) as a subphase. The phase transition, limiting molecular area, area at collapse pressure, and collapse pressure were determined for all pi-A isotherms. The mixing behavior was assessed by analyzing the concentration dependence of the average molecular area at constant film pressure (area/mole fraction or A-X diagram) and the concentration dependence of the phase transition, where possible. All three acid mixtures show a negative deviation from ideal behavior at surface pressures between 5 and 20 mN/m, which is indicative of an attractive interaction of both compounds in the mixed monolayer at the air-water interface. The miscibility apparently decreases with increasing chain length of the carboxylic acids (C15>C17>C19).