Abstract

Glycolipids are a class of biodegradable surfactants less harmful to the environment than petrochemically derived surfactants. Here we discuss interfacial properties, foam stability, characterized in terms of transient foam height, gas volume fraction and bubble diameter as well as texture of seven enzymatically synthesized surfactants for the first time. Glycolipids consisting of different head groups, namely glucose, sorbitol, glucuronic acid and sorbose, combined with different C10 acyl chains, namely decanoate, dec-9-enoate and 4-methyl-nonanoate are compared. Equilibrium interfacial tension values vary between 24.3 and 29.6 mN/m, critical micelle concentration varies between 0.7 and 3.0 mM. In both cases highest values were found for the surfactants with unsaturated or branched tail groups. Interfacial elasticity and viscosity, however, were significantly reduced in these cases. Head and tail group both affect foam stability. Foams from glycolipids with sorbose and glucuronic acid derived head groups showed higher stability than those from surfactants with glucose head group, sorbitol provided lowest foam stability. We attribute this to different head group hydration also showing up in the time to reach equilibrium interfacial adsorption. Unsaturated tail groups reduced whereas branching enhanced foam stability compared to the systems with linear, saturated tail. Moreover, the tail group strongly influences foam texture. Glycolipids with unsaturated tail groups produced foams quickly collapsing even at smallest shear loads, whereas the branched tail group yielded a higher modulus than the linear tails. Normalized shear moduli for the systems with different head groups varied in a narrow range, with the highest value found for decylglucuronate.

Highlights

  • Foams are thermodynamically unstable systems of bubbles dispersed in a solution stabilized by surfactants which can have a wide range of possible applications, e.g., in agriculture, cosmetics, food, fire-fighting, oil recovery and wastewater treatment [1,2]

  • critical micelle concentration (CMC) was determined, and further measurements were conducted at glycolipid concentrations of the CMC

  • As well as interfacial elasticity and interfacial viscosity determined as characteristic interfacial properties

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Summary

Introduction

Foams are thermodynamically unstable systems of bubbles dispersed in a solution stabilized by surfactants which can have a wide range of possible applications, e.g., in agriculture, cosmetics, food, fire-fighting, oil recovery and wastewater treatment [1,2]. Foams become destabilized by drainage, coarsening and coalescence [1,3,4] These destabilizing mechanisms are related to dynamic interfacial tension, interfacial elasticity and interfacial viscosity [5,6,7,8]. Foam characteristics, such as foam stability, coarsening rates and bubble size distribution, strongly depend on the surfactant. Surfactants are amphiphilic molecules of a hydrophilic and a hydrophobic moiety. They adsorb at interfaces and stabilize them by lowering interfacial tension as well as providing a barrier against aggregation and coalescence.

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