Publication | Closed Access
Dielectric and Calorimetric Characteristics of Bound and Free Water in Surfactant-Based Systems
19
Citations
128
References
2002
Year
EngineeringWettingExperimental ThermodynamicsChemistrySoft MatterSolution (Chemistry)PolymersChemical EngineeringFluid PropertiesHydration BehaviorAnalytical ChemistrySurfactant-based SystemsPolymer ChemistryBiophysicsEthylene OxideSurfactant SolutionBound Water MoleculesSurface TensionCalorimetric CharacteristicsPhysical ChemistryPolymer AnalysisFree WaterPhysicochemical AnalysisInterfacial PhenomenonSurface ScienceApplied PhysicsPolymer SciencePolymer CharacterizationThermophysical Property
ABSTRACT The hydration behavior of the system polyoxyethylene (10) oleylalcohol [C18:1 (EO)10 or Brij 97]/water/dodecane/butanol (model system B) was investigated along a dilution line for which the respective weight ratio of dodecane:butanol:Brij 97 is 3:3:4. Two experimental methods were applied: time domain dielectric spectroscopy (TDDS) and sub-zero temperature differential scanning calorimetry (SZT-DSC). Two types of bound water (with melting peaks at -25 and -11°C) were detected by SZT-DSC (using the endothermic mode), whereas TDDS revealed only one such type. Nevertheless, roughly the same total amount of bound water was estimated from these two techniques. The average number of bound water molecules per ethylene oxide (EO) group, NW/EO is 2.3 (TDDS data) or 2.5 (SZT-DSC data) in good agreement with the observation that 1–2 water layers are formed in the hydration of ethoxylated surfactants. We have also shown that butanol is involved in the formation of the bound water that melts at -25°C. We suggest that butanol molecules occupy binding sites within the second hydration shell, thereby reducing the expected total bound water content.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1