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1.
Soft Matter ; 12(34): 7150-8, 2016 Sep 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27470971

ABSTRACT

Nonionic surfactant-activated microgels (SAMs), composed of hydrophobic alkyl acrylates and hydrophilic hydroxyalkyl esters that utilize the effects of surfactant mediated swelling and interaction to provide pH-independent rheological properties, were previously reported as a new pathway to the rheology modification of surfactant solutions. Crosslinking was shown to play an important role in the properties of these soft microgel systems. To understand the impact of crosslinking chemistry on SAM polymers, we have compared two types of SAM polymers: a conventionally crosslinked SAM polymer via allyl pentaerythritol and a novel SAM polymer, where the surface is self-crosslinked via a reactive surfactant. We have systematically characterized the polymer's swelling, rheology and microstructure in a model system containing the polymer, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and water. Surface self-crosslinking is demonstrated to be a more effective crosslinking approach to create surfactant-mediated interactions between the microgel particles, resulting in more effective rheology modification. Internal crosslinking hinders both the full swelling of the SAM polymer as well as inter-particle bridging interactions, and is therefore less effective. To our best knowledge, this is the first report on creating a novel surface self-crosslinked microgel via a dual-functional reactive surfactant that interacts with a non-reactive surfactant to create a yield stress fluid.

2.
Langmuir ; 31(3): 1026-37, 2015 Jan 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25555062

ABSTRACT

The aggregation of surfactants around oppositely charged polyelectrolytes brings about a peculiar bulk phase behavior of the complex, known as coacervation, and can control the extent of adsorption of the polyelectrolyte at an aqueous-solid interface. Adsorption kinetics from turbid premixed polyelectrolyte-surfactant mixtures have been difficult to measure using optical techniques such as ellipsometry and reflectometry, thus limiting the correlation between bulk phases and interfacial adsorption. Here, we investigated the adsorption from premixed solutions of a cationic polysaccharide (PQ10) and the anionic surfactant sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) on an amphoteric alumina surface using quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCMD). The surface charge on the alumina was tuned by changing the pH of the premixed solutions, allowing us to assess the role of electrostatic interactions by studying the adsorption on both negatively and positively charged surfaces. We observed a maximum extent of adsorption on both negatively and positively charged surfaces from a solution corresponding to the maximum turbidity. Enhanced adsorption upon diluting the redissolved complexes at a high SDS concentration was seen only on the negatively charged surface, and not on the positively charged one, confirming the importance of electrostatic interactions in controlling the adsorption on a hydrophilic charged surface. Using the Voight based viscoelastic model, QCMD also provided information on the effective viscosity, effective shear modulus, and thickness of the adsorbed polymeric complex. The findings of viscoelastic analysis, corroborated by atomic force microscopy measurements, suggest that PQ10 by itself forms a flat, uniform layer, rigidly attached to the surface. The PQ10-SDS complex shows a heterogeneous surface structure, where the underlayer is relatively compact and tightly attached and the top is a loosely bound diffused overlayer, accounting for most of the adsorbate, which gets washed away upon rinsing. Understanding of the surface structure will have important implications toward understanding lubrication.

3.
Langmuir ; 29(50): 15521-8, 2013 Dec 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24304130

ABSTRACT

Alkali swellable microgels are widely used to control rheology of formulated products containing surfactants. However, formulations based on these pH-responsive polymers show undesirably large changes in yield stress in a range of pH close to the pKa of the acid group. Analysis of the behavior of a cross-linked copolymer of ethyl acrylate and methacrylic acid in the nonionized form (at pH below the pKa of methacrylic acid) in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate shows surfactant-mediated swelling (an increase in particle diameter by over 2.5×) and a peak in zero-shear viscosity versus surfactant concentration indicating surfactant-mediated interaction of the swollen microgels. On the basis of these results, we demonstrate a new class of nonionic microgels composed of hydrophobic alkyl acrylates and hydrophilic hydroxyalkyl esters that utilize the effects of surfactant-mediated swelling and interaction to provide pH-independent rheological properties.


Subject(s)
Gels/chemistry , Rheology/methods , Surface-Active Agents/chemistry , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Viscosity
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