Abstract

Abstract The stability of organogels differs based on the organogelator concentration, storage temperature, and solvent type. Organogel post-crystallization annealing was monitored at 5 °C, 15 °C, 20 °C or 30 °C for up to 1 month. Gels, stored at 5 °C, had highly immobilized oil, as judged from large T 2 relaxation peaks at 50–70 ms determined by pulsed nuclear magnetic resonance (pNMR) and visual observations. When the gels were stored at 30 °C, the 50–70 ms T 2 relaxation peak shifted to longer relaxation times, indicating that the oil was more mobile than at 5 °C. Along with the increase in syneresis at 30 °C, the 12HSA network’s crystallinity was also greater, having fewer inclusions of liquid oil, as determined by pNMR. The highly branched network observed at 5 °C changed more in time with regards to crystallinity although it entrained the oil to a much greater extent than the gels stored at 30 °C.

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