Colloid and Polymer Science

, Volume 275, Issue 8, pp 777–783 | Cite as

Dispersion behavior of oleic acid in aqueous media: from micelles to emulsions

  • K. Kaibara
  • E. Iwata
  • Y. Eguchi
  • M. Suzuki
  • H. Maeda
Original Contribution

Abstract

Dispersion behavior of aqueous solutions containing oleic acid (RH), sodium oleate (R-Na +), and NaCl was investigated by turbidity and dynamic light-scattering measurements. Changes of the size of scattering particles in solution composed of 1 mM oleic acid and 100 mM NaCl were traced as a function of the degree of ionization α, in terms of radius of the equivalent hydrodynamic sphere. Large associated micelles with a radius of 30 nm appeared by a slight decline of α and existed at a higher than 0.75. They were responsible for the three-phase equilibrium (solution, micelle and aggregated micelle, and acid-soap, (R-Na+)3RH) characterized by a constant pH of 9.75. The appearance of a new phase, (R-Na+)3RH, contributed to increase both the turbidity and averaged scattering particle size. As the breakdown of the three-phase equilibrium, radius of scattering particles increased significantly. Finally, oleic acid oil droplets were separated from aqueous phase at low α. When the system was buffered by tris (hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (Tris), scattering particles with a weight-averaged hydrodynamic radius of 75 nm existed in a wide range of α from 0.85 to 0.65. In Tris buffered solution, turbidity formation was induced by the increase in the number of aggregated particles.

Key words

Oleic acid sodium oleate micelle acid-soap light-scattering photometry 

Preview

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.

References

  1. 1.
    Brouwer HW, Spier HL (1971) Thermal Anal 3:131–144CrossRefGoogle Scholar
  2. 2.
    Zimmels Y, Lin IJ (1974) Colloid Polymer Sci 252:613–619CrossRefGoogle Scholar
  3. 3.
    Somansundaran P, Ananthapadmanabhan KP (1979) In: Mittal KL (ed) Solution Chemistry of Surfactants. Plenum, New York, 777–800Google Scholar
  4. 4.
    Drzymala J (1985) J Colloid Interface Sci 107:442–445CrossRefGoogle Scholar
  5. 5.
    Maeda H, Eguchi Y, Suzuki M (1992) J Phys Chem 96:10487–10491CrossRefGoogle Scholar
  6. 6.
    Drzymala J (1985) J Colloid Interface Science 108:257–263CrossRefGoogle Scholar
  7. 7.
    Ananthapadmanabhan KP, Somansun-daran P (1988) J Colloid Interface Sci 122:104–109CrossRefGoogle Scholar
  8. 8.
    Drzymala J (1989) In: Mittal KL (ed) Surfactants in Solution. Plenum, New York, 483–496Google Scholar
  9. 9.
    Koppel DE (1972) J Chem Phys 57:4814–4820CrossRefGoogle Scholar
  10. 10.
    Rokhlenko AA, Trukshina TS, Abram-son AA, Sirotkin AK (1987) Kolloidn Zh 49:192–196Google Scholar
  11. 11.
    Gebicki JM, Hicks M (1976) Chem Phys Lipids 16:142–160CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Copyright information

© Steinkopff Verlag 1997

Authors and Affiliations

  • K. Kaibara
    • 1
  • E. Iwata
    • 1
  • Y. Eguchi
    • 1
  • M. Suzuki
    • 2
  • H. Maeda
    • 1
  1. 1.Department of Chemistry Faculty of ScienceKyushu UniversityFukuokaJapan
  2. 2.Nippon Oil and Fats Company LimitedHyougoJapan

Personalised recommendations