Abstract
Interactions of phenol (PhOH) with micellar aggregates of hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide (HTAB) in aqueous solutions at surfactant concentrations close to the CMC and phenol contents of 1, 5, or 10 mmol kg(-1) have been investigated at 303 K by means of titration calorimetry, solution conductimetry, and (1)H NMR spectroscopy. Estimates of the main thermodynamic parameters related to HTAB micellization were made for PhOH/HTAB/H(2)O systems based on the specific conductivity measurements and calorimetric determination of the cumulative enthalpy of dilution as functions of the surfactant concentration at a fixed additive content. The combined analysis of the results obtained in H(2)O solutions pointed to the preferential location of PhOH in the outer micelle parts by an enthalpy-driven mechanism. Additional PhOH molecules were located increasingly deeper within the micelle core. The (1)H NMR study of PhOH solubilization by 1.5 mmol kg(-1) HTAB solutions in D(2)O indicated that the two categories of the solubilization site became saturated with the solubilizate already at the lowest additive content. Dissimilar amounts of the solubilized material in H(2)O and D(2)O solutions were ascribed to the difference in the initial micelle structures formed in the two solvents, as inferred from calorimetry and (1)H NMR studies of the HTAB micellization in D(2)O and H(2)O.
Published Version
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