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The Interfacial Dilational Rheology Properties of Betaine Solutions: Effect of Anionic Surfactant and Polymer

Interfacial dilational rheology is one of the important means to explore the interfacial properties of adsorption films. In this paper, the interfacial rheological properties of the mixed system of sulfobetaine ASB with a linear alkyl group and two anionic surfactants, petroleum sulfonate (PS) and a...

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Autores principales: Li, Haitao, Cui, Chuanzhi, Cao, Xulong, Yuan, Fuqing, Xu, Zhicheng, Zhang, Lei, Zhang, Lu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10384304/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37513308
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules28145436
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author Li, Haitao
Cui, Chuanzhi
Cao, Xulong
Yuan, Fuqing
Xu, Zhicheng
Zhang, Lei
Zhang, Lu
author_facet Li, Haitao
Cui, Chuanzhi
Cao, Xulong
Yuan, Fuqing
Xu, Zhicheng
Zhang, Lei
Zhang, Lu
author_sort Li, Haitao
collection PubMed
description Interfacial dilational rheology is one of the important means to explore the interfacial properties of adsorption films. In this paper, the interfacial rheological properties of the mixed system of sulfobetaine ASB with a linear alkyl group and two anionic surfactants, petroleum sulfonate (PS) and alkyl polyoxyethylene carboxylate (AEC), were investigated by interfacial dilational rheology. The effect of the introduction of polymer hydrophobically modified polyacrylamide (HMPAM) on the interfacial properties of the mixed system was analyzed. In this experiment, the surfactant solution was used as the external phase and n-decane was used as the internal phase. A periodic sinusoidal disturbance of 0.1 Hz was applied to the n-decane droplets, and the changes of parameters such as droplet interfacial tension and interfacial area were monitored in real time with the help of a computer. The results show that the betaine ASB molecule responds to the dilation and compression of the interface through the change of ion head orientation, while the feedback behavior of petroleum sulfonate PS and AEC molecules embedded with oxygen vinyl groups in the molecule is diffusion and exchange between the interface and the bulk phase. Therefore, the interface film formed by ASB alone is higher, and the film formed by PS and AEC molecules alone is relatively lower. After adding two kinds of anionic surfactants to the betaine system, the ionic head of PS or AEC molecules will be attached to the positive center of the hydrophilic group of ASB molecules by electrostatic attraction and no longer adsorb and desorb with the interface deformation. The interfacial rheological properties of the compound system are still dominated by betaine, with higher dilational modulus and lower phase angle. When a small amount of HMPAM is added, or the content of hydrophobic monomer AMPS in the bulk phase is low, the intermolecular interaction at the interface is enhanced, the slow relaxation process is intensified, and the interfacial film strength is increased. As the content of AMPS further increases, hydrophobic blocks and surfactant molecules will form interfacial aggregates similar to mixed micelles at the oil-water interface, which will regulate the properties of the film by affecting the adsorption of surfactants at the interface. As long as the interfacial tension is the same, the properties of the interfacial film are the same. Based on the colloid interface science and the background of enhanced oil recovery, this study provides a reference for the field application of chemical flooding formulations.
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spelling pubmed-103843042023-07-30 The Interfacial Dilational Rheology Properties of Betaine Solutions: Effect of Anionic Surfactant and Polymer Li, Haitao Cui, Chuanzhi Cao, Xulong Yuan, Fuqing Xu, Zhicheng Zhang, Lei Zhang, Lu Molecules Article Interfacial dilational rheology is one of the important means to explore the interfacial properties of adsorption films. In this paper, the interfacial rheological properties of the mixed system of sulfobetaine ASB with a linear alkyl group and two anionic surfactants, petroleum sulfonate (PS) and alkyl polyoxyethylene carboxylate (AEC), were investigated by interfacial dilational rheology. The effect of the introduction of polymer hydrophobically modified polyacrylamide (HMPAM) on the interfacial properties of the mixed system was analyzed. In this experiment, the surfactant solution was used as the external phase and n-decane was used as the internal phase. A periodic sinusoidal disturbance of 0.1 Hz was applied to the n-decane droplets, and the changes of parameters such as droplet interfacial tension and interfacial area were monitored in real time with the help of a computer. The results show that the betaine ASB molecule responds to the dilation and compression of the interface through the change of ion head orientation, while the feedback behavior of petroleum sulfonate PS and AEC molecules embedded with oxygen vinyl groups in the molecule is diffusion and exchange between the interface and the bulk phase. Therefore, the interface film formed by ASB alone is higher, and the film formed by PS and AEC molecules alone is relatively lower. After adding two kinds of anionic surfactants to the betaine system, the ionic head of PS or AEC molecules will be attached to the positive center of the hydrophilic group of ASB molecules by electrostatic attraction and no longer adsorb and desorb with the interface deformation. The interfacial rheological properties of the compound system are still dominated by betaine, with higher dilational modulus and lower phase angle. When a small amount of HMPAM is added, or the content of hydrophobic monomer AMPS in the bulk phase is low, the intermolecular interaction at the interface is enhanced, the slow relaxation process is intensified, and the interfacial film strength is increased. As the content of AMPS further increases, hydrophobic blocks and surfactant molecules will form interfacial aggregates similar to mixed micelles at the oil-water interface, which will regulate the properties of the film by affecting the adsorption of surfactants at the interface. As long as the interfacial tension is the same, the properties of the interfacial film are the same. Based on the colloid interface science and the background of enhanced oil recovery, this study provides a reference for the field application of chemical flooding formulations. MDPI 2023-07-16 /pmc/articles/PMC10384304/ /pubmed/37513308 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules28145436 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Li, Haitao
Cui, Chuanzhi
Cao, Xulong
Yuan, Fuqing
Xu, Zhicheng
Zhang, Lei
Zhang, Lu
The Interfacial Dilational Rheology Properties of Betaine Solutions: Effect of Anionic Surfactant and Polymer
title The Interfacial Dilational Rheology Properties of Betaine Solutions: Effect of Anionic Surfactant and Polymer
title_full The Interfacial Dilational Rheology Properties of Betaine Solutions: Effect of Anionic Surfactant and Polymer
title_fullStr The Interfacial Dilational Rheology Properties of Betaine Solutions: Effect of Anionic Surfactant and Polymer
title_full_unstemmed The Interfacial Dilational Rheology Properties of Betaine Solutions: Effect of Anionic Surfactant and Polymer
title_short The Interfacial Dilational Rheology Properties of Betaine Solutions: Effect of Anionic Surfactant and Polymer
title_sort interfacial dilational rheology properties of betaine solutions: effect of anionic surfactant and polymer
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10384304/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37513308
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules28145436
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