Search results for "VOLUME"
showing 10 items of 1932 documents
Copolymers sensitive to temperature and pH in water and in water+oil mixtures: A DSC, ITC and volumetric study
2011
Block copolymer micelles are receiving an increasing interest because of the variety of structures and the possibilities to tune them by changing external and internal parameters achieving the desired properties for a specific purpose. We have investigated the acid/base behavior, self-assembling and solubilization ability towards polar oils of star-like copolymers named Tetronics. They are composed of branched four-arms each one consisting of two blocks made of EO and PO units linked to the diethylenediamine group, which confers pH response ability. The copolymers T1107 and T90R4 were studied with a sequential and reverse architecture. The thermodynamics of the acid/base equilibrium was stu…
Heat capacities, volumes and solubilities of pentanol in aqueous alkyltrimethylammonium bromides
1988
Apparent molar heat capacities and volumes of pentanol, 0.05m in decyl-, tetradecyl- and hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromides micellar solutions, were measured at 25°C. They were assumed to approach the standard infinite dilution values and rationalized by means of previously reported equations following which the distribution constant between the aqueous and the micellar phase, heat capacity, and volume of pentanol in both phases are simultaneously derived. The present results show that the volume of the micellar core does not seem to have a significant effect on the apparent molar volume and heat capacity of pentanol in the micellar phase and on the free energy of transfer of pentanol from…
Viscosity of Polymer Solutions over the Full Range of Composition: A Thermodynamically Inspired Two-Parameter Approach
2015
The approach yields the following relation for the relative viscosity η rel as a function of polymer concentration c (mass/volume): ln ηrel = c/(1 + pc + qc2). Reduced concentrations c (defined as c = c[η], where [η] is the intrinsic viscosity) are used instead of c to incorporate thermodynamic information. The parameters p and q account for changes in the free volume of the solvent caused by the polymer. The analysis of literature data for seven very dissimilar systems discloses the following common feature: p > 0 and q < 0. This means that the curves in the plots of ln ηrel as a function of c are normally located below the tangent at low c and above it at high c. The values of p and q cor…
Thermodynamic Properties of Sodium n-Alkanecarboxylates in Water and in Water + Cyclodextrins Mixtures
1998
Densities and heat capacities of water−substrate, water−cyclodextrin, and water−substrate−cyclodextrin systems were determined at 298 K. The substrates studied are sodium n-alkanecarboxylates (CnCOONa) (from sodium acetate to sodium decanoate) and the cyclodextrins are hydroxypropyl-α-cyclodextrin (HP-α-CD), hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin, (HP-β-CD), hydroxypropyl-γ-cyclodextrin (HP-γ-CD) and β-cyclodextrin (β-CD). The apparent molar volumes and heat capacities of CnCOONa in water were calculated as functions of concentration. The standard partial molar properties agree with those obtained by using the additivity rule. HP-β-CD essentially does not affect the thermodynamic properties of C1COON…
N,N,N-Alkyloctyldimethylammonium Chlorides in Water: A Thermodynamic Investigation
1993
Abstract Specific conductivities, densities, heat capacities and enthalpies of dilution at 298 K and osmotic coefficients at 310 K were measured for N,N,N -octylbutyldimethylammonium, N,N,N -octylpentyldimethylammonium, and N,N -dioctyldimethylammonium chlorides in water as functions of concentration. From the specific conductivity data, the CMC and the degree of the counterion dissociation have been calculated. It is shown that additional CH 2 groups in the variable alkyl chain affect both CMC and β less than they do in the single chain surfactants. The partial molar volumes, heat capacities, relative enthalpies, nonideal free energies, and entropies at 298 K were derived as functions of t…
Prediction of the retention in reversed-phase liquid chromatography using solute-mobile phase-stationary phase polarity parameters.
2002
Abstract A previously reported algorithm, based on the equation: log k=( log k) 0 +p(P N m −P N s ) , that relates the retention in reversed-phase liquid chromatography with solute (p), mobile phase (PmN) and stationary phase (PsN) relative polarity parameters, is improved. The retention data reported by several authors for different sets of compounds, eluted with acetonitrile–water and methanol–water mixtures, are used to test the algorithm and elaborate a database of p values. The methodology is successfully applied to predict the retention using PmN values calculated as PmN=1.00−(2.13ϕ)/(1+1.42ϕ) for acetonitrile–water and PmN=1.00−(1.33ϕ)/(1+0.47ϕ) for methanol–water, ϕ being the organi…
Preparative separation of proteins and enzymes in the mean molecular-weight range of 10,000–100,000 LiChrosorb diol® packing by high-performance size…
1979
Abstract LiChrossorb Diol® packing has been to be well-suited for the separation of proteins and enzymes according to a size-exclusion mechanism in a mean molecular-weight (MW) range between 10,000 and 100,000. Loadability of a small bore column of 6 mm I.D. (A) and a large-bore column of 23.5 mm I.D. (B), both of 250 mm in length, were examined. Defining a 20% decrease of the number of theoretical plates as loadability limit the volume load at constant mass of chymotrypsinogen as representative test solute was ≈ 100 μl for column (A) and 1500 μl for column B at 0.78 · 10-5 g/g of packing for column A and 0.78 · 10-6 g/g of packing for column B, respectively. Mass load to constant injection…
Optical tweezing electrophoresis of isolated, highly charged colloidal spheres
2001
Abstract We report on a novel optical tweezing experiment measuring the electrophoretic mobility μ of highly charged spherical particles suspended in water at volume fractions Φ≤2×10 −7 . At deionised conditions μ =2.5×10 −8 m 2 V −1 s −1 , it decreases further upon increasing the salt concentration c . We compare our data to measurements at larger Φ, where generally much larger μ and a qualitatively different dependence on the salt concentration are observed. To characterise the dependence on Φ we performed measurements at no added salt. There the mobility increases in the unordered state but stays constant at μ =6.8×10 −8 m 2 V −1 s −1 as the system develops fluid order. In the ordered re…
On what terms and why the thermodynamic properties of polymer solutions depend on chain length up to the melt
2003
Theoretical considerations based on chain connectivity and conformational variability of polymers have lead to an uncomplicated relation for the dependence of the Flory-Huggins interaction parameter, chi, on the volume fraction of the polymer, phi, and on its number of segments, N. The validity of this expression is being tested extensively by means of vapor pressure measurements and inverse gas chromatography (complemented by osmotic and light scattering data from literature) for solutions of poly(dimethylsiloxane) in the thermodynamically vastly different solvents n-octane (n-C8), toluene (TL), and methylethylketone (MEK) over the entire range of composition for at least six different mol…
Polymer solutions confined in slit-like pores with attractive walls: An off-lattice Monte Carlo study of static properties and chain dynamics
1996
Using a bead spring model of flexible polymer chains, the density profiles and chain configurational properties of polymer solutions confined between parallel plates were studied. A wide range of density ϕ, chain length N, and strength e of a short-range attractive wall potential was investigated. Both a temperature T in the good solvent regime (T > θ, θ being the Theta temperature where a chain in unconfined bulk three-dimensional solution would behave ideally) and a temperature in the bad solvent regime (T θ) show a crossover from two-dimensional excluded volume behavior (Rg ∝ N2ν with ν = 3/4) to ideal random walk behavior (ν = 1/2), the relaxation times show effective exponents Zeff (τ …