Abstract

Tetraethylammonium perfluorooctyl sulfonate (TEAFOS; critical micelle concentration, 1 mM), which forms a threadlike micelle in its pure solution, was adopted to study the structure of salted-out, solubilized micelles and microemulsions by cryogenic transmission electron microscopy. The concentration of the surfactant was kept constant at 60 mM. The micelle solution salted out with LiNO3 provided a surfactant phase in the presence of a clear interface. The surfactant phase was studded, being formed of homogeneously dispersed spherical micelles, and had no obvious threadlike forms. The micelles, which solubilized the maximum amount of perfluorinated oil, were spherical and had the same size as isolated spherical micelles in pure TEAFOS solution. The microemulsions were formed in the presence of perfluorinated alcohol as cosurfactant and the particles were rotund even when the concentration of the perfluorinated oil was equivalent to that for solubilization and the sizes increased with increasing oil content. The difference in size between the solubilized micelles and microemulsions with the same amount of oil suggested that the oil molecules had been solubilized between palisades of perfluorinated alkyl chains in the micelles and had dissolved in the cores of the microemulsions.

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