Abstract
Properties of single foam films prepared with tetraethylammonium perfluorooctane-sulfonate (TAPOS) were studied. Film thickness was measured as a function of NH 4Cl concentration in the film forming solution. The dependence of the film disjoining pressure versus the film thickness (disjoining pressure isotherms) and the mean lifetime of the films were studied. The dependence of the film thickness on the electrolyte concentration showed the presence of an electrostatic double layer at the film surfaces. The electrostatic double layer component of the disjoining pressure was screened at a NH 4Cl concentration higher than 0.2 M where Newton black films (NBFs) of 6 nm thickness were formed. These films are bilayers of amphiphile molecules and contain almost no free water. The disjoining pressure isotherms of the foam films formed with 0.001 M TAPOS were measured at two different NH 4Cl concentrations (0.005 and 0.0005 M). The Deryaguin–Landau–Verwey–Overbeek (DLVO) theory describes well the isotherms with an electrostatic double layer potential of ∼140 mV. The mean lifetime, a measure of the stability of the NBFs, was measured depending on surfactant concentrations. The observation of NBF was possible above a minimum TAPOS concentration of 9.4 × 10 −5 M. Above this concentration, the lifetime increases exponentially. The dependence of the film lifetime on surfactant concentration is explained by the theory for NBF-rupture by nucleation mechanism of formation of microscopic holes.
Published Version
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