Disjoining pressure of thin films stabilized by nonionic surfactants
Krassimir D. Danov
a
, Ivan B. Ivanov
a,
⁎
, Kavssery P. Ananthapadmanabhan
b
, Alex Lips
b
a
Laboratory of Chemical Physics and Engineering, Faculty of Chemistry, University of Sofia, 1164 Sofia, Bulgaria
b
Unilever Research US, Edgewater, 45 River Road, New Jersey 07020, USA
Available online 17 January 2007
In honor of the 60th Anniversary of Prof. Nissim Garti
Abstract
In this article an attempt is made to derive a comprehensive theory of the disjoining pressure of thin liquid films, stabilized by low molecular nonionic
surfactants. We accounted for effects playing a role in the case of surfactants with spherical hydrophilic heads: (i) The thermal fluctuations of the adsorbed
surfactant molecules, due to the fact that the energy of adsorption of a –CH
2
– group is approximately equal to the average thermal energy k
B
T ; (ii) The
contribution of the collisions between molecules adsorbed on different surfaces; (iii) The restriction imposed on the fluctuation of the molecules by the
presence of a second surface situated at a small distance h from the interface where the molecules are adsorbed; (iv) The volume of the hydrophilic heads,
which expels part of the water molecules from the film region; (v) The equilibrium between the molecules adsorbed at the film surfaces and at the menisci
surrounding the film. The adsorption on the film surfaces has two main effects. First, the concentration of solute inside the film region becomes larger than in
the bulk solution and this will push the solvent toward the film thus creating an osmotic pressure (the disjoining pressure), which tends to increase the film
thickness. Second, the higher concentration inside the film and the collisions between the polar heads lead to higher chemical potential, which pushes the
surfactant toward the meniscus. We treated these effects by modifying adequately the Hildebrand–Scatchard theory for the osmotic pressure of concentrated
solutions. The partition function of the surfactant, needed for this calculation, was found by deriving an expression for the configurational integral, based on
virial expansion. The surface equations of state of Helfand, Frisch and Lebowitz and Volmer were critically analyzed and then generalized, by using the
partition function obtained by virial expansion, to permit the derivation of partition functions of the surfactant molecules in the film. A simple thermodynamic
approach was developed and applied to derive expressions for the disjoining pressure, Π, and the chemical potential of the surfactant molecules in the film, μ.
They were used to calculate numerically Π and μ and analyze their dependence on the film thickness h and the surface coverage θ. It turned out that Π has
completely different behavior above and below h =2d, where d is the diameter of the hydrophilic head. For thick films, with h N 2d, the decay of Π is initially
exponential (due mainly to the thermal fluctuations of the adsorbed molecules), followed by a long tail, proportional to h
− 2
, due to the contribution of the
osmotic pressure of the displaced solvent molecules. At h b 2d the collisions between the molecules adsorbed at different surfaces are hindered, which leads
to a steady decrease of the contribution due the interaction between the molecules. The overall result of these effects is the appearance of a maximum of Π at
h =2d. It is very large (it may reach 1000 atm and even more) and depends strongly on the surfactant adsorption. To facilitate the application and the analysis
of the theory, we derived several simpler asymptotic expressions. One of them is virial expansion, which is valid for small surface coverage and has the
advantage of being independent of the adsorption model. The other asymptotic expression is applicable at h N 2d, which is the region where the stabilization
of the film occurs. We compared our theory with the simpler theory of Israelachvili and Wennerström. It turned out that while both theories lead to decay of Π
vs. h, the numerical results and the shape of the curves are usually very different. The experimental data, which could be used to verify our theory, are scarce,
but we found reasonable agreement with the data of Lyle and Tiddy for bilayers of C
12
EO
4
. The data of Parsegian et al. for lipid bilayers also confirmed
qualitatively some of our theoretical conclusions.
© 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Disjoining pressure; Nonionic surfactants; Thin liquid films; Surface equation of state; Osmotic pressure
Contents
1. Introduction .............................................................. 186
2. Model formulation .......................................................... 188
Advances in Colloid and Interface Science 128–130 (2006) 185 – 215
www.elsevier.com/locate/cis
⁎
Corresponding author. Tel.: +359 2 9625310; fax: +359 2 9625643.
E-mail address: ii@LCPE.Uni-Sofia.BG (I.B. Ivanov).
0001-8686/$ - see front matter © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.cis.2006.11.011