Publication | Closed Access
Effect of Added Salt and Poly(ethylene glycol) on the Phase Behavior of a Balanced AOT−Water−Oil System
22
Citations
38
References
1999
Year
Materials ScienceChemical EngineeringEthylene GlycolBalanced Aot−water−oil SystemEngineeringPhase EquilibriumNatural SciencesInterfacial PhenomenonMicelleMicroemulsionPhysical ChemistryInterfacial PhenomenaChemistryAdded SaltSoft MatterAot MonolayerInterfacial ChemistryBending Rigidity κ
The phase behavior of AOT−water−NaCl−poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG; Mw = 20 000)−isooctane mixtures at equal volumes of water and oil has been systematically explored as a function of AOT, NaCl, and PEG concentrations. The effect of adding PEG is in many respects similar to that of adding salt although the changes are less pronounced. Each additive, taken separately, shifts the phase behavior to higher temperature, promotes the formation of bicontinuous microemulsions, and induces a lamellar-to-bicontinuous microemulsion phase transition. The simultaneous presence of both additives enhances the effect of salt. These phase behavior results suggest that the two variables salt and PEG act in the same direction on the spontaneous curvature C0, the bending rigidity κ, and the Gaussian bending modulus κ of the AOT monolayer.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1