Choline carboxylate surfactants are powerful alternatives to the well-known classical alkali soaps, since they exhibit substantially increased water solubility while maintaining biocompatibility, in contrast to simple quaternary ammonium ions. In the present study, we report the aqueous binary phase diagrams and a detailed investigation of the lyotropic liquid crystalline phases formed by choline carboxylate surfactants (ChCm) with chain lengths ranging from m ¼ 12-18 and at surfactant concentrations of up to 95-98 wt%. The identification of the lyotropic mesophases and their sequence was achieved by the penetration scan technique. Structural details are elucidated by small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). The general sequence of mesophases with increasing soap concentration was found to be as follows: micellar (L 1 ), discontinuous cubic (I 1 ), hexagonal (H 1 ), bicontinuous cubic (V 1 ) and lamellar (L a ). The main difference to the phase behavior of alkali soaps or of other mono-anionic surfactants is the appearance and large extent of a discontinuous cubic phase with two or even more different symmetries. The obtained phase diagrams further highlight the extraordinarily high water solubility of ChCm soaps. Finally, structural parameters of ChCm salts such as the cross-sectional area at the polarnonpolar interface are compared to those of alkali soaps and discussed in the terms of specific counterion binding and packing constraints.
Recently, a new family of ionic liquids based on oligoether carboxylates was introduced. 2,5,8,11-Tetraoxatridecan-13-oate (TOTO) was shown to form room-temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) even with small alkali ions such as lithium and sodium. However, the alkali TOTO salts suffer from their extremely high viscosities and relatively low conductivities. Therefore, we replaced the alkali cations by tetraalkylammonium (TAA) ions and studied the TOTO salts of tetraethyl- (TEA), tetrapropyl- (TPA), and tetrabutylammonium (TBA). In addition, the environmentally benign quaternary ammonium ion choline (Ch) was included in the series. All salts were found to be ionic liquids at ambient temperatures with a glass transition typically at around -60 °C. Viscosities, conductivities, solvent polarities, and Kamlet-Taft parameters were determined as a function of temperature. When using quaternary ammonium ions, the viscosities of the resulting TOTO ionic liquids are >600 times lower, whereas conductivities increase by a factor of up to 1000 compared with their alkali counterparts. Solvent polarities further reveal that choline and TAA cations yield TOTO ionic liquids that are more polar than those obtained with the, per se, highly polar sodium ion. Results are discussed in terms of ion-pairing and structure-breaking concepts with regard to a possible complexation ability of the TOTO anion.
We report on the effects of electrolytes spanning a range of anions (NaOc, NaSCN, NaNO(3), NaBr, NaCl, NaBu, NaOAc, Na(2)SO(4), Na(2)HPO(4), and Na(2)CO(3)) and cations (LiCl, NaCl, KCl, CsCl, and choline chloride) on the aqueous solubility of an extended surfactant. The surfactant is anionic with a long hydrophobic tail as well as a significant fraction of propylene oxide groups and ethylene oxide groups (C(12-14)-PO(16)-EO(2)-SO(4)Na, X-AES). In the absence of electrolytes, X-AES exhibits a cloud-point temperature that decreases with increasing surfactant concentration. After the addition of salts to the surfactant solutions, various shifts in the solubility curves are observed. These shifts follow precisely the same Hofmeister series that is found for salting-in and salting-out effects in protein solutions. In the presence of different concentrations of sodium xylene sulfonate (SXS), the solubility of the surfactant increases. In this context, SXS can be considered to be a salting-in salt. However, when the electrolytes are added to an aqueous solution of X-AES and SXS the Hofmeister series reverses for divalent anions such as Na(2)SO(4), Na(2)HPO(4), and Na(2)CO(3). Studies on the phase behavior and micelle structures using polarization microscopy, freeze-etch TEM, and NMR measurements indicate a dramatic change in the coexisting phases on the addition of SXS.
We have studied concentrated equimolar mixtures of tetradecanoic acid (myristic acid, C13COOH) and hexadecyltrimethylammonium hydroxide (CTAOH) in which the OH- counterions are gradually exchanged by other anions (Cl-, Br-, CH3COO-, CH3-(C6H4)-SO3-). We demonstrate that the stability of a Lbeta phase can be achieved at equimolarity between both surfactants, provided that the phase contains also a sufficient number of anions exchanged with OH-. In the absence of exchange (equimolar mixture of C13COOH and CTAOH), a three-dimensional crystalline Lc phase is produced. As the OH- ions are replaced by other ions, a swollen Lbeta lamellar phase appears, first in coexistence with the Lc (D* = 400 A) and then in coexistence with a dilute phase only (D* = 215 A). In the latter regime, the repeating distance depends very little on the exchange ratio, but rather on the nature of the counterion. If too many OH- ions are exchanged, the Lbeta phase becomes unstable again. A Poisson-Boltzmann model with charge regulation computed for a closed system predicts qualitatively the existence of this narrow domain of stability for the Lbeta phase.
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