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1.
Langmuir ; 35(25): 8333-8343, 2019 Jun 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31124690

RESUMO

We studied the dynamics of a cationic surfactant monolayer, Gemini 12-2-12, at the air?water interface for surfactant aqueous solutions at concentrations below the critical micelle concentration. We present surface rheology experiments performed in a Langmuir trough by the oscillatory barrier technique. From these, we found negative surface viscosities at certain frequencies. We demonstrate that this unphysical result is a consequence of an unconsidered surfactant dynamics within the interfacial region. By surface pressure relaxation experiments, after a sudden modification of the interfacial area and by dynamic surface tension and surface potential measurements, several relaxation phenomena and relaxation times were identified. We found that surfactant adsorption and desorption processes are asymmetric: the characteristic times and the number of processes involved in the mechanisms of adsorption and desorption are different. This asymmetry invalidates the usual data analysis procedure that leads to the negative viscosities. Similar mechanisms could be at the origin of the negative viscosities reported in other systems, a possibility that remains to be explored.

2.
Langmuir ; 34(31): 9252-9263, 2018 08 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29986590

RESUMO

We have studied emulsions made with two- and three-phase oil-water-surfactant systems in which one of the phases is a microemulsion, the other phases being water or/and oil excess phases. Such systems have been extensively studied in the 1970-1980s for applications in enhanced oil recovery. It was found at that time that the emulsions became very unstable in the three-phase systems, but so far few explanations have been proposed. In the most complete one, Kabalnov and colleagues related the emulsion stability to the probability of hole nucleation in the liquid film separating two nearby emulsion drops and associated this probability to the curvature elastic energy of the surfactant layer covering drop surfaces. We propose a different explanation, linked to another type of interfacial elastic energy, associated with compression of the surfactant layers. As found long ago, the three-phase systems are found near optimum formulation (hydrophile lipophile difference, HLD = 0), where the interfacial tension exhibits a deep minimum. The determination of interfacial elastic properties in low interfacial tension systems is not straightforward. In our present work, we used a spinning drop tensiometer with an oscillating rotation velocity. We show that the interfacial compression elastic modulus and viscosity also exhibit a minimum at optimum formulation. We propose that this minimum is related to the acceleration of the surfactant exchanges between the interface, oil and water, near the optimum formulation. Furthermore, we find that the surfactant partitions close to equally between oil and water at the optimum, as in earlier studies. The interfacial tension gradients that slow the thinning of liquid films between drops are reduced by surfactant exchanges between drops and the interface, which are fast whatever the type of drop, oil or water; film thinning is therefore very rapid, and emulsions are almost as unstable as in the absence of surfactant.

3.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 519: 27-37, 2018 Jun 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29477897

RESUMO

When surfactants adsorb at liquid interfaces, they not only decrease the surface tension, they confer rheological properties to the interfaces. There are two types of rheological parameters associated to interfacial layers: compression and shear. The elastic response is described by a storage modulus and the dissipation by a loss modulus or equivalently a surface viscosity. Various types of instruments are available for the measurements of these coefficients, the most common being oscillating pendent drops instruments and rheometers equipped with bicones. These instruments are applicable to systems with large enough interfacial tensions, typically above a few mN/m. We use a new type of instrument based on spinning drop oscillations, allowing to extend the interfacial rheology studies to low and ultralow interfacial tension systems. We present examples of measurements with systems of high and low tension, discuss the possible artifacts and demonstrate the capability of this new technique. We emphasize that the data shown for low interfacial tensions are the first reported in the literature. The instrument is potentially interesting for instance in enhanced oil recovery or demulsification studies.

4.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 292(2): 544-7, 2005 Dec 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16009369

RESUMO

We report results of drainage in aqueous foams of small bubble size D (D=180 microm) prepared with SDS-dodecanol solutions. We have performed free-drainage experiments in which local drainage rates are measured by electrical conductivity and by light scattering techniques. We have investigated the role of the surfactant-cosurfactant mass ratio on the drainage regime. The results confirm that a drainage regime corresponding to a high surface mobility can indeed be found for such small bubbles, and show that an increase in the cosurfactant content can induce a transition to a low surface mobility drainage regime. We show that the transition is not linked to variations of the bulk properties, but rather to variations of the interfacial properties. However, the results show that the added amount of dodecanol to trigger the transition is quite high, evidencing that the relevant control parameter for drainage regimes includes both bubble size and interfacial contributions.


Assuntos
Dodecanol/química , Dodecilsulfato de Sódio/química , Tensoativos/química , Gases , Tamanho da Partícula , Soluções/química , Propriedades de Superfície , Água/química
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