AI Article Synopsis

  • Interfacial gels form when oxidised cellulose nanofibrils (OCNF) interact with oleylamine (OA) at water/oil interfaces, driven by charge interactions.
  • The effectiveness of complexation and gel formation depends on the ζ-potential of the OCNF, which can be adjusted by adding electrolytes.
  • OCNF with a ζ-potential more negative than -30 mV adsorb spontaneously at the interface, resulting in stronger gels that can trap oil droplets, while charge neutralisation prevents this adsorption and gel formation.

Article Abstract

Interfacial gels, obtained by the interaction of water-dispersible oxidised cellulose nanofibrils (OCNF) and oil-soluble oleylamine (OA), were produced across water/oil (W/O) interfaces. Surface rheology experiments showed that the complexation relies on the charge coupling between the negatively-charged OCNF and OA. Complexation across the W/O interface was found to be dependent on the ζ-potential of the OCNF (modulated by electrolyte addition), leading to different interfacial properties. Spontaneous OCNF adsorption at the W/O interface occurred for particles with ζ-potential more negative than -30 mV, resulting in the formation of interfacial gels; whilst for particles with ζ-potential of ca. -30 mV, spontaneous adsorption occurred, coupled with augmented interfibrillar interactions, yielding stronger and tougher interfacial gels. On the contrary, charge neutralisation of OCNF (ζ-potential values more positive than -30 mV) did not allow spontaneous adsorption of OCNF at the W/O interface. In the case of favourable OCNF adsorption, the interfacial gel was found to embed oil-rich droplets - a spontaneous emulsification process.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9sm01551eDOI Listing

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