4.7 Article

Ion-specific effects in foams

Journal

ADVANCES IN COLLOID AND INTERFACE SCIENCE
Volume 225, Issue -, Pages 98-113

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.cis.2015.08.007

Keywords

Ion-specific effects; Foams; Foam films; Critical micelle concentration; Foam film drainage

Funding

  1. European research council (ERC) grant EMATTER [280078]
  2. COST action Smart and Green Interfaces [MP1106]
  3. Bulgarian National Science Fund [DDVU 02/54]

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We present a critical review on ion-specific effects in foams in the presence of added salts. We show the theoretical basis developed for understanding experimental data in systems with ionic surfactants, as well as the nascent approaches to modeling the much more difficult systems with non-ionic surfactants, starting with the most recent models of the air water interface. Even in the case of ionic surfactant systems, we show methods for improving the theoretical understanding and apply them for interpretation of surprising experimental results we have obtained on ion-specific effects in these systems. We report unexpectedly strong ion-specific effects of counter-ions on the stability and the rate of drainage of planar foam films from solutions of 0.5 mM sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) as a function of concentration of a series of inorganic salts (MCI, M = Li, Na, K). We found that the counterions can either stabilize the foam films (up to a critical concentration) or destabilize them beyond it. The ordering for destabilization is in the same order as the Hofmeister series, while for stabilization it is the reverse Therefore, the strongest foam stabilizer (K+), becomes the strongest foam destabilizer at and beyond its critical concentration, and vice versa. Though the critical concentration is different for different salts, calculating the critical surfactant adsorption level one could simplify the analysis, with all the critical concentrations occurring at the same surfactant adsorption level. Beyond this level, the foam lifetime decreases and films suddenly start draining faster, which may indicate salt-induced surfactant precipitation. Alternatively, formation of pre-micellar structures may result in slower equilibration and fewer surfactant molecules at the surface, thus leading to unstable foams and films. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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