화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.110, No.1, 68-74, 2006
A salt-free zero-charged aqueous onion-phase enhances the solubility of fullerene C-60 in water
An onion-phase (multilamellar vesicular phase or L alpha-phase) was prepared from salt-free zero-charged cationic and anionic (catanionic) surfactant mixtures of tetradecyltrimethylammonium hydroxide (TTAOH)/lauric acid (LA)/H2O. The H+ and OH- counterions form water (TTAOH + LA -> TTAL + H2O), leaving the solution salt free. The onion-phase solution has novel properties including low conductivity, low osmotic pressure and unscreened electrostatic repulsions between cationic and anionic surfactants because of the absence of salt. The spherical multilamellar vesicles have an average 250 nm radius as measured by freeze-fracture transmission electron microscopy (FF-TEM) and the maximum interlayer distance, i.e., the thickness of the hydrophobic bilayer and the water layer, was calculated to be around 52 nm by small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). Extremely hydrophobic C-60 fullerene can be solubilized in this salt-free zero-charged aqueous onion-phase. As a typical result, 0.588 mg-mL(-1) (similar to 0.82 mmol-L-1) C-60 has been successfully solubilized into a 50 mmol-L-1 catanionic surfactant onion-phase aqueous solution. The weight ratio of fullerene to TTAL is calculated to be around 1:40. Solubilization of C-60 in the salt-free catanionic onion-phase solution was investigated by using different sample preparation routes, and a variety of techniques were used to characterize these vesicular systems with or without encapsulated C-60. The onion-phase solution changed color from slightly bluish to yellow or brown after C-60 was solubilized. H-1 and C-13 NMR measurements indicated that the C-60 molecules are located in the hydrophobic layers, i.e., in the central positions [omega-CH3 and delta-(CH2)(x)] of the hydrophobic layers of the TTAL onion-phase. Salt-free zero-charged catanionic vesicular aqueous solutions are good candidates for enhancing the solubility of C-60 in aqueous solutions and may broaden the functionality of fullerenes to new potential applications in biology, medicine, and materials. Hopefully, our method can also be extended to solubilize functionalized carbon nanotubes in aqueous solutions.