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  • Title: Phase behavior of diglycerol fatty acid esters-nonpolar oil systems.
    Author: Shrestha LK, Kaneko M, Sato T, Acharya DP, Iwanaga T, Kunieda H.
    Journal: Langmuir; 2006 Feb 14; 22(4):1449-54. PubMed ID: 16460060.
    Abstract:
    Phase behavior of diglycerol fatty acid esters (Qn-D, where n represents the carbon number in the alkyl chain length of amphiphile, n = 10-16) were investigated in different nonpolar oils, liquid paraffin (LP70), squalane, and squalene. There is surfactant solid at lower temperature, and the surfactant solid does not swell in oil, and the melting temperature is almost constant in a wide range of compositions. In all of the systems, a lamellar liquid crystal (L(alpha)) is formed in a concentrated region at a temperature between the solid melting temperature and the isotropic two- or single-phase regions. In the dilute regions, reverse vesicles are formed in L(alpha) + O regions. There are two liquid-phase regions above the L(alpha) present region. This two-phase boundary corresponds to the cloud-point curve of nonionic surfactant aqueous solutions. However, instead of being less soluble in water at high temperature for the cloud point, the surfactant becomes more soluble in the organic solvents at high temperature. Namely, the effect of temperature on the solubility is opposite to the clouding phenomenon. When the hydrocarbon chain of the diglycerol surfactant decreases, the two-phase region becomes wider. In the case of a fixed surfactant, the surfactant is most miscible with squalene (narrowest two-phase regions) and the order of dissolutions tendency is squalene > LP70 > squalane. These results show that the hydrophilic moiety (diglycerol group) is more insoluble in oil compared with that of a conventional poly(oxyethylene)-type nonionic surfactant. Formation of reversed rodlike micelles was confirmed by SAXS scattering curve. When the hydrocarbon chain of surfactant is short, the micellar size becomes larger. In a fixed surfactant system, the reverse micellar size increases by changing oil from squalene to LP70. A small amount of water induces a dramatic elongation of reverse micelles.
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