Design of Nonionic Surfactants for Supercritical Carbon Dioxide

J. B. McClain(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Douglas E. Betts(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Dorian A. Canelas(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Edward T. Samulski(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Joseph M. DeSimone(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), J. D. Londono(Oak Ridge National Laboratory), H. D. Cochran(Oak Ridge National Laboratory), G. D. Wígnall(Oak Ridge National Laboratory), Delia Francesca Chillura Martino(University of Palermo), R. Triolo(University of Palermo)
Science
December 20, 1996
Cited by 277

Abstract

Interfacially active block copolymer amphiphiles have been synthesized and their self-assembly into micelles in supercritical carbon dioxide (CO2) has been demonstrated with small-angle neutron scattering (SANS). These materials establish the design criteria for molecularly engineered surfactants that can stabilize and disperse otherwise insoluble matter into a CO2 continuous phase. Polystyrene-b-poly(1,1-dihydroperfluorooctyl acrylate) copolymers self-assembled into polydisperse core-shell-type micelles as a result of the disparate solubility characteristics of the different block segments in CO2. These nonionic surfactants for CO2 were shown by SANS to be capable of emulsifying up to 20 percent by weight of a CO2-insoluble hydrocarbon into CO2. This result demonstrates the efficacy of surfactant-modified CO2 in reducing the large volumes of organic and halogenated solvent waste streams released into our environment by solvent-intensive manufacturing and process industries.


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