Abstract

Abstract The microenvironment of water droplets of nonionic polyoxyethylene (4) lauryl ether reverse micelles was investigated with infrared and ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy, also by viscosity and dynamic light scattering measurements in the presence of biological surfactant sodium cholate as additive. Influence of concentrations of polyoxyethylene (4) lauryl ether and sodium cholate on the microstructure of mixed reverse micelles was studied. Influence of sodium cholate as additive on the ratio of free, bound and trapped water fractions was studied via deconvolution of the O-H stretching vibrational absorption spectra in the region of 3 000–3 800 cm−1 into three subpeaks with a Monte Carlo method. Several characteristic parameters of reverse microemulsions were calculated on the basis of measurements of their kinematic viscosity. A different influence of concentration of sodium cholate on the binding constant and association degree of optical probes (o-nitroaniline and methyl orange respectively) to ethylene oxide groups of nonionic surfactant was observed. It was found that the bound water fraction, the binding constants and association degrees, the relative density of water pockets, etc. change their values passing through an extremum under the influence of sodium cholate.

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