Langmuir, Vol.20, No.19, 8114-8123, 2004
Adsorption and desorption of polymer/surfactant mixtures at solid-liquid interfaces: Substitution experiments
The adsorption of mixtures of aqueous solutions of cationic hydroxyethyleellulose polymer JR400 and anionic surfactant, sodium dodecyl sulfate, using atomic force microscopy (AFM) has been studied. Samples with various compositions from different regions of the ternary phase diagram presented in our previous work were imaged by atomic force microscopy on freshly cleaved mica, and hydrophobically modified mica and silica in soft-contact mode. A series of "washing" (subsequent injection of compositions with gradually decreasing polymer/surfactant ratio) and "scratching" (mechanical agitation of the surface material with an AFM tip) experiments were performed. It was revealed that the morphology of the adsorbed layer altered in a manner following the changes in morphology in the bulk solution. These changes were evidenced in cluster formation in the layer. The results suggest that the influence of the surface was limited to the formation of the adsorbed layer where the local concentrations of polymer and surfactant were higher than those in the bulk. All further modifications were driven by changes in the mixture composition in bulk. Force measurements upon retraction reveal the formation of network structures within the surface aggregates that will greatly slow structural reequilibration.