Langmuir, Vol.20, No.17, 7053-7063, 2004
Spontaneous vesicle formation and phase behavior in mixtures of an anionic surfactant with imidazoline compounds
Unexpected colloidal assemblies form in aqueous mixtures of sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate (SDBS) with the following imidazoline compounds: 2,2'-azobis[2-(2-imidazolin-2-yl)propanel dihydrochloride (V-44, which is a commonly used free-radical initiator), 2,2'-tetramethylenedi-2-imidazoline (TMI), and the main recombination product (RP) from the decomposition of V-44. All of these imidazoline compounds act as hydrotropes. As the molar ratio of imidazoline to SDBS increases, a gradual transition from micelles to vesicles to bilayers to precipitate is observed. V-44 decomposes slowly at 25 degreesC, and the phase diagrams of V-44/SDBS and RP/SDBS are similar. The vesicular region observed in mixtures of TMI/SDBS is larger in composition than that of V-44/SDBS and RP/SDBS mixtures. At equimolar compositions of SDBS and RP, a novel colloidal structure with multiple closely packed bilayers is observed. In these mixtures, small unilamellar vesicles (<80 nm in diameter) form spontaneously, although with time they coexist with a small amount of precipitate and their size increases steadily. The self-assembly of vesicles occurs over a wide range of compositions when the solution pH is lower than the pK(a) of the imidazoline moiety. Quasi-elastic light scattering, cryogenic transmission electron microscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance, and small-angle neutron scattering were used to determine the characteristic length scales and properties of the assemblies.