Structuration in the Interface of Direct and Reversed Micelles of Sucrose Esters, Studied by Fluorescent Techniques
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2015Metadata
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Sandoval Altamirano, Catalina Paz
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Structuration in the Interface of Direct and Reversed Micelles of Sucrose Esters, Studied by Fluorescent Techniques
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Abstract
Reactors found in nature can be described as micro-heterogeneous systems, where media
involved in each micro-environment can behave in a markedly different way compared with
the properties of the bulk solution. The presence of water molecules in micro-organized assemblies
is of paramount importance for many chemical processes, ranging from biology to
environmental science. Self-organized molecular assembled systems are frequently used
to study dynamics of water molecules because are the simplest models mimicking biological
membranes. The hydrogen bonds between sucrose and water molecules are described
to be stronger (or more extensive) than the ones between water molecules themselves. In
this work, we studied the capability of sucrose moiety, attached to alkyl chains of different
length, as a surface blocking agent at the water-interface and we compared its properties
with those of polyethylenglycol, a well-known agent used for this purposes. Published studies
in this topic mainly refer to the micellization process and the stability of mixed surfactant
systems using glycosides. We are interested in the effect induced by the presence of sucrose
monoesters at the interface (direct and reverse micelles) and at the palisade (mixtures
with Triton X-100). We believe that the different functional group (ester), the position of
alkyl chain (6-O) and the huge capability of sucrose to interact with water will dramatically
change the water structuration at the interface and at the palisade, generating new possibilities
for technological applications of these systems.
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Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
FONDECYT 1120196
FONDECYT 1140454
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/132429
DOI: DOI: 10.1371/journal. pone.0123669
ISSN: 1932-6203
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PLOS ONE April 23, 2015
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