Abstract

To investigate the osmotic pressure of non-ionic and ionic surfactant solutions in the micellar and microemulsion regions, a potential of mean force including hard-core repulsion, van der Waals attraction and electric double layer repulsion is proposed to describe the interactions between micelles and between microemulsions. Both van der Waals attraction and electric double layer repulsion are represented using Yukawa tails. The explicit analytical expression of osmotic pressure derived from the first-order mean spherical approximation is implemented by accounting for the Donnan membrane effect. The proposed theory has been applied to micelle solutions of the non-ionic surfactant, n-dodecyl hexaoxyethylene monoether, the cationic surfactant, cetylpyridinium chloride, the anionic surfactant, sodium dodecyl sulfate, and spherical oil-in-water microemulsion system. Successful comparison is made between the proposed theory and the experimental osmotic pressure data for the studied surfactant solutions. Theoretical results show that the long-range electric double layer repulsion dramatically influences the osmotic pressure of both cationic and anionic surfactant solutions in the micellar region. The regressed model parameters such as effective micelle diameter, the mean aggregation number and effective micellar charge are in good agreement with those from static light scattering studies in the literature.

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