N. Krasteva et al., Effect of fructose, sucrose, and dimethyl sulfoxide on the equilibrium thickness of DMPC foam films, J PHYS CH B, 105(6), 2001, pp. 1185-1190
Foam films stabilized by phospholipids are applied for model studies of int
eractions between lipid layers. The thickness of the free-standing foam fil
ms, obtained from aqueous lipid dispersions of DMPC in the presence of low
molecular weight sugars fructose and sucrose, and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO)
, was measured by means of the microinterometric technique. The equilibrium
film thickness is determined by the interplay of the different components
of the disjoining pressure and it is influenced by the composition of the f
ilm forming dispersion. In the absence of solutes and electrolyte DMPC form
s Newton black films. The addition of sugars and DMSO results in an increas
e in the film thickness, which is attributed to an increase in the surface
potential. In this case, the electrostatic disjoining pressure determines t
he film thickness, while the van der Waals attraction is not significantly
influenced by the solutes. The effective Hamaker constants are obtained fro
m the velocity of film thinning. The double layer potential phi (o) of the
thick films is calculated according to the postulations of the DLVO theory.
Stable black films are obtained at high salt concentration in the presence
of sugars and DMSO. In these thin films, the short-range structural forces
control the equilibrium thickness, which increases in the presence of suga
rs and decreases in the presence of DMSO. The changes in the film thickness
caused by the solutes are attributed to modified hydration interactions. T
he observed thickness changes correspond to inclusion or removal of several
layers of water molecules in the film aqueous core.