In this paper, the implementation of the CS-FE/MT model introduced in article 1 is discussed, and computer simulations are performed to evaluate the feasibility of the new theoretical approach. As discussed in article 1, making predictions of surfactant/solubilizate aqueous solution behavior using the CS-FE/MT model requires evaluation of DeltaDeltaG for multiple surfactant-to-solubilizate or surfactant-to-cosurfactant transformations. The central goal of this article is to evaluate the quantitative accuracy of the alchemical computer simulation method used in the CS-FE/MT modeling approach to predict DeltaDeltaG for a single surfactant-to-solubilizate or for a single surfactant-to-cosurfactant transformation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe widespread use of surfactant mixtures and surfactant/solubilizate mixtures in practical applications motivates the development of predictive theoretical approaches to improve fundamental understanding of the behavior of these complex self-assembling systems and to facilitate the design and optimization of new surfactant and surfactant/solubilizate mixtures. This paper is the first of two articles introducing a new computer simulation-free-energy/molecular thermodynamic (CS-FE/MT) model. The two articles explore the application of computer simulation free-energy methods to quantify the thermodynamics associated with mixed surfactant/cosurfactant and surfactant/solubilizate micelle formation in aqueous solution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this article, the validity and accuracy of the CS-MT model introduced in article 1 for oil aggregates and in article 2 for nonionic surfactants is further evaluated by using it to model the micellization behavior of ionic and zwitterionic surfactants in aqueous solution. In the CS-MT model, two separate free-energy contributions to the hydrophobic driving force for micelle formation are computed using hydration data obtained from computer simulation: gdehydr, the free-energy change associated with dehydration, and ghydr, the change in the hydration free energy. To enable straightforward estimation of gdehydr and ghydr for ionic and zwitterionic surfactants, a number of simplifying approximations were made.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this article, the validity and accuracy of the CS-MT model is evaluated by using it to model the micellization behavior of seven nonionic surfactants in aqueous solution. Detailed information about the changes in hydration that occur upon the self-assembly of the surfactants into micelles was obtained through molecular dynamics simulation and subsequently used to compute the hydrophobic driving force for micelle formation. This information has also been used to test, for the first time, approximations made in traditional molecular-thermodynamic modeling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurfactant micellization and micellar solubilization in aqueous solution can be modeled using a molecular-thermodynamic (MT) theoretical approach; however, the implementation of MT theory requires an accurate identification of the portions of solutes (surfactants and solubilizates) that are hydrated and unhydrated in the micellar state. For simple solutes, such identification is comparatively straightforward using simple rules of thumb or group-contribution methods, but for more complex solutes, the hydration states in the micellar environment are unclear. Recently, a hybrid method was reported by these authors in which hydrated and unhydrated states are identified by atomistic simulation, with the resulting information being used to make MT predictions of micellization and micellar solubilization behavior.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConstant surface tension (NgammaT) and constant volume (NVT) molecular dynamics simulations have been conducted on a series of bolaamphiphilic alpha,varpi-(diammonium disulfato)poly(fluorooxetane)s and on a typical "long-chain" anionic fluorosurfactant used to improve the flow-and-leveling characteristics of aqueous coatings, to compare their behavior at a water/air interface. Recent research has shown that the poly(fluorooxetane) surfactants considered in this paper could serve as an effective substitute for traditional fluorosurfactants used in flow-and-leveling applications.(1) From molecular dynamics simulation, we have determined the saturated interfacial area per surfactant, interfacial area per surfactant as a function of surface tension, density profiles, the degree of hydration for various atoms in each surfactant, the degree of counterion binding, and order parameters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomacromolecules
February 2006
Hydrogels with nanoscale structure were synthesized using amphiphilic poly(epsilon-caprolactone)-poly(ethylene oxide)-poly(epsilon-caprolactone) (PCL-b-PEO-b-PCL) triblock copolymers. Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) studies show that the block copolymers form 30-40 nm structures in aqueous solution and that these patterns are retained, with some increase in length scale, following electron beam cross-linking. Lamellar nanostructures were observed by SAXS and atomic force microscopy (AFM), with SAXS indicating cylindrical structure as the block lengths become more different in length.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurfactants can be used to increase the solubility of poorly soluble drugs in water and to increase drug bioavailability. In this article, the aqueous solubilization of the nonsteroidal, antiinflammatory drug ibuprofen is studied experimentally and theoretically in micellar solutions of anionic (sodium dodecyl sulfate, SDS), cationic (dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide, DTAB), and nonionic (dodecyl octa(ethylene oxide), C12E8) surfactants possessing the same hydrocarbon "tail" length but differing in their hydrophilic headgroups. We find that, for these three surfactants, the aqueous solubility of ibuprofen increases linearly with increasing surfactant concentration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecular-thermodynamic descriptions of micellization in aqueous media can be utilized to model the self-assembly of surfactants possessing relatively simple chemical structures, where it is possible to identify a priori what equilibrium position they will adopt in the resulting micellar aggregate. For such chemical structures, the portion of the surfactant molecule that is expected to be exposed to water upon aggregate self-assembly can be identified and used as an input to the molecular-thermodynamic description. Unfortunately, for many surfactants possessing more complex chemical structures, it is not clear a priori how they will orient themselves within a micellar aggregate.
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