Stratification in micellar foam films as a probe for intermicellar interactions
ORAL
Abstract
Sodium Naphthenate (NaN) found in crude oils can act as a surfactant and influence the stability, lifetime, and rheology of petroleum foams and emulsions. Here, we show that foam films formed by aqueous micellar solutions of NaN exhibit step-wise thinning or stratification, due to the influence of non-DLVO forces, including supramolecular oscillatory structural forces. We utilize Interferometry, Digital Imaging, Optical Microscopy protocols, previously developed by our group, to investigate the drainage and stratification in micellar foam films (h < 100 nm) with high spatial (thickness ~ 1 nm, in-plane < 1 micron) and temporal resolution (time < 1 ms). We determine how the NaN concentration influences the nanoscopic topography, stratification kinetics, and step size of foam films, and contrast the results with behavior observed with stratifying foams made with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) solutions. We span a relatively wide concentration range, such that micelle shape and size vary, as is revealed by complementary small angle X-ray scattering experiments.
–
Presenters
-
Chrystian Ochoa
- University of Illinois at Chicago
- Chemical Engineering, University of Illinois at Chicago