Abstract

During the synthesis of micelle-templated silica an intermediate inorganic/organic mesostructure is obtained with an hexagonal arrangement of channels filled by surfactant molecules. The ability of such a mesostructure to solubilize organic molecules from an aqueous solution was investigated. To that end, silica/cationic surfactant mesostructures were prepared under various conditions and their stability toward surfactant release in water was first compared in order to select materials as stable as possible. Swelled mesostructures were also used. The sorption from solution of hydrophobic molecules was then studied. The affinity of the molecules for the mesostructures is directly related to their hydrophobic character as it is derived from their octanol/water partition coefficient. A cooperative effect between hydrophobic molecules and the cationic surfactant that stabilizes the surfactant inside the mesostructure was observed. Interaction energies between the solutes and the mesostructures were determined by microcalorimetry. They varied in accordance with the hydrophobic character of the molecule and, at low sorption amounts, they were of the same order of magnitude as the solubilization enthalpies in bulk micelles. When the sorption increases, the surfactant layer in the mesostructure is not allowed to swell as the free micelle does, and steric limitations in the headgroup area render sorption less favorable.

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