Nanoemulsions and microemulsions are environments where oil and water can be solubilized in one another to provide a unique platform for many different biological and industrial applications. Nanoemulsions, unlike microemulsions, have seen little work done to characterize molecular interactions at their surfaces. This study provides a detailed investigation of the near-surface molecular structure of regular (oil in water) and reverse (water in oil) nanoemulsions stabilized with the surfactant dioctyl sodium sulfosuccinate (AOT). Vibrational sum-frequency scattering spectroscopy (VSFSS) is used to measure the vibrational spectroscopy of these AOT stabilized regular and reverse nanoemulsions. Complementary studies of AOT adsorbed at the planar oil-water interface are conducted with vibrational sum-frequency spectroscopy (VSFS). Jointly, these give comparative insights into the orientation of interfacial water and the molecular characterization of the hydrophobic and hydrophilic regions of AOT at the different oil-water interfaces. Whereas the polar region of AOT and surrounding interfacial water molecules display nearly identical behavior at both the planar and droplet interface, there is a clear difference in hydrophobic chain ordering even when possible surface concentration differences are taken into account. This chain ordering is found to be invariant as the nanodroplets grow by Ostwald ripening and also with substitution of different counterions (Na:AOT, K:AOT, and Mg:AOT) that consequently also result in different sized nanoparticles. The results paint a compelling picture of surfactant assembly at these relatively large nanoemulsion surfaces and allow for an important comparison of AOT at smaller micellar (curved) and planar oil-water interfaces.nanoemulsions | oil-water interfaces | vibrational sum-frequency scattering spectroscopy | surface spectroscopy | surfactants W e are all familiar with the adage that "oil and water do not mix," but of course, it depends upon the definition of "mix." Emulsions are an important special case, where the oil is dispersed as tiny droplets in the aqueous phase, taxonomically called a regular emulsion, or where the water is dispersed as tiny droplets throughout the oil phase, called a reverse emulsion. Because both emulsions are thermodynamically unstable, overcoming this requires an emulsifying agent such as a surfactant. Recently, there has been interest in surfactant-stabilized emulsions with droplet diameters in the nanoscale range for unique applications in drug delivery (1, 2) and oil recovery (3, 4) and as nanoreactors to produce materials ranging from polymers to quantum dots (5). Regular or reverse emulsions with droplet diameters in the range of 10-1,000 nm are called nanoemulsions. Little is known about the processes or molecular structures that result in their stability via surfactants. Even less is known about the structure-function relationship, which is crucial to determine the best surfactant for a given nanoemulsion application. Their utility hinges on a ...
The synergistic adsorption of polymers with surfactants at the oil/water interface has applications that range from oil remediation to targeted drug delivery. However, the inherent inaccessibility of the buried oil/water interface has challenged the development of a molecular-level understanding of the structure-function relationship of these systems. This study uses vibrational sum frequency spectroscopy to examine the molecular structure, orientation, and electrostatic effects of synergistic adsorption of the surfactant cetrimonium bromide (CTAB) and polymer poly(acrylic acid) (PAA) at a planar oil/water interface. Results demonstrate that coadsorption leads to a high degree of interfacial ordering of both the polymer and the surfactant and a subsequent alteration of the interfacial water bonding and orientation. Complementary zeta potential measurements provide further information about how surface partitioning of a charged polymer and a surfactant relates to their aggregation behavior in a bulk solution. With the CTAB concentration fixed but the PAA concentration variable, hydrophobic interactions result in a modest synergic coadsorption when CTAB is in excess. However, when the PAA carboxylate monomer concentration approaches that of CTAB, the electrostatic interactions between the components change the structure and increase the amount of adsorbed PAA until the interfacial charge is neutralized. This work reveals that the synergic adsorption behavior of this model polyacid/surfactant system arises from a combination of concentration-dependent hydrophobic and electrostatic forces working in tandem.
The strong synergistic adsorption of mixed polymer/surfactant (P/S) systems at the oil/water interface shows promise for applications such as oil remediation and emulsion stabilization, especially with respect to the formation of tunable mesoscopic multilayers. There is some evidence that a combination of dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide (DTAB) and sodium poly(styrenesulfonate) (PSS) exhibits the adsorption of a secondary P/S layer, though the structure of this layer has long eluded researchers. The focus of this study is to determine whether the DTAB-assisted adsorption of PSS at the oil/water interface occurs as a single layer or with subsequent multilayers. The study presented uses vibrational sum-frequency spectroscopy and interfacial tensiometry to determine the degree of PSS adsorption and orientation of its charged groups relative to the interface at three representative concentrations of DTAB. At low and intermediate DTAB concentrations, a single mixed DTAB/PSS monolayer adsorbs at the oil/water interface. No PSS adsorbs above the system critical micelle concentration. The interfacial charge is found to be similar to that of P/S complexes solvated in the aqueous solution. The surface adsorbate and P/S complexes in the bulk both exhibit a charge inversion at around the same DTAB concentration. This study demonstrates the importance of techniques which can differentiate between coadsorbing species and calls into question current models of P/S adsorption at an oil/water interface.
Strongly adsorbing polymer/surfactant (P/S) combinations have been proposed for long-term applications such as emulsion stabilization. However, P/S systems are known to exhibit nonequilibrium behavior despite steady-state surface characteristics. This work examines the coadsorption of dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide and sodium poly(styrene sulfonate) (PSS) using oil/water tensiometry, UV absorption, and vibrational sum frequency spectroscopy. To determine which features do not represent true equilibrium, the molecular details of PSS adsorption are compared for fresh and aged samples. At surfactant concentrations concurrent with bulk precipitation, significant differences between fresh and aged samples indicate that the strong initial coadsorption within this system is a nonequilibrium feature. We conclude that the long equilibration timescales arise from the slow assembly of non-adsorbing polyelectrolyte/micelle complexes below the critical micelle concentration. This study resolves a recent debate regarding system equilibria of surface-active P/S combinations at a water surface.
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