Hybrid-Supported Bilayers Formed with Mixed-Charge Surfactants on C18-Functionalized Silica Surfaces
Author(s) -
Maryam Zare,
Jay P. Kitt,
Joel M. Harris
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
langmuir
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.042
H-Index - 333
eISSN - 1520-5827
pISSN - 0743-7463
DOI - 10.1021/acs.langmuir.0c01210
Subject(s) - alkyl , monolayer , pulmonary surfactant , bilayer , chemistry , chemical engineering , phospholipid , cationic polymerization , phase (matter) , alkane , membrane , crystallography , organic chemistry , polymer chemistry , hydrocarbon , biochemistry , engineering
Mixtures of cationic-anionic surfactants have been shown to spontaneously form ordered monolayers at hydrophobic-hydrophilic boundaries, including air-water and oil-water interfaces. In this work, confocal Raman microscopy is used to investigate the structure of hybrid-supported surfactant bilayers (HSSBs) formed by deposition of a distal leaflet of mixed cationic-anionic surfactants onto a proximal leaflet of n -alkane (C 18 ) chains on the interior surfaces of chromatographic silica particles. The surface coverage of the two surfactants in a hybrid bilayer was determined from carbon analysis and the relative Raman scattering of their respective head-groups. Within the measurement uncertainty, the stoichiometric ratio of the two surfactants is one-to-one, equivalent to mixed-charge-surfactant monolayers at air-water and oil-water interfaces and consistent with the role of the head-group electrostatic interactions in their formation. When self-assembled on the hydrophobic surface, pairs of oppositely charged n- alkyl chain surfactants resemble a phospholipid (phosphatidylcholine) molecule, with its zwitterionic head-group and two hydrophobic acyl chain tails. Indeed, the structure of these hybrid-supported surfactant bilayers on C 18 -modified silica surfaces is similar to that of hybrid-supported lipid bilayers (HSLBs) on the same supports, but with denser and more-ordered n -alkyl chains. Hybrid-supported surfactant bilayers exhibit a melting phase transition (gel to liquid-crystalline phase) with structural and energetic characteristics similar to those of hybrid-supported bilayers prepared from a zwitterionic phospholipid of the same alkyl chain length. These mixed-charge surfactants on n -alkane-modified silica are stable in water over time (months), results that suggest the potential use of these hybrid bilayers for generating supported lipid-bilayer-like surfaces or for separation applications.
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