Litcius/Paper detail

How Nano‐Ions Act Like Ionic Surfactants

Max Hohenschutz, Isabelle Grillo, Olivier Diat, Pierre Bauduin

2020Angewandte Chemie29 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Recently, nanometric ions were shown to adsorb to hydrated neutral surfaces and to bind to the cavities of macrocyclic molecules with an unexpectedly strong affinity arising from a solvent‐mediated effect named superchaotropicity. We show here that nano‐ions at low concentrations (μ m range), similarly to anionic surfactants, induce the spontaneous transformation of a swollen lyotropic lamellar phase of non‐ionic surfactant into a vesicle phase. This transition occurs when the neutral lamellae acquire charges, either by adsorption of the nano‐ions onto, or by anchoring of the ionic surfactant into the lamellae. In contrast to ionic surfactants, nano‐ions strongly dehydrate the neutral surfactant assemblies. As a conclusion, these purely inorganic nanometric ions act as alternatives to the widely used organic ionic surfactants.

Topics & Concepts

Ionic bondingPulmonary surfactantIonChemistryLamellar structureAdsorptionLyotropicMoleculePhase (matter)VesicleIonic liquidNano-Chemical engineeringInorganic chemistryCrystallographyOrganic chemistryMembraneEngineeringLiquid crystallineCatalysisBiochemistrySurfactants and Colloidal SystemsMolecular Sensors and Ion DetectionIonic liquids properties and applications