Title: University of Oklahoma Institute for Applied Surfactant Research
1University of OklahomaInstitute for Applied
Surfactant Research
- Reproducing Microemulsion Phase Behavior with the
- Net-Average Curvature Model
Jeff Harwell, Edgar Acosta, Erika Szekeres, and
David A. Sabatini
2Outline
- Motivation
- Background (phase behavior, curvature/phase
behavior relationship, models of microemulsions,
critical scaling) - Net-average curvature model drop radius
- net curvature expression scaling to critical
point, SAD, critical exponent - average curvature expression statistical droplet
concept of water/oil, limiting - Interfacial tension model (interfacial rigidity
concept) - Solution flow diagram
- Model results (drop radius/salinity benzene and
limonene, phase vol TCE, extension for mixtures
(2 slides), non-ionics-IFT, ternary diagram for
saturated, ternary for non-saturated (Type IV) - Summary
3Motivation
- Why model microemulsions?
- To predict
- Solubilization / aggregate size
- Interfacial tension
- Phase behavior (Winsor Type I-III-II and IV
phase transitions) - Important to which applications?
- Remediation of oil contaminated aquifers /
enhanced oil recovery - Replacement of organic solvents
- Detergency
- Nanoscale aggregates formed by polymerization or
precipitation - Microemulsion drug delivery
4Microemulsion Phase Behavior
Optimum Formulation (S, ?, ?)
S
Tetrachloroethylene (PCE) - 4 Sodium dihexyl
sulfosuccinate (AMA) - NaCl phase behavior study
5Phase behavior - Curvature
0
-
Curvature (H 1/R)
Decreasing O/W Curvature
6Microemulsions Models
- Types of models
- (1) Free energy of the bent surfactant film
(Kegel, Overbeek and Lekkerkerker ACRS model by
Adelman, Cates, Roux, and Safran, 1986) - (2) Molecular thermodynamic model (Ruckenstein
and Nagarajan, 1982) - (3) Statistical mechanical models (microscopic
models and interfacial models Gompper, Shick,
Widom, Ginzburg - Landau, 1940-1970) - (4) Lattice Monte Carlo Models (Care, 1987
,Larson, 1985 and Mattice,1994) - Problems with models
- (1) (2) Complex equations with difficult to
estimate parameters - (3) (4) Over-simplified models for real
systems - Our model readily available parameters,
- simple to solve
7Critical Scaling Law
Applies for second order (continuous) phase
transformations, where dependent variable
vanish/diverge at critical point, without
discontinuous change. On molecular level there is
no abrupt change between ordered / disordered
structures. Evans, Wennerstrom The colloidal
Domain. Where Physics, Chemistry, and Biology
Meet. 2nd, 1999, pp.489 Bellocq in Handbook of
Microemulsion Science and Technology, P. Kumar
and K. L. Mittal Eds. 1999, pp. 171
8Net Curvature Model
- Critical point optimum formulation
Critical Scaling law
Kelvin equation
? Length scale - radius of the droplet (Rd)
Hypothesis
9Net Curvature Model
Surfactant Affinity Difference
(Salager, J. L. in Encyclopedia of Emulsion
Technology. Becher, P. Editor. Marcel Dekker, New
York, 1988, Vol 3, Chap. 3.)
10Net Curvature Model
- Statistical approach to structure
- Statistical distribution of coexistent water
- and oil droplets in middle phase systems
- droplet size limited by entropy effects -
11Interfacial Rigidity Concept
- Surface free energy of bare o/w droplet
- Interfacial rigidity of surfactant self-assembly
12Flow Diagram
Net - Average Curvature Model
Type I
Type II
Interfacial Tension
Type III
Independent variable salinity
13Modeling Radius of Oil Droplets
Salinity
does not include surfactant length
Surfactant 4 wt sodium dihexyl sulfosuccinate
14Modeling Phase Volumes Effect of Temperature
Dwarakanath, V. Pope, Gary A. Environ. Sci.
Technol. 2000, 34, 4842
L 10 Å ? 51 Å
- The length parameter L is
- Independent of Temperature
- Independent of the Oil
- Proportional to the extended length of the
surfactant
15Modeling Selective Solubilization of Oil
Mixtures
- Two Important variables salinity (for ionic
surfactants) - oil
composition
- Total solubilization core interfacial
solubilization
from net-average curvature model
16Modeling Selective Solubilization of Oil Mixtures
- Optimum salinity model
- Optimum characteristic length model
17Modeling Selectivity
- Interfacial solubilization
Benzene - limonene oil mixture 4 wt Sodium
dihexyl sulfosuccinate No salt, T 23 C
18Modeling Interfacial Tension Non-Ionic Surfactant
Microemulsions
Stolen, T. and Strey, R. J.
Chem. Phys. 1997, 106(20), 8606
Net-average Curvature Model
C10 E5 - Octane microemulsion
Interfacial rigidity model
L 20 Å ? 230 Å T 25C Er 3
KBT cT0.054
19Modeling Ternary Phase Diagram
Nonionic surfactants
H Kuneida and Stig Friberg, Bull Chem. Soc. Jpn.
541010 (1981)
T21.5 C
C8E3 -Decane Microemulsion
L 16 Å ? 40 Å T 21.5C cT0.064
Net-average Curvature Model
L2
L1
L3
L5
L4
D
20Modeling Ternary Phase Diagram
Nonionic surfactants
H Kuneida and Stig Friberg, Bull Chem. Soc. Jpn.
541010 (1981)
T15.8 ºC
C8E3 -Decane Microemulsion
L 16 Å ? 40 Å T 21.5C cT0.064
Net-average Curvature Model
21Modeling Ternary Phase Diagram
Nonionic surfactants
H Kuneida and Stig Friberg, Bull Chem. Soc. Jpn.
541010 (1981)
T26 ºC
C8E3 -Decane Microemulsion
L 16 Å ? 40 Å T 21.5C cT0.064
Net-average Curvature Model
22Modeling Fish Diagram Anionic surfactants
Net-average Curvature Model
L 10 Å ? 55 Å S normalized
- Model simplifications
- constant
- constant
- when surfactant concentration changes
23Summary
- Critical scaling theory is used to model
microemulsions - Model assumptions
- Critical point is the optimum formulation
- SAD is used as the reduced field variable
- Scaling exponent by analogy with
the Kelvin equation - Bicontinuous microemulsions are coexistent
water/oil droplets - Interfacial rigidity of surfactant film
determines the IFT between microemulsion and an
excess phase
24Summary
- Model predictions for anionic surfactant systems
- Droplet sizes
- Phase volumes in saturated microemulsions
- Selective solubilization of polar-nonpolar oil
mixtures - Fish phase diagram
- Model predictions for non-ionic surfactant
systems - Interfacial tension
- Ternary phase diagrams at different temperatures
25References
- Acosta, E. Szekeres, E. Sabatini, D. A.
Harwell, J. H. Net-Average Curvature Model for
Solubilization and Supersolubilization in
Surfactant Microemulsions. Langmuir 2003, 19,
186 - Acosta, E. Szekeres, E. Sabatini, D. A.
Harwell, J. H. Modeling Microemulsion
Solubilization and Interfacial Tension The
Net-average Curvature Model. AIChE Annual
Meeting, Nov.2002 - Szekeres, E. Acosta, E. Sabatini, D. A.
Harwell, J. H. A Two-State Model for Selective
Solubilization in Water-Surfactant-Mixed Oil
Systems. AIChE Annual Meeting, Nov. 2002 -
- Szekeres, E. Acosta, E. Sabatini, D. A.
Harwell, J. H. A Two-State Model for Selective
Solubilization of Benzene-Limonene Mixture Using
Sodium Dihexyl Sulfosuccinate Microemulsions (In
preparation)