Active Interfacial Modifier: Stabilization Mechanism of Water in Silicone Oil Emulsions by Peptide Silicone Hybrid Polymers

作者:Sakai Kenichi*; Ikeda Ryosuke; Sharma Suraj Chandra; Shrestha Rekha Goswami; Ohtani Naoko; Yoshioka Masato; Sakai Hideki; Abe Masahiko; Sakamoto Kazutami
来源:Langmuir, 2010, 26(8): 5349-5354.
DOI:10.1021/la100146x

摘要

We have developed hybrid amphiphilic polymers consisting of a silicone backbone modified with hydrocarbon chains and hydrolyzed silk peptides. These polymers are molecularly soluble neither in water nor in most of organic solvent. but are attractive with these solvents. We assume that this property enables die polymers to form "an independent third phase" between immiscible two liquid phases find stabilize the emulsion system, based on a fundamentally distinguishable mechanism from the approach by conventional surfactants. We have named these amphiphilic polymers "active interfacial modifier (AIM)" and studied physicochemical properties of AIM-stabilized water-in-silicon oil emulsions. The addition of-AIM to a mixture of water and decamethylcyclopentasiloxane (D(5)) has achieved preparation of stable W/O emulsions (droplet size = ca. 1 mu m) in a wide range of the three components, even under relatively gentle vortex mixing. Interestingly, the prepared W/O emulsions arc found to be nearly genuine or quasi Newtonian fluid with low viscosity when water content is in the range from 0 to 36 wt % for the fixed weight ratio of AIM/D(5) = 6/4. This is a good piece of evidence that AIM forms the independent third phase, where the Newtonian shear occurs at the D(5)/AIM interface. The presence of AIM as third phase has also been confirmed by fluorescence probe method with confocal laser scanning microscopy. As such, AIM can activate interfaces by the least amount to cover interfaces as an independent third phase, and hence, this provides a new concept achieving a precise control of interracial properties.

  • 出版日期2010-4-20