Abstract
The interactions between ions and lipid monolayers have captivated the attention of biologists and chemists alike for almost a century. In the absence of experimentally accessible concentration profiles, the electrolyte adsorption remains the most informative quantitative characteristic of the ion-lipid interactions. However, there is no established procedure to obtain the electrolyte adsorption on spread lipid monolayers. As a result, in the literature, the ion-lipid monolayer interactions are discussed qualitatively, based on the electrolyte effect on more easily accessible variables, e.g., surface tension. In this letter, we demonstrate how the electrolyte adsorption on lipid monolayers can be obtained experimentally. The procedure requires combining surface pressure versus molecular area compression isotherms with spreading pressure data. For the first time, we report an adsorption isotherm of NaCl on a lipid monolayer as a function of the density of the monolayer. The leading interactions seem to be the osmotic effect from the lipid head groups in the surface layer and ion-lipid association.
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