Issue 9, 2011

Aging mechanism of unsaturated long-chain amidosulfobetaine worm fluids at high temperature

Abstract

Both fundamental and technological research interests have highlighted in recent years a remarkable growing focus on surfactant wormlike micelles. Nevertheless, long-term thermal stability, as well as the corresponding aging mechanism of viscoelastic worm fluids was rarely examined. We report for the first time the high-temperature aging effect on wormlike micellar solutions formed by an unsaturated C22-tailed amidosulfobetaine surfactant in the absence and presence of a reducer, by means of rheological methods, cryo-TEM observations, IR and 1H NMR measurements. It was found that the aging effect mainly resulted from the degradation of the carbon–carbon double bond in the surfactant tail rather than its amido head group; and the addition of a small amount of reducing agent could effectively improve thermal stability of the worm fluids.

Graphical abstract: Aging mechanism of unsaturated long-chain amidosulfobetaine worm fluids at high temperature

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Nov 2010
Accepted
11 Mar 2011
First published
22 Mar 2011

Soft Matter, 2011,7, 4485-4489

Aging mechanism of unsaturated long-chain amidosulfobetaine worm fluids at high temperature

Z. Chu, Y. Feng, H. Sun, Z. Li, X. Song, Y. Han and H. Wang, Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 4485 DOI: 10.1039/C0SM01394C

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