Supramolecular Structural Forces in Stratifying Foam Films and Micelle Aggregation Number
ORAL
Abstract
Understanding and controlling the drainage kinetics of thin films is an important problem that underlies the stability, lifetime and rheology of foams and emulsions. Foam films containing micelles, colloidal particles or polyelectrolyte-surfactant mixtures exhibit step-wise thinning or stratification, due to the influence of non-DLVO forces, including supramolecular oscillatory structural forces. In this study, we use experiments and theory to investigate the drainage and stratification in vertical and horizontal thin foam films (\textless 100 nm) formed by aqueous sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) solutions.~We determine how the concentration of surfactants and added salt influences the stepwise thinning process for micellar solutions, and how step size can be used for estimating micelle size and interactions. The concentration-dependent aggregation number extracted from our experiments match-up reasonably well with values obtained by other techniques including scattering and fluorescence.
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Authors
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Subinuer Yilixiati
Univ of Illinois - Chicago, Chemical Engineering, University of Illinois at Chicago, University of Illinois at Chicago
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Yiran Zhang
Univ of Illinois - Chicago, Chemical Engineering, University of Illinois at Chicago, University of Illinois at Chicago
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Ewelina Wojcik
Univ of Illinois - Chicago
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Rabees Rafiq
Univ of Illinois - Chicago
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Vivek Sharma
Univ of Illinois - Chicago, Chemical Engineering, University of Illinois at Chicago, University of Illinois at Chicago