Influence of Cellulose Nanofibers on the Behavior of Pickering Emulsions. Part 1. Microscopy and Startup Flow Test.

Materials (Basel)

Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Polymer Science and Technology, Guangdong Research Center for Interfacial Engineering of Functional Materials, Nanshan District Key Laboratory for Biopolymers and Safety Evaluation, College of Materials Science and Engineering, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen 518055, China.

Published: November 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how flexible polymer chains at the interface of cellulose nanofiber (CNF)-based Pickering emulsions affect their rheological and dielectric properties, using liquid paraffin and didodecyldimethylammonium bromide (DDAB) as components.
  • Results show that varying the amounts of CNF and DDAB alters droplet size and dispersion, leading to changes in viscosity and yield points, with CNF promoting a network formation and DDAB assisting in solubilizing CNF.
  • Polarized optical microscopy and fluorescence analysis reveal distinct behaviors of droplets based on CNF and DDAB content, while broadband dielectric spectroscopy further clarifies the relationship between composition, morphology, and physical interactions within the emulsion system

Article Abstract

The dispersibility of flexible polymer chains present at the emulsion's interface between the dispersed and continuous phase has obvious effects on rheology and dielectric properties of the whole emulsion. Cellulose nanofiber (CNF)-based Pickering emulsions are good systems to research these properties with respect to their microscopic phase structure, dielectric, and rheological properties by using CNF as a water-dispersible Pickering emulsifier, liquid paraffin as an oil phase, and didodecyldimethylammonium bromide (DDAB) as a cationic auxiliary surfactant. The CNF and DDAB contents were systematically varied while the water-to-paraffin oil ratio was kept constant to discern the influence of the Pickering emulsifiers. Polarized optical microscopic images reveal that the droplets tend to shrink at higher CNF content but grow bigger when increasing the DDAB content, which is proved by fluorescence analysis of the CNF dispersibility with varying DDAB content. The dielectric damping exhibits a minimum, whose value decreases with increasing DDAB and CNF content. Increasing the DDAB content promotes the solubilization of CNF in the aqueous phase, which will increase the overall viscosity and yield points. Similarly, a higher CNF content leads to a higher viscosity and yield point, but at high DDAB contents, the viscosity function exhibits an S-shape at intermediate CNF contents. To evaluate the results further, they were compared with CNF dispersions (without oil phase), which showed a surfactant effect slightly on maximum stress but strongly on yield stress τy, indicating that DDAB can promote the formation of a CNF network rather than the viscosity of the whole system. This paper provides information on how a systematical variation of the composition influences morphology and physico-chemical interactions as detected by broadband dielectric spectroscopy and rheological behavior.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9736908PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma15238285DOI Listing

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