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Título
Remarkable viscoelasticity in mixtures of cyclodextrins and nonionic surfactants
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Cyclodextrins
beta-Cyclodextrins
Micelles
Fecha de publicación
2014
Editor
American Chemical Society
Citación
García-Pérez, Á., Da Silva, M. A., Eriksson, J., González-Gaitano, G., Valero, M., & Dreiss, C. A. (2014). Remarkable viscoelasticity in mixtures of cyclodextrins and nonionic surfactants. Langmuir, 30(39), 11552-11562. https://doi.org/10.1021/LA503000Z
Resumen
[EN]We report the effect of native cyclodextrins (α, β, and γ)
and selected derivatives in modulating the self-assembly of the nonionic
surfactant polyoxyethylene cholesteryl ether (ChEO10) and its mixtures
with triethylene glycol monododecyl ether (C12EO3), which form
wormlike micelles. Cyclodextrins (CDs) generally induce micellar
breakup through a host−guest interaction with surfactants; instead, we
show that a constructive effect, leading to gel formation, is obtained with
specific CDs and that the widely invoked host−guest interaction may
not be the only key to the association. When added to wormlike micelles
of ChEO10 and C12EO3, native β-CD, 2-hydroxyethyl-β-CD (HEBCD),
and a sulfated sodium salt of β-CD (SULFBCD) induce a substantial
increase of the viscoelasticity, while methylated CDs rupture the
micelles, leading to a loss of the viscosity, and the other CDs studied
(native α- and γ- and hydroxypropylated CDs) show a weak interaction. Most remarkably, the addition of HEBCD or SULFBCD
to pure ChEO10 solutions (which are low-viscosity, Newtonian fluids of small, ellipsoidal micelles) induces the formation of
transparent gels. The combination of small-angle neutron scattering, dynamic light scattering, and cryo-TEM reveals that both
CDs drive the elongation of ChEO10 aggregates into an entangled network of wormlike micelles. 1H NMR and fluorescence
spectroscopy demonstrate the formation of inclusion complexes between ChEO10 and methylated CDs, consistent with the
demicellization observed. Instead, HEBCD forms a weak complex with ChEO10, while no complex is detected with SULFBCD.
This shows that inclusion complex formation is not the determinant event leading to micellar growth. HEBCD:ChEO10 complex,
which coexists with the aggregated surfactant, could act as a cosurfactant with a different headgroup area. For SULFBCD,
intermolecular interactions via the external surface of the CD may be more relevant.
URI
ISSN
0743-7463
DOI
10.1021/LA503000Z
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