Publication | Closed Access
CO<sub>2</sub>-Switchable Viscoelastic Fluids Based on a Pseudogemini Surfactant
243
Citations
21
References
2013
Year
Supramolecular AssemblyEngineeringSurfactantsOrganic ChemistryChemistrySoft MatterPseudogemini SurfactantChemical EngineeringRheologySurfactant SolutionMaterials ScienceMicellePhysical ChemistryHost-guest ChemistryViscoplastic FluidPolymer ScienceTmpda MoleculesCo2-switchable WlmsAmphiphilic System
Recent research has highlighted a growing focus on stimuli-responsive surfactant wormlike micelles (WLMs), particularly those with switchability. Here we report CO2-switchable WLMs based on the commercial anionic surfactant sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-1,3-propanediamine (TMPDA) mixed in a mole ratio of 2:1. When CO2 is bubbled into an aqueous mixture of these reactants, the TMPDA molecules are protonated to form quaternary ammonium species, two of which in the same protonated TMPDA molecule "bridge" two SDS molecules by noncovalent electrostatic attraction, behaving like a pseudogemini surfactant and forming viscoelastic WLMs as verified by cryo-TEM. Upon removal of CO2, the quaternized spacers are deprotonated back to tertiary amines, dissociating the pseudogeminis back to conventional SDS molecules that form low-viscosity spherical micelles. Such a reversible sphere-to-worm transition could be repeated several cycles without a loss of response to CO2.
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