Abstract

Proton NMR spectra for gel and liquid crystalline samples, composed of dimyristoyl and/or dipalmitoyl lecithin, cholesterol and water, can be consistently interpreted in terms of mesophase symmetry and molecular diffusion according to a model proposed by Wennerström (Wennerström, H. (1973) Chem. Phys. Lett. 18, 41–44). It is shown by computer simulation that the characteristic “super-lorentzian” bandshape of the lamellar mesophase can be described by the superposition of three gaussian curves. The NMR signal of the gel phase can be simulated by the superposition of two gaussian curves with widths at half height of 2.5 kHz and 19 kHz. An upper limit of the lateral diffusion coefficient of the lecithin molecules in the gel phase is calculated to be about 5 · 10 −15 m 2/s. It is therefore concluded that the static intermolecular dipolar couplings average to zero in the lamellar mesophase. An estimation of the order parameter of the liquid crystalline phase is made from experimental data and a calculated “rigid lattice” linewidth. A two phase system is shown to exist in the temperature range 28–34 °C for a mesophase of a mixture of dimyristoyl and dipalmitoyl lecithin. The presence of cholesterol results in enhanced lateral diffusion of the lecithin molecules at temperatures below the Chapman transition point.

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