Abstract

When small amounts of the anionic surfactant sodium decyl sulfonate (C10SO3Na) are mixed with the non-ionic surfactant dodecylpentaoxyethylene glycol monoether (C12E5) in water, the ionic surfactant has a profound influence on the equilibrium between lamellar (Lα) and L3 phases. C12E5 in water forms a highly swollen lamellar phase at elevated temperatures that is in equilibrium with an L3 phase at lower surfactant concentrations. The swollen lamellar phase is stabilized by steric interactions caused by bilayer undulations. The addition of anionic surfactant ends the swelling of the Lα phase at higher surfactant concentrations, and the L3 phase is replaced by a new bilayer phase. In the mixed surfactant Lα phase, bilayer undulations are inhibited by long-range electrostatic repulsions, and the L3 phase appears to be destabilized by changes in the preferred curvature of the bilayer as charge is added. To determine microstructure and aggregate interactions, small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) and static light scattering (SLS) experiments were performed as a function of temperature and added anionic surfactant. The influence of a steady increase in electrostatic interactions can be seen clearly in the SANS spectra from mixed micellar solutions. The swelling behaviour and estimates of the bilayer width can be extracted from combined SANS and SLS spectra for the lamellar phase and the new bilayer phase.

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