Nanoemulsion stability above the critical micelle concentration: A contest between solubilization, flocculation and Krafft precipitation
Kareem Rahn-Chique (1), Oriana Barrientos (2), German Urbina-Villalba, (1) ((1) Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Cient\'ificas (IVIC), (2), Universidad Sim\'on Bol\'ivar)

TL;DR
This study investigates how micelle solubilization, flocculation, and Krafft precipitation influence nanoemulsion stability above the critical micelle concentration, highlighting the complex interplay of physicochemical factors affecting aggregation and solubilization.
Contribution
It provides experimental and simulation insights into nanoemulsion behavior above the CMC, emphasizing the roles of salt concentration and surfactant properties.
Findings
Salt induces aggregation without reaching CMC or Krafft point.
Micelle solubilization decreases absorbance, flocculation increases it.
Simulation models help understand micelle-mediated processes.
Abstract
The relative importance of micelle solubilization and Krafft temperature on the appraisal of the flocculation rate is studied using a dodecane-in-water nanoemulsion as a model system. In 0.5 mM solutions of sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS), neither the critical micelle concentration (CMC) nor the Krafft point of the surfactant are attained between 300 and 700 mM NaCl and 20 < T < 25 {\deg}C. Hence, the addition of salt to a SDS-stabilized nanoemulsion only induces aggregation. Conversely, a surfactant concentration of 7.5 mM SDS promotes micelle solubilization or crystal precipitation depending on the physicochemical conditions. Solubilization decreases the absorbance of the system while flocculation and Krafft precipitation increase it. In this paper, the actual variation of the absorbance above the CMC was followed during five minutes for 300, 500 and 700 mM NaCl. The initial 60-second…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurfactants and Colloidal Systems · Crystallization and Solubility Studies · Coagulation and Flocculation Studies
