Home > Publications database > Surfactant or block copolymer micelles? Structural properties of a series of well-defined n-alkyl–PEO micelles in water studied by SANS |
Journal Article | FZJ-2014-04535 |
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2014
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
Cambridge
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Please use a persistent id in citations: http://hdl.handle.net/2128/22886 doi:10.1039/c4sm00625a
Abstract: Here we present an extensive small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) structural characterization of micelles formed by poly(ethylene oxide)-mono-n-alkyl ethers (Cn–PEOx) in dilute aqueous solution. Chemically, Cn–PEOx can be considered as a hybrid between a low-molecular weight surfactant and an amphiphilic block copolymer. The present system, prepared through anionic polymerization techniques, is better defined than other commercially available polymers and allows a very precise and systematic testing of the theoretical predictions from thermodynamical models. The equilibrium micellar properties were elaborated by systematically varying the n-alkyl chain length (n) at constant PEO molecular weight or increasing the soluble block size (x), respectively. The structure was reminiscent of typical spherical star-like micelles i.e. a constant core density profile, [similar]r0, and a diffuse corona density profile, [similar]r−4/3. Through a careful quantitative analysis of the scattering data, it is found that the aggregation number, Nagg initially rapidly decreases with increasing PEO length until it becomes independent at higher PEO molecular weight as expected for star-like micelles. On the other hand, the dependency on the n-alkyl length is significantly stronger than that expected from the theories for star-like block copolymer micelles, Nagg [similar] n2 similar to what is expected for surfactant micelles. Hence the observed aggregation behavior suggests that the Cn–PEOx micelles exhibit a behavior that can be considered as a hybrid between low-molecular weight surfactant micelles and diblock copolymer micelles.
Keyword(s): Polymers, Soft Nano Particles and Proteins (1st) ; Key Technologies (1st) ; Soft Matter, Macromolecules, Complex fluids, Biophysics (1st) ; Chemistry (2nd) ; Soft Condensed Matter (2nd)
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