Dynamic Partitioning of Surfactants into Nonequilibrium Emulsion Droplets.

J Am Chem Soc

Department of Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, United States.

Published: September 2024

Characterizing the propensity of molecules to distribute between fluid phases is key to describing chemical concentrations in heterogeneous mixtures and the corresponding physiochemical properties of a system. Typically, partitioning is studied under equilibrium conditions. However, some mixtures form a single phase at equilibrium but exist in multiple phases when out-of-equilibrium, such as oil-in-water emulsion droplets stabilized by surfactants. Such droplets persist for extended times but ultimately disappear due to droplet dissolution and micellar solubilization. Consequently, equilibrium properties like oil-water partition coefficients may not accurately describe out-of-equilibrium droplets. This study investigates the partitioning of nonionic surfactants between shrinking microscale oil droplets and water under nonequilibrium conditions. Quantitative mass spectrometry is used to analyze the composition of individual microdroplets over time under conditions of varying surfactant composition, concentrations, and oil molecular structures. Within minutes, nonionic surfactants partition into oil droplets, reaching a nonequilibrium steady-state concentration that can be over an order of magnitude higher than that in the aqueous phase. As the droplets solubilize over hours, the surfactants are released back into water, leading to transiently high surfactant concentrations near the droplet-water interface and the formation of a microemulsion phase with a low interfacial tension. Introducing ionic surfactants that form mixed micelles with nonionic surfactants reduces partitioning. Based on this observation, stimuli-responsive ionic surfactants are used to modulate the nonionic surfactant partitioning and trigger reversible phase separation and mixing inside binary oil droplets. This study reveals generalizable nonequilibrium states and conditions experienced by solubilizing oil droplets that influence emulsion properties.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.4c08917DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

oil droplets
16
nonionic surfactants
12
droplets
9
surfactants
8
emulsion droplets
8
droplets study
8
ionic surfactants
8
oil
5
dynamic partitioning
4
partitioning surfactants
4

Similar Publications

Enzyme-instructed signal generation at liquid-liquid interfaces presents a novel strategy for controlling and detecting biochemical processes on macroscopic scales. Here, we explore the self-assembly and jamming of pillar[5]arene (P[5]A) derivatives at the oil-water interface via a copper-mediated "click" reaction, providing a versatile platform for generating observable signals. The formation of a pillar[5]arenes network at the droplet interface reduces interfacial tension, allowing droplets to adopt various nonequilibrium shapes based on the interfacial jamming process.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Oily skin not only threatens people with aesthetic and hygienic discomfort but also confronts them with annoying skin problems. To explore new skin care ingredients from herbal or plant extracts and understand their underlying mechanism for sebum control would assist in the discovery of desirable sebosuppressive agents, though it is still a deserving and challenging task.

Aim: To explore the effect of Camellia saponin (CS) on modulating the lipogenesis of human sebocytes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Doxepin (DX) is used orally to relieve itching but can cause side effects like blurred vision, dry mouth, and drowsiness due to its antimuscarinic effect. To reduce these adverse effects and improve skin permeation, DX is being developed in topical formulations. This study aims to improve DX skin absorption by developing a microemulsion (ME) formulation (ME-DX).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An emulsion of silicone oil droplets in aqueous buffer produces a distinctive series of peaks or resonances in the side scatter histogram in a flow cytometer. As many as 12 peaks are observed in the violet-side scatter channel at 405 nm, with half that number observed in the blue side scatter channel at 488 nm. Using the index of refraction of the oil and buffer, the wavelength of light, and the collection angle and gain of the instrument, we assign the peaks to specific diameters at which Mie resonances occur.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Water-in-oil emulsions are critical in various fields, including food, agriculture, personal care, and pharmaceuticals. In some situations, spontaneous emulsification occurs in emulsions with high concentrations of oil-soluble surfactants, in which the parent water drops fragment into finer droplets, forming a network near the interface, which exhibits interfacial elasticity. This study investigates this phenomenon using a water/Span 80-paraffin oil system.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!