Nonionic surfactant mixtures. I. Phase equilibria in C10E4–H2O and closed-loop coexistence
- 1 December 1980
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 73 (11) , 5849-5861
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.440028
Abstract
A detailed phase diagram for mixtures of the homogeneous nonionic surfactant 3,6,9,12‐tetraoxadocosanol (C10E4) with water is presented. Closed‐loop coexistence is shown to be a prominent feature in this system as well as in three other aqueous mixtures of nonionic surfactant to which it is compared: 3,6,9,12,15‐pentaoxapentacosanol (C10E5), decyldimethylphosphine oxide (C10PO), and dodecyldimethylphosphine oxide (C12PO). The sizes and locations of these curves are discussed in terms of a decorated lattice‐gas model of closed‐loop coexistence. The shape of one loop (C10E4) in the vicinity of its lower critical point is nonclassical; β is found to be 0.36±0.02. Sources of complexity in the diagram for C10E4–water are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Critical dynamics of a binary fluid mixture in a centrifugal fieldPhysical Review A, 1979
- Theory of lower critical solution points in aqueous mixturesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1978
- ’’Exactly soluble’’ two-component lattice solution with upper and lower critical solution temperaturesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1975
- A lattice model of gas-gas equilibria in binary mixturesPhysica, 1974
- Critical Points in Multicomponent SystemsPhysical Review A, 1970
- Reaction of diethyl phosphonate with methyl and ethyl Grignard reagentsThe Journal of Organic Chemistry, 1968
- Theory of upper and lower critical solution temperaturesDiscussions of the Faraday Society, 1953
- Solubilities and Structures in Aqueous Aliphatic Hydrocarbon SolutionsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1952
- RECIPROCAL SOLUBILITY OF THE NORMAL PROPYL ETHERS OF 1,2-PROPYLENE GLYCOL AND WATER. CLOSED SOLUBILITY CURVES. IIJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1927
- CCLVI.—Studies in mutual solubility. Part II. The mutual solubility of glycerol and alcohols, aldehydes, phenols, and their derivativesJournal of the Chemical Society, Transactions, 1923