INFLUENCE OF SURFACE AGING ON THE DRAINAGE OF FOAM FILMS STABILIZED BY AQUEOUS-SOLUTIONS OF ETHYL HYDROXYETHYL CELLULOSE

Citation
E. Poptoshev et al., INFLUENCE OF SURFACE AGING ON THE DRAINAGE OF FOAM FILMS STABILIZED BY AQUEOUS-SOLUTIONS OF ETHYL HYDROXYETHYL CELLULOSE, Langmuir, 13(15), 1997, pp. 3905-3908
Citations number
8
Categorie Soggetti
Chemistry Physical
Journal title
ISSN journal
07437463
Volume
13
Issue
15
Year of publication
1997
Pages
3905 - 3908
Database
ISI
SICI code
0743-7463(1997)13:15<3905:IOSAOT>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
The drainage times of microscopic horizontal foam films stabilized by dilute aqueous solutions of ethyl hydroxyethyl cellulose (EHEC) was sh own to be dependent on the aging effects (configuration changes of the adsorbed macromolecules) occurring in the freshly created air/solutio n interface. At low polymer concentration (5 ppm), the films drained f airly rapidly from thicknesses of about 400 to 300 nm with drainage ti mes about 5 to 6 times greater than theoretical values calculated usin g the Reynolds equation. However, at higher polymer concentrations (10 0 ppm) at extended surface aging (15-180 min) the film drainage times were shown to increase drastically giving values 50 times greater than theoretical values. Although these aging effects could not be directl y related to surface tension data, diffusion coefficients were calcula ted from interfacial tension profiles using classical diffusion theory . As the concentration of polymer increased, the diffusion coefficient s were shown to decrease and were considerably smaller than previously reported experimentally values determined in bulk solution by NMR. Th is difference between experimental and theoretical results endorsed a kinetic rather than a diffusion or mass transport model for the transf er of EHEC molecules to the interface. The increase in drainage times with extended aging times could be explained by the gradual formation of a steric energy barrier caused by configuration changes of the adso rbed polymer. This probably involved the progressive extension of the EHEC tails into the aqueous phase increasing the disjoining pressure, decreasing the drainage rate, and producing thick stable films.