Abstract

The formation and rheological behavior of a viscoelastic wormlike micellar solution in an aqueous solution of a nonionic fluorinated surfactant, perfluoroalkyl sulfonamide ethoxylate, of structure C8F17SO2N(C3H7)(CH2CH2O)10H was studied. Temperature-induced viscosity growth is observed even at low-surfactant concentration (approximately 1 wt %), and viscosity reaches the maximum at a temperature T(eta)-max. Upon successive increases in the temperature, the viscosity decreases, and ultimately a phase separation occurs. Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) measurements confirm the presence of cylindrical aggregates at low temperature, which undergo continuous one-dimensional growth with increasing temperature, and ultimately, an indication of a slight lamellarlike structural pattern is observed, which probably comes from the formation of micellar joints or branching. Such changes in the microstructure result in a decrease in the viscosity and stress-relaxation time, while the network structure is retained; the trends in the evolution of shear modulus (Go) and relaxation time (tauR) with temperature are in agreement with this. With increased surfactant concentration, the temperature corresponding to the viscosity maximum (T eta-max) in the temperature-viscosity curve shifts to lower values, and the viscosity at temperatures below or around T eta-max increases sharply. A viscoelastic solution with Maxwellian-type dynamic rheological behavior at low-shear frequency is formed, which is typical of entangled wormlike micelles. Rheological parameters, eta(o) and Go, show scaling relationships with the surfactant concentrations with exponents slightly greater than the values predicted by the living-polymer model, but the exponent of tauR is in agreement with the theory. Dynamic light-scattering measurements indicate the presence of fast relaxation modes, associated with micelles, and medium and slow modes, associated with transient networks. The disappearance of the slow mode and the predominance of the medium mode as the temperature increases support the conclusions derived from SAXS and rheometry.

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