Sodium lauryl ether sulfate (SLES) is a common anionic surfactant used in a large number of personal care products. Commercial products typically contain a distribution in the number of ethoxy groups; despite this, there is limited existing work studying the effect of the ethoxy groups on the phase formation and structure. This is particularly important for the effect the structure has on the viscosity, an important consideration for commercial products. Dissipative particle dynamics is used to simulate the full phase diagram of SLES in water, including both micellar and lyotropic liquid crystal phases. Phase transitions occur at locations which are in good agreement with experimental data, and we find that these boundaries can shift as a result of varying the number of ethoxy groups. Varying the ethoxy groups has a significant effect on the micellar shape and crystalline spacing, with a reduction leading to more nonspherical micelles and decreased periodic spacing of the hexagonal and lamellar phases. Finally, while typical commercial products contain a distribution of ethoxy groups, computational work tends to focus on simulations containing a single chain length. We show that it is valid to use monodisperse simulations to infer behavior about solutions with a polydisperse chain length, based on its mean molecular length.
The many-body dissipative particle dynamics parametrisation scheme developed in this work allows us to predict the surface tension and conformation of surfactants at air/water interfaces.
A study using both Raman spectroscopy and molecular dynamics
(MD)
simulations was carried out for alkyl ethoxysulfate (AES) surfactants
at various concentrations in solution. Direct comparison between experiment
and simulation shows that the conformational changes observed in MD
are in good agreement with those obtained via Raman spectroscopy.
We show that there is an increase in the relative number of trans conformations with increasing concentration and illustrate
the relationship between phase structure and molecular conformation,
which is often speculated but difficult to confirm. Our results open
up the possibility of applying MD to other surfactants, with the aim
of analyzing conformational behavior, which can typically be difficult
to study experimentally using spectroscopy methods, due to large numbers
of vibrational modes present in large complex molecules.
Dissipative particle dynamics (DPD) provides good predictions for the phase diagrams of SDS (sodium dodecyl sulfate) and 3 isomeric forms of LAS (linear alkylbenzene sulfonates) across an extensive concentration range.
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