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1.
Langmuir ; 20(11): 4436-45, 2004 May 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15969150

ABSTRACT

A quantitative model for the kinetics of adsorption of ionic surfactants to an expanding liquid surface is presented for surfactant concentrations below and above the critical micelle concentration (cmc). For surfactant concentrations below the cmc, the electrostatic double layer is accounted for explicitly in the adsorption isotherm. An overflowing cylinder (OFC) was used to create nonequilibrium liquid surfaces under steady-state conditions. Experimental measurements of the surface excess for solutions of cationic surfactants CH3(CH2)n-1N+(CH3)3 Br- (CnTAB, n = 12, 14, 16) and the anionic fluorocarbon surfactant sodium bis(1H,1H-nonafluoropentyl)-2-sulfosuccinate (di-CF4) in the OFC are in excellent agreement with the theoretical predictions for diffusion-controlled adsorption for all concentrations studied below the cmc. For surfactant concentrations above cmc, the diffusion ofmicelles and monomers are handled separately under the assumption of fast micellar breakdown. This simplified model gives excellent agreement for the system C14TAB + 0.1 M NaBr above the cmc. Agreement between theory and experiment for C16TAB + 0.1 M NaBr is less good. A plausible explanation for the discrepancy is that micellar breakdown is no longer fast on the time scale of the OFC (ca. 0.1 s).

2.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 267(1): 243-58, 2003 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14554190

ABSTRACT

We investigate the effect of surfactant on the hydrodynamic stability of a thin liquid film formed between two emulsion drops or gas bubbles, which are moving along a narrow capillary. A ganglion (deformed drop or bubble in a pore) is covered by an adsorption monolayer of surfactant. Due to the hydrodynamic viscous friction, the surfactant is dragged from the front part of a moving ganglion toward its rear part. Consequently, the front and rear parts are, respectively, depleted and enriched in adsorbed surfactant. When such two ganglia move one after another, surfactant molecules desorb from the rear part of the first ganglion and are transferred by diffusion, across the intermediate liquid film, to the front part of the second ganglion. This leads to the appearance of a diffusion-driven hydrodynamic instability, which may cause coalescence of the two neighboring drops or bubbles. The coalescence occurs through a dimple-like perturbation in the film thickness, which is due to a local lowering in the pressure caused by a faster circulation of the liquid inside the film, which in turn is engendered by the accelerated surfactant diffusion across the thinner parts of the film. The developed theory predicts the critical distance between the two ganglia, which corresponds to the onset of coalescence, and its dependence on the radius of the capillary channel, velocity of motion, surfactant concentration and type of the operative surface forces. The results can be useful for a better understanding and quantitative description of the processes accompanying the flow of emulsions and foams though porous media.

3.
Adv Colloid Interface Sci ; 96(1-3): 101-29, 2002 Feb 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11908783

ABSTRACT

The stability of partially mobile draining thin liquid films with respect to axisymmetric fluctuations was studied. The material properties of the interfaces (Gibbs elasticity, surface and bulk diffusions) were taken into account. When studying the long wave stability of films, the coupling between the drainage and perturbation flows was considered and the lubrication approximation was applied. Two types of wave modes were examined: radially-bounded and unbounded waves. The difference between the thickness of loss of stability, h(st), the transitional thickness, h(tr), at which the critical wave causing rupture becomes unstable, and the critical thickness, h(cr), when the film ruptures, is demonstrated. Both the linear and the non-linear theories give h(st) > h(tr) > h(cr). The numerical results show that the interfacial mobility does not significantly influence the thickness of the draining film rupture. The interfacial tension and the disjoining pressure are the major factors controlling the critical thickness. The available experimental data for critical thicknesses of foam and emulsion films show excellent agreement with the theoretical predictions. The important role of the electromagnetic retardation term in the van der Waals interaction is demonstrated. Other published theories of the film stability are discussed.

4.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 251(1): 18-25, 2002 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16290697

ABSTRACT

Relaxation processes of surfactant adsorption and surface tension, which are characterized by two specific relaxation times, are theoretically investigated. We are dealing with fluid interfaces and small initial deviations from equilibrium. For surfactant concentrations below the critical micellization concentration (CMC), we consider adsorption under mixed barrier-diffusion control. General analytical expressions are derived, which are convenient for both numerical computations and asymptotic analysis. Series expansions for the short- and long-time limit are derived. The results imply that the short-time asymptotics is controlled by the adsorption barrier, whereas the long-time asymptotics is always dominated by diffusion. Furthermore, for surfactant concentrations above the CMC, adsorption under mixed micellization-diffusion control is considered. Again, a general analytical expression is derived for the relaxation of surfactant adsorption and surface tension, whose long- and short-time asymptotics are deduced. The derived equations show that at the short times the relaxation is completely controlled by the diffusion, whereas the long-time asymptotics is affected by both demicellization and diffusion. The micellar effect is manifested as an exponential (rather than square-root) decay of the perturbation. The derived expressions are applied to process available experimental data for the nonionic surfactant Triton X-100 and to determine the respective demicellization rate constant.

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