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NMR Studies of Restricted Diffusion in Lyotropic Systems
Tortuosity, 1/α, and surface-to-volume ratio, S/V, were determined in aqueous solutions of decylammonium, dodecylammonium and tetradecylammonium chlorides of various concentrations by measuring the apparent diffusion coefficient of water, D app(Δ). This was found to be much smaller than in the bulk...
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Published in: | Solid state nuclear magnetic resonance 2002-09, Vol.22 (2), p.394-408 |
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Main Authors: | , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Tortuosity,
1/α, and surface-to-volume ratio,
S/V, were determined in aqueous solutions of decylammonium, dodecylammonium and tetradecylammonium chlorides of various concentrations by measuring the apparent diffusion coefficient of water,
D
app(Δ). This was found to be much smaller than in the bulk state. Such restricted diffusion is interpreted in terms of the Mitra model, where
D(Δ) depends on diffusion time and is controlled primarily by
S/V. The samples exhibit lamellar (L), hexagonal (H) and isotropic (I) liquid crystalline phases. We observed changes in
S/V upon phase transition. In the lamellar and hexagonal phases, the system is ordered, resulting in relatively small
S/V ratios, compared to the micellar-isotropic phase. We did not observe a dependence on the diffusion time, Δ, in the isotropic phase, because the duration of the experiment was not sufficiently short to observe the change from
D
app(Δ) to
D
eff. We observed the effective diffusion coefficient of water, which directly probes the tortuosity of the system. The
S/V ratios were obtained by fitting the Mitra model, using known values of the bulk water diffusion coefficients, and the assumption that
D
app→D
0 for Δ→0.
S/V is correlated with the type of structure, increasing on transition to the isotropic phase and decreasing on transition to other phases. The change in tortuosity is small, but slightly larger for the isotropic phase. |
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ISSN: | 0926-2040 1527-3326 |
DOI: | 10.1006/snmr.2002.0087 |