Abstract
Neutron reflection has been used to study the composition and structure of layers adsorbed at the air/water surface of solutions of gelatin and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and these results have been compared with the surface tension of the same solutions. Above a concentration where free micelles of SDS can be expected to form in the bulk solution the layer is exactly as would be expected for solutions of SDS on its own. However, at low SDS concentrations the presence of gelatin greatly enhances the adsorption of SDS in comparison with solutions just containing surfactant, and in the intermediate range of SDS concentration, where the surface tension is relatively constant, the surface excess of SDS is also constant at gelatin concentrations of 0.1 wt %. The thickness of the surfactant layer in the two lower ranges of SDS concentration is much larger than a simple surfactant layer, ranging from 35 down to 22 A (in comparison with 19 A for the pure surfactant layer), suggesting that the layer is not only ...
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