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1.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 659: 833-848, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38218087

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: Surfactants like C8E8CH2COOH have such bulky headgroups that they cannot show the common sphere-to-cylinder transition, while surfactants like C18:1E2CH2COOH are mimicking lipids and form only bilayers. Mixing these two types of surfactants allows one to investigate the competition between intramicellar segregation leading to disc-like bicelles and the temperature dependent curvature constraints imposed by the mismatch between heads and tails. EXPERIMENTS: We establish phase diagrams as a function of temperature, surfactant mole ratio, and active matter content. We locate the isotropic liquid-isotropic liquid phase separation common to all nonionic surfactant systems, as well as nematic and lamellar phases. The stability and rheology of the nematic phase is investigated. Texture determination by polarizing microscopy allows us to distinguish between the different phases. Finally, SANS and SAXS give intermicellar distances as well as micellar sizes and shapes present for different compositions in the phase diagrams. FINDINGS: In a defined mole ratio between the two components, intramicellar segregation wins and a viscoelastic discotic nematic phase is present at low temperature. Partial intramicellar mixing upon heating leads to disc growth and eventually to a pseudo-lamellar phase. Further heating leads to complete random mixing and an isotropic phase, showing the common liquid-liquid miscibility gap. This uncommon phase sequence, bicelles, lamellar phase, micelles, and water-poor packed micelles, is due to temperature induced mixing combined with dehydration of the headgroups. This general molecular mechanism explains also why a metastable water-poor lamellar phase quenched by cooling can be easily and reproducibly transformed into a nematic phase by gentle hand shaking at room temperature, as well as the entrapment of air bubbles of any size without encapsulation by bilayers or polymers.

2.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 660: 177-191, 2024 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38241866

ABSTRACT

HYPOTHESIS: Specific alkaline cation effects control the area per headgroup of alkylester sulphates, which modifies the spontaneous packing of the surfactants. The resulting effective packing minimizes the total bending energy frustration and results in a Boltzmann distribution of coexisting pseudo-phases. These pseudo-phases constitute of micelles and other structures of complex morphology: cylindrical sections, end-caps, branching points, and bilayers, all in dynamic equilibrium. According to our model, excess of end-caps or excess of branching points lead to low viscosity, whereas comparable amounts of both structures lead to viscosity maxima. Relative occurrence of branching points and end-caps is the molecular mechanism at the origin of the salt-sensitive viscosity peak in the "salt-curve" (viscosity against salt concentration at fixed surfactant concentration). Up to now, and as indicated in former papers, this has been a pure model without microscopic verification. EXPERIMENTS: In this work, we introduce explicit counting of the number of coexisting pseudo-phases as observed by state-of-the-art cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM). The model system used, i.e., sodium laurylethersulfate (SLES)/salt/water, is very common as part of cosmetic formulations. As added salts, we used Li+, Na+, K+, and Cs+ chlorides. In parallel to imaging, we measured the macroscopic viscosities of the different solutions. FINDINGS: With cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cryo-TEM), we imaged a variety of morphologies (pseudo-phases) in the different aqueous surfactant/salt solutions: cylindrical micelles with end-caps, discs surrounded by "rims", entangled thread-like micelles with branching points, networks with gliding branching points, and bilayers. The relative chemical potentials of these morphologies could be approximated simply by counting the relative proportion of their occurrence. This simple multi-scale approach avoids any ad-hoc "specificity" assumption of ions, and is based on the bending energy model in an extended version of the Benedek "ladder model". It is capable of explaining and even quantifying the location of all viscosity peaks in the "salt-curves" for the different cations investigated, thus confirming the previously proposed model experimentally, and - thanks to cryo-TEM - for the first time on a microscopic scale. Moreover, this approach can also be applied when the added cations lead to newly observed pseudo-phases, such as discs and vesicles. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that cryo-TEM is used, together with a mesoscopic model, to describe a macroscopic property such as viscosity and specific ion effects on it, without any a priori assumption about these effects. So, in total, we could a) confirm the predictions of the previously developed model, b) use cryo-TEM imaging and viscosity measurements to predict and find unusual morphologies when varying the cations of the added salt, and c) count the pseudo-phases in cryo-TEM micrographs to quantitatively explain the different nanostructures.

3.
Eur Phys J E Soft Matter ; 46(9): 76, 2023 Sep 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37668863

ABSTRACT

We have studied the microemulsion and lamellar phases of two of the most commonly described systems based on nonionic C12E5 and ionic AOT surfactants. We show that C12E5 is best described by the symmetric disordered open connected lamellar model (DOC-lamellar), contrary to the more commonly employed standard flexible model. In the case of AOT, the bicontinuous microemulsion structure is best described by the standard flexible model at high temperatures. Around room temperature, connected cylinders in a molten cubic crystal phase are the only description which corresponds to the data. In the lamellar phase, around one third of the available surface area is lost in fluctuations and defects. Comparing structurally predictive models with results from conductivity measurements show that salt adsorption in the hydrated ethoxy groups is dominant for C12E5 (nonionic). For AOT, our conductivity measurements clarify the role of tortuosity versus cation absorption.

4.
Research (Wash D C) ; 6: 0026, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37040494

ABSTRACT

Water/ethyl acetate/ethanol is widely used as a "green" extractant system. We show that 2 different types of phase separation can be induced upon centrifugation in this ternary system using ethanol as a cosolvent of water and ethyl acetate: centrifuge-induced criticality and centrifuge-induced emulsification. The expected composition profiles of samples after centrifugation can be represented by bent lines in a ternary phase diagram when gravitational energy is added to the free energy of mixing. The experimental equilibrium composition profiles behave qualitatively as expected and can be predicted using a phenomenological theory of mixing. The concentration gradients are small except near the critical point, as expected for small molecules. Nevertheless, they are usable when accompanied by temperature cycles. These findings open new possibilities of centrifugal separation, even if control is delicate during temperature cycles. These schemes are accessible even at relatively low centrifugation speed for molecules that float and sediment with apparent molar masses several hundred times larger than the molecular mass.

5.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 637: 207-215, 2023 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36701866

ABSTRACT

HYPOTHESIS: The key to prepare a mesostructured porous material by a soft-template route coupled to a colloidal sol-gel process is to control the surfactant-colloid interface. In the case of tetravalent actinide ions, their high reactivity in aqueous media always leads to uncontrolled and irreversible condensation. The addition of a complexing agent to the sol may moderate these reactions and enhances the interaction between the colloids and the surfactant to in fine prepare a mesostructured nanoporous actinide oxide material. EXPERIMENTS: Several colloidal sols were prepared without and with formic acid as complexing agent by varying the molar ratios between thorium, carboxylic surfactant and pH. Small and Wide Angle X-ray Scattering were used to characterize the nature of the colloids, their interaction with the surfactant and the final ThO2 materials. FINDINGS: Depending on the colloid nature, hexagonal or worm-like hybrid mesophase is formed. The thermal treatment of the worm-like mesophase with a sufficient amount of Th-formic acid hexameric species coated at the surface of surfactant micelles generates micrometric ThO2 nanofibers. This material having an accessible porosity opens new perspectives to be impregnated with minor actinide solutions offering a promising safety method for the fabrication of mixed oxide nuclear fuel and the minor actinide transmutation.

6.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 630(Pt B): 762-775, 2023 Jan 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36356444

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: The monoammonium salt of glycyrrhizic acid (AGA) is known to form fibrillar hydrogels and few studies regarding self-assembly of AGA have been published. Yet, the understanding of the fibrillar microstructures and the gelation remains vague. Thus, we attempt to achieve a deeper understanding of the microstructures and the gelation process of binary solutions of AGA in water. Further, we examine the effect of ethanol on the microstructures to pave the way for potential enhancement of drug loading in AGA hydrogels. EXPERIMENTS: A partial room temperature phase map of the ternary system AGA/ethanol/water was recorded. Small-angle X-ray and neutron scattering experiments were performed over wide ranges of compositions in both binary AGA/water and ternary AGA/ethanol/water mixtures to get access to the micro-structuring. FINDINGS: Binary aqueous solutions of AGA form birefringent gels consisting of a network of long helical fibrils. 'Infinitely' long negatively charged fibrils are in equilibrium with shorter fibrils (≈25 nm), both of which have a diameter of about 3 nm and are made of around 30 stacks of AGA per helical period (≈9nm), with each stack consisting of two AGA molecules. The interaxial distance (order of magnitude ≈20 nm) varies with an almost two-dimensional swelling law. Addition of ethanol reduces electrostatic repulsion and favors the formation of fibrillar end caps, reducing the average length of shorter fibrils, as well as the formation of small, swollen aggregates. While the gel network built by the long fibrils is resilient to a significant amount of ethanol, all fibrils are finally dissolved into small aggregates above a certain threshold concentration of ethanol (≈30 wt%).


Subject(s)
Ethanol , Hydrogels , Hydrogels/chemistry , Ethanol/chemistry , Glycyrrhizic Acid , Water/chemistry , Sodium Chloride
7.
J Chem Phys ; 157(21): 214901, 2022 Dec 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36511558

ABSTRACT

Swollen cubic lyotropic ternary phases with Pn3m symmetry and reduced hardness were obtained from a specific binary mixture of cubic phase-forming (phytantriol) and lamellar phase-forming (decaglycerol monooleate) compounds. The microstructures were determined by using a small-angle x-ray scattering technique. The softness and temperature-induced phase transitions were investigated by means of rheology. The incorporation of a surface-active fragrance compound (linalool) at concentrations up to 6 wt. % induced a structural transition toward a softer Im3m bulk cubic phase with longer water channels. Higher linalool concentrations allowed for the spontaneous dispersion of the bulk cubic phase into microscopic particles with a cubic structure (cubosomes).


Subject(s)
Surface-Active Agents , Surface-Active Agents/chemistry , Phase Transition , Temperature , X-Ray Diffraction
8.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 14(47): 53165-53173, 2022 Nov 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36383750

ABSTRACT

The identification of new colloidal sol-gel routes for the preparation of actinide oxides, which have a homogeneous and accessible porosity that can easily be impregnated by any concentrated actinide solution, opens new perspectives for the preparation of homogeneous nuclear fuel for minor actinide transmutation. This homogeneity allows us to avoid "hot spot" formation due to the local accumulation of more fissile elements. Here, we report the preparation of macro-microporous ThO2 materials by a colloidal sol-gel route. Using a thorium salt with 6-aminocaproic acid as a complexing agent at a controlled pH, we were able to pilot the condensation of thorium hydroxo species forming colloids of tuned nanometric size and thus the sol stability. After a freeze-drying process to concentrate colloids and a thermal treatment allowing complexing agent removal and macroporosity formation by a brutal gas release during combustion, a loose packing of ThO2 nanoparticles with an ordered distribution of interparticular porosity and a fraction of nanometric crystallites, whose size depends on the initial colloidal size, were obtained. The sols, pastes, and final materials were characterized by small- and wide-angle X-ray scattering to determine the colloidal size and the final structure of the materials, which was also confirmed by transmission electron microscopy. The most promising material was finally successfully impregnated by a simulating minor actinide solution and thermally treated to prepare a mixed actinide oxide material. This safe technology, relying on the colloidal sol-gel process and the formulation of complex fluids forming tunable precursors, opens new perspectives for the reuse of nuclear waste solutions as new fuel.

9.
J Appl Crystallogr ; 55(Pt 5): 1154-1163, 2022 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36249511

ABSTRACT

The characterization of nanoporous powders of highly absorbing compounds by small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) involves overcoming several difficulties before quantitative information related to the porous texture, such as the specific surface and the porous volume, can be derived. In this article, first, the contribution of the grain facet reflectivity and scattering from the bulk of a grain with the density of ThO2, a highly absorbing material, were calculated. Microporous ThO2 powder having micrometric grain size was characterized, in which the scattering signal is predominant. A high-resolution synchrotron instrument was used in order to cover a wider q range and minimize the absorption effect, and the results were compared with those obtained using a laboratory X-ray source. Concerning the absorption problem existing with a laboratory X-ray source, a new and robust experimental method was proposed to correctly determine the scattering intensity of the highly absorbing granular samples on an absolute scale. This method allows one to calculate accurately the porous volume and the specific surface via Porod's law and the invariant using a laboratory SAXS instrument. This last result opens new perspectives for the characterization of the volume and the specific surface of highly absorbing actinide oxide powders.

10.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(18): 11353-11361, 2022 May 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35485971

ABSTRACT

Surfactants aggregate in water into micelles, and these micelles incorporate organic substances to solubilize them. Hydrotropes are compounds that increase the solubility of hydrophobic substances in water without this form of aggregation. Decreasing the chain length of the classical surfactant Aerosol OT (AOT) from C8 to C5 results in a molecule with intermediate properties. Molecular dynamics simulations and surface tension measurements are performed on this short chain derivative of AOT. This compound shows high solubility and at the same time progressive weak aggregation. The hydration of head groups hinders significant plunging into a hydrophobic core, which leads to well defined liquid chain nanodomains. The transition to bicontinuous aggregates is in the concentration range of 1 mol L-1. The sulfonate group of the head groups (placed at the water interface of worm-like aggregates) rather than the aggregate-aggregate interaction is responsible for the unusual small angle X-ray scattering pattern.

11.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 621: 470-488, 2022 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35483179

ABSTRACT

HYPOTHESIS: In a recent paper, we determined the phase behavior of an aqueous solution of octyl ether octaethylene oxide carboxylic acid ([H+][C8E8c-], Akypo™ LF2) and with partial replacement of H+ by Na+ and Ca2+. It was found that even the neat surfactants are liquid at room temperature and that they form only direct micelles for any aqueous content and over large temperature ranges. The aim of the present work was to find an explanation for the clouding in these systems as well as for the coacervation observed at very low surfactant content. We expected that very similar phase diagrams would be found for a full replacement of H+ by the mentioned ions. EXPERIMENTS: We established the respective phase diagrams of the above-mentioned salts in water and determined the structures of the occurring phases in detail with small-and wide-angle X-ray scattering, small-angle neutron scattering, dynamic light scattering, heat flux differential scanning calorimetry, as well as surface tension, ESI-MS, and NMR experiments. FINDINGS: To our surprise, we discovered a new type of nematic phase between an isotropic and a hexagonal phase. Based on the complete description of all occurring phases both in the acidic and the charged surfactant systems, we were able to design a coherent and unified picture of all these phases, including the auto-coacervation at low surfactant concentration, the non-conventional clouding at high temperatures, the unusual liquid crystalline phases in a small domain at high surfactant concentrations, and the Lß phase at low temperatures and at very low water content. It turned out that all phenomena are a consequence of the subtle interplay between a) the packing constraint due to the very large head-group, b) the relatively small hydrocarbon chain and c) the tunable electrostatic interactions versus entropy.


Subject(s)
Micelles , Surface-Active Agents , Carboxylic Acids , Ethylene Oxide , Ions , Surface-Active Agents/chemistry , Water/chemistry
12.
J Phys Chem B ; 125(43): 12054-12062, 2021 Nov 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34694817

ABSTRACT

In this work, we developed a general theoretical description of ternary solutions of small molecules under a centrifugal field, from which we obtained the centrifugation map (CMap) as a general tool to understand observations or to predict composition profiles in centrifugal fields of arbitrary strength. The theoretical formalism is based on the classical density functional theory with established models for liquid mixtures. Thermodynamics also yields a general criterion for apparent aggregation. The strength of the CMap approach is illustrated for a ternary model system where ethanol is a co-solvent.

13.
Langmuir ; 37(36): 10637-10656, 2021 Sep 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34251218

ABSTRACT

The phase transfer of ions is driven by gradients of chemical potentials rather than concentrations alone (i.e., by both the molecular forces and entropy). Extraction is a combination of high-energy interactions that correspond to short-range forces in the first solvation shell such as ion pairing or complexation forces, with supramolecular and nanoscale organization. While the latter are similar to the long-range solvent-averaged interactions in the colloidal world, in solvent extraction they are associated with lower characteristic lengths of the nanometric domain. Modeling of such complex systems is especially complicated because the two domains are coupled, whereas the resulting free energy of extraction is around kBT to guarantee the reversibility of the practical process. Nevertheless, quantification is possible by considering a partitioning of space among the polar cores, interfacial film, and solvent. The resulting free energy of transfer can be rationalized by utilizing a combination of terms which represent strong complexation energies, counterbalanced by various entropic effects and the confinement of polar solutes in nanodomains dispersed in the diluent, together with interfacial extractant terms. We describe here this ienaics approach in the context of solvent extraction systems; it can also be applied to further complex ionic systems, such as membranes and biological interfaces.


Subject(s)
Liquid-Liquid Extraction , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Entropy , Solutions , Solvents
14.
Chem Rev ; 121(10): 5671-5740, 2021 05 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33955731

ABSTRACT

Microemulsions, as thermodynamically stable mixtures of oil, water, and surfactant, are known and have been studied for more than 70 years. However, even today there are still quite a number of unclear aspects, and more recent research work has modified and extended our picture. This review gives a short overview of how the understanding of microemulsions has developed, the current view on their properties and structural features, and in particular, how they are related to applications. We also discuss more recent developments regarding nonclassical microemulsions such as surfactant-free (ultraflexible) microemulsions or ones containing uncommon solvents or amphiphiles (like antagonistic salts). These new findings challenge to some extent our previous understanding of microemulsions, which therefore has to be extended to look at the different types of microemulsions in a unified way. In particular, the flexibility of the amphiphilic film is the key property to classify different microemulsion types and their properties in this review. Such a classification of microemulsions requires a thorough determination of their structural properties, and therefore, the experimental methods to determine microemulsion structure and dynamics are reviewed briefly, with a particular emphasis on recent developments in the field of direct imaging by means of electron microscopy. Based on this classification of microemulsions, we then discuss their applications, where the application demands have to be met by the properties of the microemulsion, which in turn are controlled by the flexibility of their amphiphilic interface. Another frequently important aspect for applications is the control of the rheological properties. Normally, microemulsions are low viscous and therefore enhancing viscosity has to be achieved by either having high concentrations (often not wished for) or additives, which do not significantly interfere with the microemulsion. Accordingly, this review gives a comprehensive account of the properties of microemulsions, including most recent developments and bringing them together from a united viewpoint, with an emphasis on how this affects the way of formulating microemulsions for a given application with desired properties.


Subject(s)
Surface-Active Agents/chemistry , Emulsions , Solvents/chemistry
15.
Langmuir ; 37(13): 3817-3827, 2021 Apr 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33724851

ABSTRACT

Even in the absence of surfactants, polymers, or particles, spontaneous emulsions produced by dilution with water can be stable over days. This "Ouzo effect" used by the industry is obtained by rapid dilution from an identified "pre-Ouzo" domain of composition where weak aggregates are present: nanometer-sized clusters covered by a surface layer enriched in a hydrotrope such as ethanol. In these systems, Ostwald ripening is not an effective destabilizing mechanism. Using in situ autodilution small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), we follow the morphological transitions occurring in a ternary mixture of water/n-octanol/ethanol throughout the monophasic and biphasic regions. This allows for the first time an online characterization of the multiscale coexisting microstructures. Small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) profiles on metastable emulsions as well as phase-separated samples complete the SAXS data, taking advantage of contrast variation via isotopic substitution. After crossing the phase boundary into the two-phase region, coexisting phases are both ternary solutions structured at the nanometer scale when the emulsion is stable. The transition from single phase to two phases is asymmetric around the plait point. When the initial concentration of the hydrotrope is below the minimum hydrotrope concentration (MHC), emulsification failure occurs, i.e., emulsions cream within seconds. Beyond MHC, the low interfacial tension between coexisting ternary fluids results in a Laplace pressure below 100 Pa, explaining the puzzling resilience of spontaneous emulsion to the universal mechanism of Ostwald ripening.

16.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 23(14): 8261-8272, 2021 Apr 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33527947

ABSTRACT

We use the model system ethanol-dodecane to demonstrate that giant critical fluctuations induced by easily accessible weak centrifugal fields as low as 2000g can be observed above the miscibility gap of a binary liquid mixture. Moreover, several degrees above the phase transition, i.e. in the one-phase region, strong gradients of ethanol concentration occur upon centrifugation. In this case, the standard interpretation of sedimentation equilibrium in the analytical ultracentrifuge (AUC) yields an apparent molar mass of ethanol three orders of magnitude higher than the real value. Notably, these composition gradients have no influence on the distribution gradient of solutes such as dyes like Nile red. The thick opaque interphase formed upon centrifugation does not appear as the commonly observed sharp meniscus, but as a turbidity zone, similar to critical opalescence. This layer is a few millimeters thick and separates two fluids with low compositional gradients. All these effects can be qualitatively understood and explained using the Flory-Huggins solution model coupled to classical density functional theory (DFT). In this domain hetero-phase fluctuations can be triggered by gravity even far from the critical point. Taking into account Jean Perrin's approach to external fields in colloids, a self-consistent definition of the Flory effective volume and an explicit calculation of the total free energy per unit volume is possible.

17.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 590: 375-386, 2021 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33556757

ABSTRACT

HYPOTHESIS: The surfactant C8EO8CH2COOH (Akypo LF2) and its salts have a small hydrophobic and a significantly longer hydrophilic part. As a consequence, there must be a significant steric constraint, once these surfactant molecules form micelles. In addition, the partially charged headgroups should bring some additional fine-tuning via electrostatic interactions to this "essentially non-ionic" surfactant. EXPERIMENTS: Phase diagrams of binary mixtures of water and C8EO8CH2COOH are established over large concentration and temperature ranges, also at different pHs and in the presence of sodium and calcium ions. Surface tensions and osmotic pressures are measured to understand the systems. To evaluate the microstructures, also Dynamic Light Scattering and Small-Angle X-ray Scattering are performed. FINDINGS: Apart from the formation of coacervates at very low surfactant concentrations, spherical micelles persist over the whole concentration and temperature range and do not change in size and shape. At very high surfactant concentrations, above 60% by weight, where the headgroups are no longer fully hydrated, the standard core-shell structure of micelles vanishes and highly stabilized aggregates of 8-26 octyl chains are suspended in interdigitated polyoxyethylene layers and form an "osmotic brush". When the acid is partially transformed to a sodium salt, the repulsion between the micelles increases, whereas bridging between micelles prevails, when the counterions are calcium cations. Remarkably, the negative charges of the headgroups are randomly distributed in the hydrophilic ethylene oxide shell. Altogether, a phase diagram without lyotropic liquid crystalline phases and an extreme shift of the cloud-point in temperature and composition is found, similar to the phase diagram of C8EO8OH already known in literature. The phase properties can be explained by the curvature and packing constraints together with the Lindemann rule applied to short hydrocarbon chains.

18.
ACS Cent Sci ; 6(9): 1628-1638, 2020 Sep 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32999938

ABSTRACT

We propose a general transport theory for pheromone molecules in an atmosphere containing aerosols. Many pheromones are hydrophobic molecules containing polar groups. They are low volatile and have some properties similar to those of hydrotropes. They therefore form a nonsoluble film at the water-air interface of aerosols. The fate of a small pheromone puff in air is computed through reaction-diffusion equations. Partitioning of pheromones between the gas and the aerosol surface over time is studied for various climate conditions (available aerosol surface) and adsorption affinities (energy of adsorption). We show that, for adsorption energy above 30 k B T per molecule, transport of pheromones on aerosols dominates over molecular transport typically 10 s after pheromone emission, even when few adsorbing aerosols are present. This new communication path for airborne chemicals leads to distinctive features including enhanced signal sensibility and increased persistence of pheromone concentration in the air due to slow diffusion of aerosols. Each aerosol droplet has the ability to adsorb thousands of pheromones to the surface, keeping a "history" of the atmospheric content between emission and reception. This new mechanism of pheromone transport leads to dramatic consequences on insect sensing revisiting the way we figure the capture of chemical signals.

19.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 22(10): 5449-5462, 2020 Mar 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32083621

ABSTRACT

A microfluidic technique is coupled with X-ray fluorescence in order to investigate the origin of the so-called synergy effect observed in liquid-liquid extraction of rare earth elements (REEs) when special combinations of two extractants - one solvating and one ionic - are used. The setup enables kinetic studies by varying the two phases' contact time. The results obtained are compared with those obtained using a standard batch extraction method at identical contact time. We then determine variations of free energies of transfer for five rare earth elements present in a solution together with a non-target ion (Fe3+) at different pH. Analysis of the effect of temperature and of surface charge density of the coexisting cations allows separating electrostatic effects from complexation effects. We finally show that all non-linear (synergic) effects are quadratic in mole fraction. This demonstrates that in-plane mixing entropy of the bent extractant film, in the first nanometer around rare earth ions, is the determining term in the synergy effect. Surprisingly, even when the third phase is present, free energies of transfer could still be measured in the dilute phase, which is reported for the first time, to our knowledge. We hence show that the extractive power of the dense third phase is stronger than that of conventional reverse aggregates in equilibrium with excess water.

20.
ACS Nano ; 13(12): 13745-13758, 2019 Dec 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31710459

ABSTRACT

In solvent extraction, the self-assembly of amphiphilic molecules into an organized structure is the phenomenon responsible for the transfer of the metal ion from the aqueous phase to the organic solvent. Despite their significance for chemical engineering and separation science, the forces driving the solute transfer are not fully understood. Instead of assuming the simple complexation reaction with predefined stoichiometry, we model synergistic extraction systems by a colloidal approach that explicitly takes into account the self-assembly resulting from the amphiphilic nature of the extractants. Contrary to the current paradigm of simple stoichiometry behind liquid-liquid extraction, there is a severe polydispersity of aggregates completely different in compositions, but similar in the free energy. This variety of structures on the nanoscale is responsible for the synergistic transfer of ions to the organic phase. Synergy can be understood as a reciprocal effect of chelation: it enhances extraction because it increases the configurational entropy of an extracted ion. The global overview of the complex nature of a synergistic mixture shows different regimes in self-assembly, and thus in the extraction efficiency, which can be tuned with respect to the green chemistry aspect.

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