The partitioning of salt (chlorides of Na, K, Ca, Mg) between an excess water phase and a microemulsion phase were studied for two five-component anionic microemulsion systems at 20°C. Three-phase microemulsions contain two phases that include inorganic salts, that is, excess brine and the microemul
Partitioning of Salt in Winsor II Microemulsion Systems with an Anionic Surfactant and the Consequences for the Phase Behavior
✍ Scribed by George A. Van Aken; J.Theo G. Overbeek; Phil L. De Bruijn; Henk N.W. Lekkerkerker
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 481 KB
- Volume
- 157
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9797
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✦ Synopsis
The distribution of salt between the microemulsion phase and the excess aqueous phase for Winsor II type equilibria is studied experimentally. It has been observed that the salt concentration in the excess phase is significantly higher than the salt concentration in the initial aqueous phase before mixing with the oil phase. This implies that the average salt concentration in the water-rich regions of the microemulsion is smaller than the salt concentration in the excess phase. Under certain conditions the dispersed aqueous region is essentially salt-free. This highly unequal distribution of salt is due to the negative adsorption of coions. It can be quantitatively explained with the Gouy-Chapman-Stern theory adapted for spherical electrical double layers. Because of this unequal distribution of salt the initial solution of salt in water may not be regarded as a pseudocomponent of the system. The consequences of this phenomenon for the phase behavior of microemulsion systems are discussed, and in fact these appear to be of major importance to the ultimate interpretation of the phase behavior. 1993 Academic Press, Inc.
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Microemulsion phase behavior was studied as a function of salinity and temperature. The objectives were to investigate the influence of different electrolytes on optimal salinity and solubilization, and to relate the efficiency of each cation to change in microemulsion phase behavior. Two five-compo