Rg. Snyder et al., DETECTION AND MEASUREMENT OF MICROAGGREGATION IN BINARY-MIXTURES OF ESTERS AND OF PHOSPHOLIPID DISPERSIONS, Journal of physical chemistry, 99(20), 1995, pp. 8432-8439
An infrared method developed earlier for the study of spontaneous demi
xing in n-alkane mixtures was used to measure microaggregation in bina
ry mixtures of alkyl methyl esters in the crystalline state and also i
n phospholipid bilayers consisting of two symmetric phospholipids that
differ in the length of their acyl chains. The lengths of the acyl ch
ains involved are in the range of 18-24 carbons. Spontaneous demixing
at room temperature occurred for the melt-quenched ester mixtures whic
h, except for one case, were in the orthorhombic phase. In the excepti
onal case, the demixing occurred in the hexagonal phase. The kinetics
of demixing are similar to those observed earlier for n-alkane mixture
s. Demixing in the phospholipid mixtures was observed, but, under the
conditions of our measurements, was not found to be time dependent. Ou
r results are generally in keeping with the phase behavior reported in
the literature for phospholipids with alkyl chains having 12-16 carbo
ns. The sensitivity of the infrared method to small domains allowed us
to measure aggregation in gel-state phospholipid mixtures with chain-
length differences of 2 carbons, mixtures previously considered to be
randomly-mixed solid solutions.