“…Polyelectrolytes can spontaneously interact with oppositely charged surfactants in aqueous solution to produce polyelectrolyte−surfactant complexes according to a strict 1:1 stoichiometry required for overall charge balance. − These systems have been extensively studied in the past as a function of many parameters including surfactant tail length, − nature of the polyelectrolyte, − density of charge sites along the polyelectrolyte backbone, ,,,, solution pH, and the incorporation of low molecular weight electrolyte. ,,,− A combination of electrostatic attraction between the oppositely charged constituents and interactions between the long-chain surfactant tails is understood to culminate in a highly cooperative binding process, which leads to stabilization of the polyelectrolyte−surfactant complex. ,,,,− In the solid phase, these materials tend to display a layered arrangement derived from demixing of the polar polyelectrolyte backbone and the hydrophobic surfactant tails. The precise structure is influenced by a number of factors which include the relative volume fractions of ionic and alkyl phases present, and the molecular geometry of the surfactant molecules .…”